Estimating body mass of wild pigs (Sus scrofa) using body morphometrics

Author:

Baruzzi Carolina12ORCID,Snow Nathan P.3,Vercauteren Kurt C.3,Strickland Bronson K.2,Arnoult Jacques S.2,Fischer Justin W.3,Glow Michael P.3,Lavelle Michael J.3,Smith Benjamin A.3,Steakley Daryl2,Lashley Marcus A.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, North Florida Research and Education Center University of Florida Quincy Florida USA

2. Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Aquaculture Mississippi State University Mississippi State Mississippi USA

3. National Wildlife Research Center USDA/APHIS Fort Collins Colorado USA

4. Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractWild pigs (Sus scrofa) are invading many areas globally and impacting biodiversity and economies in their non‐native range. Thus, wild pigs are often targeted for eradication efforts. Age‐ and sex‐specific body measurements are important for informing these eradication efforts because they reflect body condition, resource availability, and fecundity, which are common indicators of population trajectory. However, body mass is often difficult to collect, especially on large individuals that require specialized equipment or multiple people to weigh. Measurements that can be rapidly taken by a single land or wildlife manager on any size wild pig without aid from specialized equipment would be beneficial if they accurately infer wild pig body mass. Our goals were to assess whether morphometric measurements could accurately predict wild pig body mass, and to provide tools to directly input these measures and estimate wild pig body mass. Using linear models, we quantified the relationship between body mass and morphometric measurements (i.e., body length, chest girth, ear length, eye to snout length, hindfoot length, shoulder length, and tail length) from a subset (n = 102) of wild pigs culled at the Mississippi Alluvial Valley, Mississippi, USA. We evaluated separate models for each individual morphometric measurement. We then used the model coefficients to develop equations to predict wild pig body mass. We validated these equations predicting body mass of 1592 individuals collected across eight areas in Australia, Guam, and the USA for cross‐validation. Each developed equation remained accurate when cross‐validated across regions. Body length, chest girth, and shoulder length were the morphometrics that best predicted wild pig body mass. Our analyses indicated it is possible to use the presented equations to infer wild pig body mass from simple metrics.

Funder

Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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