1 wild boar killed, 6 still at large in Yukon - Action News
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1 wild boar killed, 6 still at large in Yukon

'Approaching these animals I wouldnt recommend it,' says one wild boar researcher in Saskatchewan. 'If you see them out on the ground, I would definitely get back in the house and close the door, if it was me.'

'They really do a lot of damage to almost any landscape,' says Saskatchewan expert

Seven wild boars escaped from a farm in the Mendenhall subdivision area, west of Whitehorse, last month. Since then, they've been spotted on peoples' properties and alongside the highway. The territorial government says one of the animals has now been killed, but the rest are still loose. (Jody Peters)

The owner of seven wild boars that escaped last month west of Whitehorse has managed to find and kill one of the animals, according to the Yukon government. But the other six are still running free.

And according to a University of Saskatchewan researcher who's studied wild boars, that's bad news.

"If you think what you're doing is important today, you're wrong. Stop what you're doing...get out there and find every one of [the boars]and remove them," said associate professor Ryan Brook.

He said any boar that is shot at, but not killed, becomes "wild very, very quickly."

The animals, all female, escaped from a farm in the Mendenhall subdivision areasometime last month.

Local residents have been alarmed to see the beasts occasionally wander onto their rural properties, but the animals have proven hard to catch.

Tannis Thompson-Preete took this photo a couple of weeks ago, when she spotted the animals near the Alaska Highway. The government has since told the animals' owner to remove them from the wild or face fines. (Tannis Thompson-Preete)

Last week, government agriculture officials admitted the pigs had so far outsmarted them, so they gave the owner an ultimatum:remove your animals from the wildor face fines.

The deadline passed last Wednesday, but government officials won't say how the farmer's being penalized.

"Since this is an ongoing enforcement issue, we are not able to provide further information on the details surrounding the timeline, and amount of fines," said Jesse Devost, a spokesperson for the Department of Energy, Mines and Resources, in an email to CBC.

'They will eat almost anything'

According to Brook, wild boars are an invasive species and they've wreaked havoc in many places across the country, including Saskatchewan.

'They really do a lot of damage to almost any landscape, but especially wetlands get really torn apart,' says Ryan Brook, a wild boar researcher at the University of Saskatchewan. (Tannis Thompson-Preete)

He said they can damage landscapes and ecosystems,and threaten local agriculture,because they root up vegetationand"they will eat almost anything."

"They really do a lot of damage to almost any landscape, but especially wetlands get really torn apart," Brook said.

"These wild pigs, they're just a major global threat. Not just Canada, or not just local here it is a global issue."

Brook saidit's also possible the animalscould spread diseaseto livestock, wild species, and possibly even people, although he said that's not a major concern in Canada right now.

"That's mainly because we haven't looked," he said.

Risk of reproducing low, gov't says

Brook said it's key to eradicate the animalsfrom the wildas soon as possible, especially if there's any risk that theymight reproduce.

"These animals are continuously breedingnon-stop and producing litters of sixall along the way. And those young can become sexually mature at about fiveto sixmonths. So, you do the math," he said.

The Yukon government has said therisk of the animals breeding in the wild is low, since the escapees are all female and there are no other known wild pigs in Yukon for them to mate with.

A submitted shot of a wild boar. The Yukon government has said the risk of the animals breeding in the wild is low, since the escapees are all female and there are no other known wild pigs in Yukon for them to mate with. (Brian Keating)

The animals can breed with domestic pigs, so other pig farmers in the area have been advised to "be diligent in monitoring their animals and containment structures while these wild boar are in the area," Devostwrote.

Brook said that's all good news, but it doesn't lessen his concern.

"Even a couple can do a lot of damage," he said.

They're also just plain dangerous when they're running wild, Brook said. He advises any Yukonerwho sees the animalsto beat a retreat.

"Approaching these animals I wouldn't recommend it," he said."If you see them out on the ground, I would definitely get back in the house and close the door."

"When we have a ground crew here, when people are going toshoot at pigs, we also have people with shotguns to protect the shooters themselves because [the boars] will charge."

He also said that the longer the animals runloose, the more elusive and dangerous they'll be.

"Time is everything with these things," he said.

With files from Heather Avery