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July 2016 Articles

Farmers hear updates on crops, research at LSU AgCenter field day in St. Joseph
Buddleia adds color, attracts butterflies to landscapes
Creep Feeding
• feral hog damage of topic of workshop
La. farmers should scout for soybean rust disease
Mulching trees needs to be done right
Where is the Love?
Senate Examines EPA's Unfunded Mandates
Interior Appropriations Bill Advances through Committee
Cover crops offer farmers benefits
You can control fire ants
Farm Bureau Hails Supreme Court Victory: Farmers and Ranchers May Sue to Stop Cl
Reducing the RFS, Bad for the Environment and Economy
Environmental Best Management Practices for Poultry Production in Louisiana
Fan Dust Evaluation
Red River Station field day focuses on water use
4-H day at the capitol
Louisiana state 4-H, FFA horse show set for July 9-13 in Gonzales
Louisiana, Mississippi county agents hold joint meeting
Just Rambling July 2016

(20 articles found)

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feral hog damage of topic of workshop

Feral hog damage topic of workshop
Writer: Bruce Schultz at 337-250-3876 or bschultz@agcenter.lsu.edu
(05/31/16) ALEXANDRIA, La. – Controlling the feral hog epidemic will probably require chemical control, an LSU AgCenter researcher said at a workshop on May 31.
LSU AgCenter animal scientist Glen Gentry said hunting and trapping hogs is inefficient, and a large-scale contraceptive strategy has yet to be found.
Meanwhile, he said, the wild pig population continues to increase. “The expansion of the pig population across the United States is not done.”
LSU AgCenter economist Shaun Tanger estimated the damage and losses from pigs on Louisiana agriculture at $74 million a year, with sugarcane and rice farmers reporting the highest damage totals.
Just to keep the pig population at the current level, Gentry said, 70-75 percent of the current population would have to be eliminated.
Gentry said the AgCenter continues research into the use of sodium nitrite. The chemical, used as a food preservative, is lethal to pigs but it rapidly decomposes when exposed to air or water.
Different encapsulation materials are being tested, he said, that would prevent decomposition of sodium nitrite until pigs eat bait laced with the chemical. “I believe that is what is holding us up right now.”
Gentry said research has shown pigs are attracted to dried fish that can be used as bait, and the use of another invasive species, Asian carp, is being tested as bait. “Maybe we can kill two birds with one stone.”
He said getting the bait only to pigs is a challenge though, because other animals could be attracted to the material. He said some feeders have been invented that could prevent the bait from being eaten by other species.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has issued an experimental use permit for testing warfarin or rat poison on pigs, he said. That research is being conducted by Genesis Laboratories in Colorado.
Gentry said he is certain that a chemical will be approved to control hogs, but it will be sold as a restricted use pesticide. “It won’t be sold like rat poison.”
Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry veterinarian Dr. Jonathan Roberts said new feral swine regulations restrict where wild hogs can be relocated.
Relocation can only be done by authorized transporters, and wild hogs must be kept in a permitted facility. Roberts said hogs could be kept by individuals if the pens are approved by LDAF after an inspection.
Richard Vlosky, director of the LSU AgCenter Forestry Products Development Center, said a survey of farmers showed that half of the respondents had crop damage from pigs, and most disagreed that wild pigs are being managed effectively by state and federal agencies.
Glen Gentry can be reached at 225-683-5848 or ggentry@agcenter.lsu.edu Shaun Tanger can be reached at 225-578-0344 or stanger@agcenter.lsu.edu Richard Vlosky can be reached at 225-578-4527 or rvlosky@agcenter.lsu.edu

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