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FWC needs help with feral hogs on Hutton Unit
April 2, 2008
Contact: Fred Robinette, (850) 265-3676
Feral hogs have a reputation for destroying wildlife
habitat with their foraging habits and high reproductive rates. Nowhere
is that more clear than on the Blackwater Wildlife Management Area,
Hutton Unit, near Milton.
Due to extensive damage and a growing number of hogs on
the 5,243-acre area, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission (FWC) is offering five three-day hog hunts this spring and
summer. The hunts are the product of an agreement between the FWC and
the Florida Division of Forestry - the lead managing agency for
Blackwater River State Forest.
Hunt dates are May 23-25, June 20-22, July 18-20, Aug.
22-24 and Sept. 19-21. A total of five quota permits are available
for each three-day hunt. Up to two people may hunt per quota permit.
And, the best thing yet for some hunters is that
hog-dogs will be allowed during the hunts. Hunters will be limited to a
total of three dogs, however.
Hog hunting has been legal on the Hutton Unit since the
late 1990s, according to FWC wildlife biologist Fred Robinette.
"The trouble is they learn pretty quickly when still
hunters are there, and hogs change their habits. It's impossible to
harvest enough to control their numbers. I think they've taken a
half-dozen or so over the years," he said.
Robinette said hogs come out mostly at night, destroying
wildlife food plots of chufas, corn and wheat. Recent surveys show that
ground-nesting birds, such as quail, have declined in numbers on the
area, likely from hogs destroying their nests and ground cover.
Anyone interested in applying for the hunts can do so
beginning April 22 at 10 a.m. EDT through the Total Licensing System at
county tax collectors' offices or online on a first-come, first-served
basis at MyFWC.com/license.
There will be no size or bag limit on hogs. No live hogs
may be removed from the area.
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