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Online Hub Brings it all Together

To address the growing ecological and agricultural threat posed by invasive wild pigs, Canada is responding with the launch of Wild Pigs Canada. This new online hub was developed by Invasives Canada and Animal Health Canada in collaboration with the Invasive Wild Pig Leadership Group.

Wild Pigs Canada offers a central source for tools, information, and resources to address the threat of invasive wild pigs. This site will empower the public and interest groups to identify and report wild pigs, understand their impacts to Canada, and stay up to date on current initiatives to tackle the problem.

“Animal Health Canada is proud to be a collaborator on the new Wild Pigs Canada website that shares information to support the prevention, management and removal of invasive wild pigs from the Canadian landscape,” says Dr. Leigh Rosengren, industry co-chair on the Animal Health board of directors.

Invasive wild pigs are uncontained pigs that are not under human control. They are adaptable, elusive, and increasingly widespread in Canada. These animals destroy crops, damage natural habitats, and pose threats to native wildlife, livestock, pets, people, and ways of life. They can also spread or be a reservoir for diseases such as African swine fever (ASF).

ASF is a foreign animal disease of particular concern that is not yet in Canada. If introduced, wild pigs could rapidly spread the disease, with devastating impacts on domestic pigs, the swine industry and international trade.

In Canada, invasive wild pigs can be found in any province and territory, however the only known self-sustaining, established populations exist in parts of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. Their adaptability, combined with their wide-ranging economic, environmental and social impacts, demands a collaborative effort from all sectors and individuals nationwide.

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Ice makes reorganizing the sheep barns and moving sheep in preparation for lambing very hazardous - it looks more like sheep skating in an ice rink than walking in a barnyard! But, lambing season is quickly approaching, and we have the final group of ewes that require vaccinating prior to lambing, the last breeding rams need to be removed from breeding groups and tattooed, and the barns all need reorganizing to accommodate the new lambs that will be arriving shortly. So, in today’s sheep farming vlog at Ewetopia Farms, we can no longer wait for better weather conditions and must brave the treacherous ice and hope no one gets injured! This is Canadian sheep farming!