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Wild Pigs Kill More People Than Sharks, Shocking New Research Reveals
AgWeb.com ^ | April 16, 2024 | Chris Bennett

Posted on 06/15/2024 1:47:33 PM PDT by Twotone

Hogzilla or Jaws? More humans are killed annually by wild pigs than by sharks, a startling new study reveals. By slice, puncture, hook, and gouge, the global number of fatalities from wild pig attacks is rising by the decade.

Between 2014 and 2023, the average yearly number of fatal shark attacks worldwide was 5.8, while the average number of fatal wild pig attacks was 19.7. In 2024 alone, there have already been seven deaths from wild pig incidents.

According to groundbreaking research published in 2023, the number of humans killed by wild pig attacks steadily climbed from 2000 to 2019, for a total of 172 deaths—including a freakishly grisly fatality in southeast Texas.

“Most of the public doesn’t know the facts about wild pig attacks on humans,” says John J. Mayer, lead author of the study and wild pig research pioneer. “It’s not sharks, wolves, or bears that kill the most people—it’s wild pigs, and the numbers are consistently trending up.”

1,532 Attacks and 172 Deaths

In 1973, well before the global pig bomb exploded, Mayer began noting wild pigs’ capacity for habitat destruction. At a steady drip, he also heard anecdotes of pig attacks on humans. Although many of the stories initially could not be verified, by the 1990s Mayer accumulated a folder bulging with confirmed encounters, and in 2013, he published research detailing wild pig attacks.

The public reaction to his findings surprised Mayer: “I got a significant number of negative responses from people who refused to believe wild pigs were dangerous. I had people telling me the stories of attacks on humans were pure nonsense. Interestingly, if you asked those same people about sharks, they would, to a person, say that sharks are dangerous.”

A decade later, after collating a global dragnet of sources with colleagues James Garabedian and John Kilgo, both USDA wildlife biologists, Mayer published Human Fatalities Resulting From Wild Pig Attacks Worldwide: 2000–2019, and the report is packed with eye-opening detail: 1,532 wild pig attacks on humans from 2000-2019, resulting in 172 human deaths in 29 countries.

Of the 172 fatalities, 88% occurred in non-hunting circumstances; 77% of victims died due to blood loss; 86% of attacks occurred in daylight; 84% of victims were male and 62% of victims were adults; 38% of attacks involved farm workers engaged in agriculture; almost all attacks were by solitary pigs, except for 20 encounters featuring multiple pigs; and average pig size in each incident was 240 lb.

“Tigers, Indian elephants, Nile crocodiles, and venomous snakes kill more people than wild pigs, but wild pigs are certainly worse than bears, wolves, and all shark species put together,” says Mayer, technical program manager at the Savannah River National Laboratory in Aiken, S.C. “Wild pigs are nowhere near the worst of the worst, but they’re far more dangerous than people believe.”

“These attacks can be horrific,” Mayer adds. “Typically, wild pigs don’t bother anyone if they don’t feel threatened, but they can deliver tremendous damage to the human body in a matter of seconds in a very gruesome manner. We found that in fatal attacks, 55% of people died on the scene. A wild pig is at the waist to knee range for most humans, and when pigs slash in that area, they do tremendous damage to the arterial system.”

Sincerely. Boars deliver stab-and-slash wounds, often around the groin area, with tusks that operate as nails and razors.

7x Predatory

Boar tusks are extremely sharp, with 60-70% of a canine enclosed in the jaw and roughly 1”-4” outside the socket. The upper and lower tusks rub against one another each time a boar opens and closes its mouth, honing the lower tusks into cutters via a perpetual sharpening process.

“Boars punch holes with their tusks, making rough-edged slashes and gouges,” Mayer describes. “They can also break bones with a powerful bite. Sows have smaller tusks, proportionally almost like dogs, so a sow tends to bite, rather than stab or slash. Therefore, most fatal attacks are by males with large canines, and often to the inner leg and femoral artery. On top of that, they can run in short bursts up to 30 to 35 miles per hour.”

Mayer’s benchmark report makes clear that almost all fatal wild pig attacks are associated with defensive behaviors. However, he documented seven attacks “during which the pig’s behaviors appeared to be predatory.”

“If they can get their mouths around something, they’ll eat it. It’s rare, but without question, they sometimes attack unprovoked,” Mayer notes. “We found one case in India where a young girl was walking with her father when a wild pig emerged from brush, grabbed her and picked her up in its jaws, and carried her away. The father gave chase and caught up, but both the father and daughter ended up in the hospital and the little girl died from her wounds.”

“And then there was the 2019 case in Texas where a lady endured the worst,” he adds. “That case is as terrible as it gets.”

As in, maneater. Wild pigs as maneaters.

Feeding Frenzy

The Sunday before Thanksgiving, Nov. 24, 2019, arguably ranks as the most savage wild pig attack on record.

As caregiver at the home of an elderly couple living in rural Chambers County, Christine Rollins, 59, arrived to work at roughly 6 a.m., in clockwork fashion. Rollins parked a Chrysler sedan in the yard of the well-kept property, directly beside the driveway, and exited her vehicle. She likely was dead within minutes, partially consumed while alive.

At approximately 7:45 a.m. law enforcement arrived at the property and found Rollins—5’1” and 130 lb.—on her back against the manicured lawn, 6’ from the Chrysler. Rollins’ clothing was torn away. A shirt and jacket were bunched high on her torso; pants and shoes were gone.

Her body, head to toe, was a roadmap of injuries—bites, punctures, and lacerations, including large portions of her legs devoid of flesh. Gone. Eaten.

Arriving on site as an investigation unfolded, nothing in Sheriff Brian Hawthorne’s 35-year southeast Texas career prepared him for the scene.

“I’d never seen anything like it in my life,” he recalls. “Miss Rollins was annihilated. A third of her body was mutilated and in ghastly condition. We could see that she’d been attacked by wild animals and we could see clear signs of hog rooting in the yard. The area around the property was rural and partially wooded, and the elderly owners told us they had major wild hog problems.”

“The owners also had two dogs outside, a 14-year-old Lab and a dachshund, a classic wiener dog. The Lab was extremely friendly toward us and was happy to see the deputies.”

Designated as an “unknown death,” the incident automatically triggered a criminal investigation. Hawthorne reserved judgement, pending an autopsy.

The autopsy was telltale.

“It was tragic. Miss Rollins bled to death,” Hawthorne says. “She had wounds over her whole body, but the lower extremities were horrific. People tried to attribute the attack to dogs, but the evidence was clearly to the contrary. The pathologist found no canine bites on the body. There certainly were bites and tusk marks of all sizes and different widths, but they were made by hogs. Material was sent to labs for DNA testing, and those results confirmed the wild hog attack.”

“It can only be speculation, but we believe she exited her car while the wild pigs were coming around the house,” he continues. “Initially, she was an obstruction, but then became the center of a feeding frenzy by multiple adult hogs and multiple juveniles of various sizes. I’d compare it to the frenzy of domesticated pigs when slop is dumped in a pen, or the frenzy normally associated with sharks at feeding.”

Glaringly, the 2019 wild pig attack in Chambers County accords with Mayer’s research and study. “Every part of me wishes Christine Rollins’ death was attributable to something other than wild hogs, but every bit of evidence says it’s not so,” Hawthorne concludes. “This attack was an exception, but I tell people all the time: Wild hogs are problematic and a danger to be around. Period.”

No More Skeptics

Why do most of the attacks and deaths from wild pigs go unnoticed? Over half (51%) of all fatal pig attacks occur in India, followed by China (8%), with the U.S. well behind at six recorded fatalities in the past 100 years, as noted in Human Fatalities Resulting From Wild Pig Attacks Worldwide: 2000–2019.

However, the attack rate is trending up everywhere, Mayer says. “In the last 30 years, the global wild pig population has exploded, and we expect encounters to climb alongside, and now the news media is also catching up and the data is more available. In America, for example, I’m certain there were more wild pig fatalities in the past century, but those accounts were never documented. No doubt, there are more lost in family histories.”

In the early 1970s, when Mayer first began giving presentations on wild pig expansion, he was met with puzzled looks and a frequent question: “Why study an animal with no relevance?”

Fifty years later, with the U.S. wild pig population ballooning to 7 million, and annual damage to the agriculture economy at $1.5 billion, according to USDA estimates, no one questions Mayer over the impact of wild pigs.

“You hear about shark attacks all the time in the news, but you almost never hear about wild pig attacks. I hope our study increases awareness about wild pigs and makes people more cautious,” he says. “Wild pig attacks are rare and fatal attacks are rarer, but the rate is still much, much higher than people think—high enough to place wild pigs over sharks in cause of death.”

Sincerely. By the numbers, Hogzilla defeats Jaws.


TOPICS: Agriculture; Outdoors; Pets/Animals
KEYWORDS: livestock; pigs; sharks; wildpigs
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To: metmom

Nope. New poison that kills without passing on toxin, sodium nitrite (the secret ingredient in bacon). Pig falls asleep and dies if it was a lethal dose, if not a lethal dose wakes up from a nap.


61 posted on 06/15/2024 3:53:46 PM PDT by Cold Heart
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

I didn’t mean to imply that any animal isn’t welcome.

Yes, some are beneficial, but if they show a pattern of aggressive or destructive behavior and the person does not control them or try to, but allows it to continue after being talked to, IMO, all bets are off.


62 posted on 06/15/2024 3:56:52 PM PDT by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus…)
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To: Cold Heart

Tha5’s good. At least, if you catch it asleep, it’s easier to dispatch. Won’t fight back.


63 posted on 06/15/2024 3:58:33 PM PDT by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus…)
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To: Twotone

When walking half a mile through brush in South Texas, just before dusk, there is nothing like the sound, on two sides, of multiple wild boar, clicking their tusks, to fill you with a resolution to never find yourself in that position again, without a firearm.


64 posted on 06/15/2024 4:02:53 PM PDT by Pilsner
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To: ifinnegan

Hog-nado.

Hogzilla.

Hogzilla vs. Gypsy Mothra

Hogs of the Corn

Zombie Hog

Night of the Living Hogs

How Fast Can You Run

Maws

Frankenhog

The Hogman

Big Ass Hog

Moby Hog

the Hogs

This could revive lagging box office revenue in Hollyweird. If only they still had any imagination left and didn’t just keep copying copies of copies of copies of homage to early 20th century film makers and rehash the same crap… oh, is that what I was suggesting? Never mind. There’s MONEY to be made.

An additional benefit would be to keep city-dwellers the hell away from my farm out in the country and stop building all those micro mcmansions popping up in clusters of 5-20 sucking up all the ground water from the aquifer.


65 posted on 06/15/2024 4:05:30 PM PDT by normbal (normbal. somewhere in socialist occupied America ‘tween MD and TN)
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To: chajin

Hognado
***********
No — hogmagedden.


66 posted on 06/15/2024 4:06:28 PM PDT by Socon-Econ (adi)
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To: metmom

Texas has already done this.


67 posted on 06/15/2024 4:14:30 PM PDT by szweig (HYHEY Have You Had Enough Yet??!?)
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To: ifinnegan

I remember a movie in the 1980s about a giant hog in Australia. Here in the Ozarks the wild hogs shot are left to rot as they are usually infected with psudo-rabies.


68 posted on 06/15/2024 4:21:00 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar ( Government is not reason, it is not eloquence-it is force!--G. Washington)
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To: marktwain

Ping! You could start a new discussion about defending against pigs with handguns.


69 posted on 06/15/2024 4:27:59 PM PDT by Disambiguator
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To: Twotone
It also bears mention that swine are not native to the Americas. These all are an invasive species, starting with pigs that Columbus brought on his second voyage in 1493 that escaped or were left behind. The enviro-weenies shouldn't have any heartburn with exterminating them. These are not Conquistadores brought that escaped. escaped
70 posted on 06/15/2024 4:34:13 PM PDT by Paal Gulli
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To: Twotone

Yes, but what about sharks with laser beams attached to their heads.


71 posted on 06/15/2024 4:46:15 PM PDT by Seruzawa ("The Political left is the Garden of Eden of incompetence" - Marx the Smarter (Groucho))
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To: Eleutheria5

I worked in a pig feeding operation.
One sick pig got loose in another operation and it infected all the other pigs.
The operation lost their @$$


72 posted on 06/15/2024 4:50:18 PM PDT by South Dakota (Patriotism is the new terrorism .)
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To: Round Earther

we’re going to need a bigger condo!


73 posted on 06/15/2024 4:53:14 PM PDT by CVS-20
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To: sasquatch

Pork … it’s why God invented pigs…


74 posted on 06/15/2024 6:04:20 PM PDT by NFHale (The Second Amendment - By Any Means Necessary.)
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Define “wild pig”


75 posted on 06/15/2024 6:05:06 PM PDT by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist! )
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To: Gene Eric
Feral is probably a better word.

There are no true wild pigs in North America. Just Peccaries. Same order, different family.

76 posted on 06/15/2024 6:56:44 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear ( Roses are red, Violets are blue, I love being on the government watch list, along with all of you.)
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To: Twotone

... and you can’t even avoid them by staying out if the water.


77 posted on 06/15/2024 7:12:10 PM PDT by Salman (It's not a slippery slope if it was part of the program all along. )
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To: metmom

Texas has already done this.


78 posted on 06/15/2024 7:15:21 PM PDT by szweig (HYHEY Have You Had Enough Yet??!?)
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To: NFHale

As Alton Brown has said: “Good Eats”


79 posted on 06/15/2024 7:21:24 PM PDT by sasquatch (Do NOT forget Ashli Babbit! c/o piytar)
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To: guitar Josh

I wonder what kills more people a year, an AR-15 or wild pigs?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
People with an AR-15 or with some other deadly weapon kill a far greater number of people than are killed by wild animals, including pigs. Of course “deadly” weapons only become deadly when people, intentionally or accidentally misuse them.


80 posted on 06/15/2024 7:37:52 PM PDT by fortes fortuna juvat (Biden left our troops to die in Afghanistan and our military equipment to our enemy. Never forget.)
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