I.
History
and Description
Wild
boars are not native to North America. They were brought here from Europe,
first by the Spanish explorers in the 1500’s (for food) and later in the 1900’s
by people who wanted to hunt the pigs for sport. The wild boars you see today
are the great grandchildren of the European boars brought here a long time ago.
They are NOT pink with curly tails. Wild boars are large - sometimes 5 feet
long, and weigh up to 300 pounds. They have stiff black fur and straight tails.
The males (boys) have tusks that curl out of their mouth. They are not long
tusks like an elephant’s, but they are still 2-5 inches long and can really
hurt you! Sometimes wild boars will breed with pot-bellied pigs. The babies
will grow up to have black fur and straight tails, but they may have fat
bellies and a white stripe on their foreheads.
There are 23 subspecies of hogs worldwide (most of
them warty), but there is only one species in the US: Sus scrofa. (The family is
Suidae, thus the hog call, "sui".) Just as our countless breeds of
dogs were all derived from the wolf, our varieties of domestic hogs and their
feral relatives were all derived from the Eurasian Wild Boar. They are
incidentally not at all related to the southwest's javalina (collared peccary).
The ancestors of the hog go back to the Ice Age, and
their domestication was somewhere between 5000 to 9000 years ago. The American
continents have no native hogs as the cold, snow and glaciers of the Ice Age
blocked the hog's access to the North American Continent.
Columbus in 1493 brought 8 hogs to the West Indies.
Importation to the American mainland was in the mid 1500's by Cortez and De
Soto, and in the mid 1600's by La Salle. Pure Eurasian boar were not brought
here until they were imported for sport hunting in the early 1900's.
In the US the pure Eurasian hog is classed as an
exotic, and the rest of the wild boar--originally domestic animals gone wild--are
technically feral, but in common use the term feral is reserved for only the
domestic hogs that have more recently gone wild.
II.
Wild
Boar found on the Philippines
"BABOY
RAMO" (WILD PIG)
"Baboy ramo" refers to several wild pig
species found in the Philippines. There are four (4) recognized wild pig
species that are endemic to the Philippines and occurs through most of the
country, the Philippine Warty Pig(Sus philippensis),
the Visayan Warty Pig (Sus cebifrons), the Mindoro
Warty Pig (Sus oliveri) and the Palawan Bearded Pig (Sus
ahoenobarbus).
Philippine Warty Pig (Sus philippensis)
Status: Vulnerable
The robustly built Philippine warty
pig has a coarse, bristly, blackish coat with a scattering of silvery white
hairs on the sides. Long, stiff hairs form a crest running down the middle of
the back, which is particularly conspicuous in males during the breeding season
when if forms a prominent mane over the head crest and neck. The medium-length
tail has a tuft of long, black hairs at the tip, used to swat away flies and
signal mood.
The Philippine warty pig has a long
snout, terminating in a flat, mobile disc with the nostrils in the centre. The
teeth are well-developed, with the large upper and lower canines forming
laterally and upwardly protruding tusks in males. It has relatively small eyes
and ears, and its narrow feet have four toes, but only the two central toes are
used for walking
Visayan Warty Pig (Sus cebifrons) - also known as Oliver’s
Warty Pig
Status: Critically Endangered
The
Visayan warty pig is a little-known, small, forest-dwelling pig that has only
recently been recognised as a separate species. The males (boars) are much
larger than females (sows) and, uniquely amongst wild pigs, develop crests and
manes that are up to 23 cm long during the breeding season. Sows have only 3
pairs of nipples, a feature that was previously thought to be unique to the
pygmy hog (Sus salvanius).
Mindoro Warty Pig (Sus oliveri)
Status: Endangered
The Mindoro Warty Pig was recognized
as a separate species from Sus philippensis. It is known from four skulls and a
mounted head collected in 1993 now in the Field Museum in Chicago, USA.
Palawan Bearded Pig (Sus ahoenobarbus)
Status: Vulnerable
Palawan bearded pig has an elongated
skull and a dense tuft of coarse, white hair surrounding the cheek and snout.
Supported on long legs, its large body is reddish-brown to black and sparsely
haired. The male is slightly larger than the female and has small but marked
facial warts, which are thought to provide protection during head-to-head
fights.
Threat and Conservation
The Philippine wild pigs are
technically fully protected by Philippine law. Unfortunately, however, the
generally extreme levels of deforestation on most islands on which they occur,
coupled with intense hunting pressure, inadequate legal protection and the poor
enforcement of existing legislation even within most protected areas, have
resulted in the systematic decline of all Philippine populations of these
animals. To improve these pigs’ situation, programs to educate local people and
to alter their negative attitudes towards wild pigs have been recommended.
Further research into its exact distribution, status, and biology has also been
suggested, which will help inform any conservation or management plan for the
Philippine wild pigs.
III.
Wild Boar
Wild boar classification and evolution
The Wild Boar is a species of Wild Pig, native to the forests of Europe, north-west Africa and it is also found
throughout Asia. The Wild Boar has an extremely wide distribution with the
number of estimated Wild Boar subspecies ranging from 4 to 25. Naturally, it is
hard to classify them all as they can easily interbreed, so it is widely agreed
that there are four main subspecies which are determined by their location.
They are all very similar in size and appearance, but tend to vary somewhat in
colour, depending on their geographic location. The Wild Boar is an extremely
adaptable animal as it is found in a variety of different habitats, eats almost anything that will fit
in it's mouth and not only runs fast, but also swims well too. They are also
commonly known as European Wild Pigs, Hogs or simply Boars.
Wild boar
Anatomy and Appearance
The Wild Boar is a medium-sized mammal with a large head and front end, that leads into a
smaller hind. They have a thick and course double coat of fur, that consists of
a harder, bristly top layer, with a softer undercoat beneath it. The hair that
runs along the ridge of the Wild Boar's back is also longer than the rest. The
Wild Boar varies from brown, to black, to red or dark grey in colour, something
which generally depends on the individual's location. For example Wild Boar
individuals found in Western Europe tend to be brown, where those
inhabiting the forests of Eastern Europe can be completely black in
colour. The Wild Boar has incredibly poor eyesight due to it's very small-sized
eyes, but they also have a long, straight snout which enables them to have an
incredibly acute sense of smell.
Wild boar Distribution and Habitat
The Wild Boar is the most widely distributed land mammal on Earth as it's native range extends from
Western Europe, right across to Japan to the east, and down to the rainforestsof Indonesia in the south. The four
separate subspecies are determined by their location with one inhabiting Europe, north-western Africa and western Asia; another is found across
northern Asia and in Japan; the third inhabits the tropical jungles
of India, South East Asiaand the Far East, with the last
being found only in Indonesia. Wild Boars are found in a variety of
different habitats including tropical jungles and grasslands, but they tend to favour deciduous
broad-leafed forests where the vegetation is incredibly dense.
Wild boar
behavior and Lifestyle
Wild Boar are nocturnal animals that only come out at night to forage for food. They
spend around 12 hours sleeping in a dense nest of leaves during the day, before
waking up to find a meal under the cover of night. Female Wild Boars are
relatively sociable animals, inhabiting loose territories in groups known as sounders
which can contain between 6 and 30 individuals. Sounders consist of breeding
females and their young and can often be found in the same area as other
groups, although the two tend not to mix. Males however, are solitary for the
majority of the year, with the exception of during the breeding season when
they can be found in close proximity of both the sounders, and indeed other
males. Male Wild Boar compete with one another by fighting for the chance to
mate with a female.
Wild boar
Reproduction and Life Cycles
Once mated the female Wild Boar gives birth to 4 - 6 piglets
in a nest found in a dense thicket, which is made up of leaves, grasses and
moss. The mother remains with her piglets solidly for the first couple of weeks
to protect them from hungry predators. Wild Boar piglets are incredibly distinctive animals as they have light brown fur, with cream and brown
stripes that run the length of their backs. Although these stripes begin to
disappear when the piglets are between 3 and 4 months old, they prove to
camouflage the Wild Boar young into the debris on the forest floor, very
effectively. Once they are two months old, the piglets begin to venture out of
the nest on short foraging trips, before they become independent at around 7
months old and are almost red in colour. The fur of the Wild Boar does not
reach adult colouration until the animal is about a year old.
Wild boar
Diet and Prey
The Wild Boar is an omnivorous animal that primarily feeds on plants. Plant matter comprises
around 90% of the Wild Boar's diet as they feed on young leaves,
berries, grasses and fruits, and unearth roots and bulbs from the ground with
their hard snouts. Living in highly seasonal regions, Wild Boars have had to
adapt to the changing fruits and flowers, and are known to favour the
protein-rich nuts (such as acorns) that become available in the autumn and
prepare them for the winter ahead. They will however, eat almost anything that
will fit into their mouths, and supplement their diet by eating eggs, Mice, Lizards, Worms and even Snakes. Wild Boar will also happily finish
off the abandoned kill of another animal.
IV.
Wild
boar Facts
Animalia
|
|
Chordata
|
|
Mammalia
|
|
Artiodactyla
|
|
Suidae
|
|
Sus
|
|
Sus scrofa
|
|
Wild Boar
|
|
Other Name(s):
|
Wild Pig, Wild Hog, Boar
|
Mammal
|
|
Number Of Species:
|
4
|
Location:
|
Throughout Europe and Asia
|
Deciduous broad-leaf forests
|
|
Brown, Red, Black, Grey
|
|
Fur
|
|
55cm - 100cm (21.6in - 39.3in)
|
|
80kg - 175kg (176lbs - 386lbs)
|
|
48kph (30mph)
|
|
Diet:
|
Omnivore
|
Prey:
|
Berries, Roots, Worms
|
Tiger, Wolves, Humans
|
|
Nocturnal
|
|
Group Behaviour:
|
Sounder
|
15 - 20 years
|
|
Age Of Sexual Maturity:
|
7 - 10 months
|
Gestation Period:
|
3 - 4 months
|
5
|
|
Name Of Young:
|
Piglet
|
Age Of Weaning:
|
2 - 3 months
|
Least Concern
|
|
Estimated Population Size:
|
Sustainable
|
Biggest Threat:
|
Habitat loss
|
Most Distinctive Feature:
|
Long, hard and straight snout
|
Fun Fact:
|
Males have a top tusk to sharpen
the bottom one!
|
V.
Breeding Wild Boar( hogs)
Wild hogs will breed year round, but births peak in
spring and fall. Gestation is 114 days, and a sow will give birth to anywhere
from 1 to a dozen piglets. She can have 2 litters a year.
The sow is a superb protectoress of her young. Sows can form cooperative groups, and in danger will place their piglets in the center of their vicious circle of snapping, foaming jaws. It is not necessary to threaten a piglet to invoke the wrath of the sow...like a bear sow, just being near her young one can be enough provocation.
Maternal family groups can travel together as well as back each other against danger. These groups are called "drifts" or "sounders". The boars though are solitary.
Boars will mate with any sow in season, often battling for the opportunity, and do not remain to perform any familial duties.
The sow is a superb protectoress of her young. Sows can form cooperative groups, and in danger will place their piglets in the center of their vicious circle of snapping, foaming jaws. It is not necessary to threaten a piglet to invoke the wrath of the sow...like a bear sow, just being near her young one can be enough provocation.
Maternal family groups can travel together as well as back each other against danger. These groups are called "drifts" or "sounders". The boars though are solitary.
Boars will mate with any sow in season, often battling for the opportunity, and do not remain to perform any familial duties.
One of our wild sows and her nursing piglets.
The same family unit walking off due to my presence
at 100 yards. Had I been approaching they would have run off at top speed. The
mother sows truly are fearless when they think their pigs are threatened.
VI.
Native pig production
Native pigs are important sources of income,
food and manure on small farms. Native pigs are sold to friends and neighbors,
used during special occasions or serve as a profitable part-time job for family
members. These pigs are considered sturdy and are more resistant to various hog
diseases. They can survive on kitchen wastes and farm-grown feeds or farm
by-products.
Backyard swine raisers
may prefer to raise native pigs than the imparted breeds of swine mainly due to
the scarcity of capital resources to purchase initial stock and to build a
house/pen and to provide commercial feeds
Comparison.
|
|
UPGRADED
|
PURE BREED
|
Age (from birth to market) native
|
7-9 months
|
7 months
|
4.5-5.5 months
|
Carcass weight
|
40 kilos
|
50 kilos
|
60-70 kilos
|
Low-cost
housing/pen of native pigs
Considerations:
1. Site - Elevated, near
water source
2.
Orientation - East to west orientation; with this type of orientation, floor of
the pen is kept dry.
3.
Roofing materials - Cogon, nipa, used G.l. sheets
4.
Flooring materials
a. Cement
- Thickness: 3.5-4"
(88.9-102 mm)
- Preparation: 1 part cement, 3 parts gravel, 2.5 parts sand, 2/3 parts water
- Preparation: 1 part cement, 3 parts gravel, 2.5 parts sand, 2/3 parts water
b. Wood slabs c. Bamboo
5. Space requirement for
two heads of pigs: 2 sq m
6.
Sidings: bamboo
Note:
Gliricidia and Leucaena are not applicable since these could be eaten up by the
pigs.
Height
of sidings:
36" (914 mm) for
fatteners and breeders
30" (762 mm) for weanlings and starters
30" (762 mm) for weanlings and starters
7.
Feeding and watering trough materials used:
a. cement
b. wood
c. bamboo
d. halved-tire
Low-cost housing/pen of native pigs
b. wood
c. bamboo
d. halved-tire
Low-cost housing/pen of native pigs
Feeds and Feeding
Common
ways of preparing feeds
1.
Grinding
This
would depend on the age of the animal to be fed. Young animals do not have
fully developed digestive system, hence, there is a need for grains to undergo
the process.
Example: Corn
Example: Corn
2.
Cooking
Through
this process, the feeding value of some feed stuff is increased. Likewise,
calcium oxalate which causes itchiness is destroyed.
Examples: Beans and gabi
Examples: Beans and gabi
Feeding management
Weight
|
No. of Feeding time
|
Feeding system
|
Average Daily Intake
|
10 kgs (12.2 Ibs)
|
4x a day
|
Dry feeding
|
1-2 kgs a day
|
45 kgs (99 lbs)
|
3x a day
|
Wet feeding
|
2.2 kgs a day
|
55 kgs (121 lbs)
|
2-3x a day
|
Wet feeding
|
2.5 kgs a day
|
Considerations:
1. The number of feeding
time presented would minimize feed wastage.
Note:
Decrease the amount of feed given to animals with diarrhea.
2. Dry feeding is recommended
for starters since they still have less feed intake; that way, spoilage of
feeds is minimized.
Examples of Feedstuff for native pigs
|
Parts used
|
A. Protein sources
|
|
1. Madre de Cacao
|
Leaves, stems,
|
Gliricidia sepium
|
flowers, fruits
|
Kakawat
|
|
2. Ipil-ipil
|
Leaves, stems,
|
Leucaena leucocephala
|
flowers, fruits
|
3. Cowpea
|
Leaves, stems,
|
Visna sinensis
|
flowers, fruits
|
Paayap
|
|
4. Hyacinth bean
|
Leaves, stems,
|
Dolichos lablab
|
flowers, fruits
|
Batao
|
|
B. Energy sources
|
|
1. Corn
|
Grain
|
Zea mays
|
|
Mais
|
|
2. Cassava
|
Root
|
Manihot esculenta
|
|
Kamoteng kahoy, balinghoy
|
|
3. Sweet potato
|
Root
|
Ipomoea batatas
|
|
Kamote
|
|
4. Taro
|
Root
|
Colocasia esculenta
|
|
Gabi
|
|
5. Ubi
|
Tuber
|
Dioscora alata
|
|
Ubi
|
|
6. Arrow root
|
Root
|
Maranta arudinacea
|
|
Uraro
|
|
7. Tugul
|
Root
|
Dioscorea esculenta
|
|
C. Vitamin and mineral sources
|
|
1 Malunggay
|
Leaves, stems, flowers, fruits
|
Moringa oleifera
|
|
Malunggay, kalunggay
|
|
2. Amaranth
|
Leaves
|
Amaranthas spinosus
|
|
Uray, kulitis
|
|
3. Sweet potato
|
Leaves, vines
|
Impomea batatas
|
|
Kamote
|
|
4. Gabi
|
Leaves, petiole
|
Colocassia esculenta
|
|
D. Water sources
|
|
1. Sweet potato
|
Leaves, stems,
|
Ipomea batatas
|
flowers
|
Kamote
|
|
2. Kangkong (upland)
|
Leaves, stems
|
Ipomea aquatica
|
|
Native
pig diseases and Their Common causes and treatment
Disease
|
Transmission
|
Signs/symptoms
|
Treatment
|
A. Bacterial
|
|
||
1. Swine
|
Dirty feeds, water and pen
|
Acute form - lameness, vomiting, diarrhea, reddening of skin in
thighs and abdomen
|
Decoction of guava or caimito leaves
|
Erysipelas
|
Nose
|
Chronic form - recurring lameness
|
Penicillin Streptomycin
|
|
Open wounds
|
Urticarial form - fever, anorexia, reddening of skin in abdomen,
inner thighs, chest and back (diamond-shape)
|
|
2. Colibacillosis
|
Dirty feeds and water
|
Whitish to yellowish diarrhea
|
Decoction of guava or caimito leaves
|
|
Unsanitary condition of peo
|
Anorexia
|
Coco juice
|
|
Spoiled feedstuff
|
Swollen eyelids
|
Antibiotic
|
|
|
|
Trimethoprim
|
|
|
|
Sulfa preparation
|
B. Viral
|
|||
Diseases due to virus are difficult to treat. There is no
specific medication to combat the disease. Antibiotics, vitamins and minerals
are given to fight secondary bacterial infections.
|
|||
1. Hog cholera
|
Contact with discharges from sick pig
|
Vascular discharge
|
Serum
|
|
Dirty feeds, water and pen
|
High fever
|
Vitamin and minerals
|
|
|
Diarrhea, then constipation
|
Tetracycline
|
|
|
|
Coco juice
|
2. Foot and mouth disease
|
Contact with discharges from sick pig
|
Drooling of saliva
|
Gentian violet saturated with alum
|
|
|
Anorexia (inappetence)
|
|
|
|
Vesicles in mouth, hooves and udder
|
|
C. Parasitic
|
|
||
1. Mange/Scabies
|
Contact with infested pigs
|
Frequent scratching
|
Apply used motor oil all over the belly
|
|
|
Alopecia (hair loss)
|
Extracts of kakawati
|
|
|
Untriftiness
|
|
|
|
Thickening of skin
|
|
2. Lice (oflenly seen in less hairy areas of the body
|
Contact with infested pigs
|
Unthriftiness
|
Raw seeds of kakawati
|
|
Voracious eater but poor feed conversion
|
Thick, rough hair
|
Raw seeds of ipil-ipil
|
|
|
Raw seeds of squash
|
|
Vaccination
program for native pigs
Vaccine
|
First dose
|
Next dose
|
|
|
|
1. Hog cholera
|
45 days old
|
after 6 months
|
|
|
|
2. FMD
|
1-2 months
|
after 6 months
|
|
|
Note: Consider disease
indicence in the area as to which vaccine would have given first
Herbal
medicine
Plant
|
Parts used
|
Indication
|
Preparation
|
1. Sambong Blumea balsamifera
|
Leaves
|
Colds
|
Boil leaves in water. Give 0.5-1.0 liter as drench 2x a day for
1-5 days.
|
|
|
Fever
|
|
|
|
Diarrhea
|
|
2. Ipi-ipil
|
Seeds
|
Roundworms
|
Grind and mix seeds into 5-8 oz of water. Given as drench.
|
Leucaena leucocephala
Note: This is contraindicated with pregnant sows/gilt. |
|||
3. Squash
|
Seeds
|
Tapeworms
|
Mix raw seeds in feeds.
|
Cucurbita maxima
|
|
|
|
4. Starapple Chrysophyllum cainito
|
Leaves
|
Diarrhea
|
Boil 1 kg of leaves in 1 liter of water for 15 minutes Give 1
cup 2x a day for 1-3 days
|
5. Saba Musa sapientum
|
Leaves
|
Diarrhea
|
Chop leaves and mix with feeds.
|
6. Madre de Cacao Gliricidia sepium
|
Seeds
|
Roundworms
|
Mix seeds with feeds.
|
7. Malunggay Moringa oleifera
|
Leaves
|
Anemia
|
Give 1 cc extract for day old pigs, once 9 day for 3-5 days (if
necessary).
|
8. Guava
Psidium guajava |
Leaves
|
Diarrhea
|
Boil leaves and give 1-2 glasses of decoction 2-3x a day for 1-2
days.
|
VII.
Success Stories
Native swine project helps raise farmers’
income
(The Philippine Star) | Updated June
30, 2013 - 12:00am
MANILA,
Philippines - A native pig project in Bondoc Peninsula has succeeded in raising
the income of farmers by P33,700 in two years just from selling piglets.
It
also opens bigger opportunities for them to sell the specialty pigs for
“lechon” or roasted pig.
The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) is replicating
the success of this native pigs multiplier project funded by the Bureau
of Agricultural Research (BAR).
The project is being implemented by the University of the
Philippines Los BaƱos (UPLB) Agricultural Systems Cluster-College of
Agriculture in two barangays located in two municipalities in Bondoc
Peninsula, Quezon-Brgy. Latangan of Mulanay and Brgy. San Juan of San
Narciso.
Rural farmers’ income there traditionally reaches
only between P5,000 to P6,000 yearly according to ipon-philippines.org.
That income is now being raised by as much
as two to three times by the Native Swine Project (NSP).
“A farmer with two sows, each producing seven weanlings
three times in two years will have added income of P33,700 from piglet sales
alone,” said Dr. Mary Jean G. Bulatao, UPLB Native Swine Project (NSP) team
leader.
BAR
is committed to implementing Phase 2 which expands the program to Real
and Infanta, also in Quezon. The first phase was implemented from July 2009 to
October 2011.
“We want to raise livelihood opportunities in these mostly
upland areas. Their increased production of native hogs will also enable them
to meet a requirement for a specialty product that has a growing market in
Metro Manila,” said
Dos por Cinco
The Native Swine Project’s production and repayment scheme has worked well in the
selected Bondoc Peninsula communities.
Each farmer-beneficiary received two ready-to-breed gilts
(the Dos part), enabling the farmers to have a year-round supply of
piglets.
As observed in the community, a native
sow normally farrows or gives birth to piglets two times in 14
months. This produces an average of 28 piglets.
The project also provided five weanlings or piglets (the
Cinco part) to farmers for immediate fattening. This generates cash
for the farmers in three to four months which provides cash while the
farmers waiting for the gilts (young female pig) to produce
piglets.
Hardwork
Dos por Cinco is not just a dole out system that is here
today and gone tomorrow. It encourages farmers to work hard by contributing
something to the project.
The
farmers’ contribution is land, at least a 1,000 square meters (sq.m), and
labor.
They have to plant their farms with feed resources such as gabing San Fernando, madre de agua, and some
herbal plants for supplements.
GSF corn is a tubelike portion of the GSF’s stembase and
forms part of the main root system. It is also used as a planting material. It
is locally called sakwa or bungo in Bondoc Peninsula.
“The project promoted the use of sakwa (a by-product) as
the main source of energy feed for ranging native swine to improve nutrient
availability and increase the average daily gain of the animals,” said Bulatao.
GSF, according to UPLB researcher Virgilio T.
Villancio can substitute corn as a feed source by 60 to 90 percent as the
feed ingredient’s energy source.
GSF is now a valued feed product with its cormlet as
food and sakwa as feed. Sakwa for native swine feed is now sold at P120
per sack in the market. It was only thought as waste before and given away
free-of-charge.
The farmers also have to construct a simple animal shed to
protect animals from the harsh environment. They have to care for
the animals, and put up fences to block stray animals from destroying the
farm.
Profitable
Native
pig business can be profitable.
For
a 25-kilo pig, a farmer can enjoy a P780 income per head.
If a farmer decides to raise five heads in one cycle (five
to six months), or a total of 10 heads per year, he will have an added income
of P7,800 yearly.
Based on the project’s data, native sows can produce
an average of seven live piglets in a litter. A farmer with
two sows producing seven weanlings each, two times in 14 months , can have an
added income of about P22,484 in 14 months or about P33,700 per two years
from piglets alone.
“These may be modest added returns but very important to
the farmers. These become a significant buffer income in times of
unexpected needs. Farmers are now starting to treat this activity as a business
enterprise,” said Bulatao.
Paying back
Farmers
pay for the Dos por Cinco gilts and fattening weanlings by giving back
piglets.
They are considered debt-free once they give back the
number of piglets whose price is equal to the purchase cost of the loaned
animals.
Their piglet payments become part of a multiplier program.
These are re-loaned to other organization members.
At the start, the project had 12 farmer partners – six in
each of the barangay pilot areas. Beneficiaries are now at least 45
including the original 12 farmers, (as of May 2013 at least 54 farmers),
a 300 percent growth.
In two years, animal inventory of the farmers increased by
50 to 100 percent, while household income was up by 50 percent. Repayment is
placed at 80 percent.
Because authorities saw how the NSP beneficiaries
multiplied fast with good repayment rate, the FAO-International Labor
Organization Livelihood Project adapted the Dos por Cinco scheme.
It operates in the same area. It provided the Dos por
Cinco package or module to an additional 35 RIC (Rural Improvement Club)
members in the Mulanay site.
The
pig module (with two gilts, five weanlings) per farmer costs around
P15,000.
Moreover, the local government of San Narciso also released
some funds to benefit an additional three to five farmers
initially.
Value adding
Phase
2 is stepping up help to farmers by providing options in marketing.
The first is on value adding, particularly meat
processing. It involves producing finished products like sausage, longganiza,
or cut-up pork that will give the farmer-beneficiaries an even higher
income.
A freezer and other basic equipment like vacuum
packaging machine, meat grinder, and some tools will be provided to the
organization .
Good agricultural practice and good manufacturing practice
will be observed to assure clean and safe meat for consumers.
The other choice is for the farmer organization to become
an assembler or consolidator. It involves gathering the animals from individual
farmer members and selling in bulk to the assemblers-truckers. They
themselves may also transport the animals to Metro Manila, acting as an
assembler-trucker.
However, they need to gather at least 200 animals at
a single time for the transport to be cost efficient.
These programs will channel to farmers a portion of the
income that goes to assemblers, traders-transporters.
At present, the link between farmers and lechon processors
are the traders.
But in the future there is a plan to link the Bondoc
Peninsula native pig producers (as an organization) to other processors and
lechon retail chains. This will market their hogs not only to Metro Manila but
also to nearby urban centers like the cities of Lucena, San Pablo and Lipa.
Smaller margin
Farmers’
direct contact to market will raise their income. At present, they are
losing income opportunities that normally go to middlemen or
traders.
“The animals have to pass through the village agent then to
the municipal agent-assembler before they are loaded for delivery to the lechon
processor by the trucker-assembler,” she said.
For instance, for a small 17-kilo or less live pig , a
farmer receives a farmgate price of P1,000. The agent resells this at
P1,200. Then the trucker resells it at P1,600. The lechon
processor sells at P2,244.
Breeding program
The ongoing Phase 2 will also involve breeding. It
has a partnership with the Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI)-National Swine and
Poultry Research and Development Center based in Tiaong, Quezon. BAI is
engaged in a study on “Animal Genomics to Increase Productivity of
Part of the BAI-NSPRDC project is to characterize and conserve the
Philippine native pigs. Bulatao said this is of the essence.
“While native pigs are considered disease resistant
compared to commercial breed, the project still encountered mortality due to
disease,” she said.
Native
pigs, unlike the imported white breeds, are usually colored black or have
spots.
Production
As of July 2011, the San Narciso site produced a total of
173 animals. These were 15 breeders, 110 weaners, and 48 piglets. The
Mulanay site produced 189 animals. These were 15 breeders, 128 weaners, and 46
piglets.
After six-seven months of planting GSF, farmers’ fields
yielded an average of 240 kilos of fresh GSF tuber per 1,000 sq.m.(2.4 tons per
hectare).
In Brgy. San Narciso, after seven months, farmers
produced 2.2 tons per hectare of sakwa; 2.4 tons per hectare of gabi; and 7.6
tons per hectare of herbage)
In Brgy. Mulanay, after six months, farmers produced 390
kilos of sakwa per 1,000 sq.m., 6,420 kilos of gabi over the same area, and 760
kilos of herbage.
San Narciso farmers sold their pigs at P94 per kilo of live
weight while Mulanay, at P90 per kilo.
Weanlings
were priced P800 to P1,000 per head.
Average farm gate price of native pigs per head was P2,161
for Mulanay for an average weight of 24.49 kilos and P1,787 per head for
San Narciso for an average weight of 19.03 kilos.
Bondoc Peninsula
The farmers in the pilot program in Brgy. Latangan, Mulanay
came from the Rural Improvement Club (RIC), a women’s group supported by the
town local government unit. A total of 22 out of 43 RIC members became
partners at the end of two years.
“The number is continuously growing as other members await
their turns to receive five heads of native swine,” said
Bulatao.
In San Narciso, the farmers already formed a group – San
Juan Native Swine Producers Association.
Farmers underwent training and visited the
National Swine and Poultry Research and Development Center in Tiaong, Quezon
and the Animal and Dairy Sciences Cluster Farm in UP Los BaƱos.
They were trained on good agricultural practices to
improve their native pig production practices including prevention and
management of common swine diseases. It also included preparation
of common herbal supplements to improve animal health and reduce
mortality.
Native pigs bring P140M to Marinduque
11:17 pm | Tuesday, June 26th, 2012
BOAC, Marinduque—Raising native pigs has grown into a
P100-million industry in this province, according to Marinduque’s top
veterinarian.
Last year alone, according to
provincial veterinarian Dr. Josue Victoria, the province sold 64,016 native
pigs with an estimated value of P140.8 million.
Records at the Provincial Veterinary
Office (PVO) showed that in 2010, 48,960 organically grown pigs were sold,
earning for pig raisers in the province a gross income of P107.7 million.
Victoria said the amounts could be
higher since PVO came up with the figures based only on what he said were
modest estimates.
If the weight of each pig sold would
be taken into consideration, Victoria said the figures would be much higher
because native pigs in the province weigh from 20 to 35 kilograms each.
Half of the province’s pigs are
shipped out while the other half are consumed locally, said the provincial
veterinarian.
The province appears to be on track
to maintain its sales record this year. As of May 31 this year, Victoria’s
office has recorded at least 17,343 pigs sold.
Live pigs from Marinduque are
usually sought by meat traders and dealers from Metro Manila because the island
has long been declared free from foot-and-mouth disease and because the
province’s native pigs are considered ideal for roasting.
Hog growers in other parts of the
country are not as fortunate, however.
Many hog growers in Central Luzon
are complaining of declining sales as a result of the unabated smuggling of
pork into the country.
No action has been taken, however,
on the continuing smuggling of pork and other meat products into the country
despite protests made by local hog growers that their industry is dying as a
result of imported meat flooding the markets.
Sorsogon housewife proves native pig business profitable
June 15, 2013 12:09 pm
By Danny O. Calleja
CASTILLA, Sorsogon, June 13 (PNA) —
Annie Asejo owns two native sows penned up within the backyard of her house in
Barangay Cumadcad here.
Her husband,
Sonny, is engaged in a medium-scale livestock trading business but not earning
good enough for all the family’s needs because of the dwindling stocks of
cattle and carabao in the locality.
He buys the farm
animals from local raisers, particularly farmers, and sells them in the
livestock auction market in Batangas.
Profit most of the time is not so
favorable.
Cash-strapped for
the recent enrollment of their two sons in college? Not really, the housewife
revealed.
Annie said that in
their latest litters, her two sows produced a total of 18 live piglets, which
she had sold for P3,000 per head or a total of P54,000, an amount that was good
enough to settle enrollment fees and buy some school supplies.
Both sows,
according to her, produce an average of eight weanlings each, two times in 14
months, giving her an income of nearly P100,000 within the period from piglets
alone.
Dozens of
households in the neighborhood are also in the same backyard-based venture and
doing well in terms of income and profit, she said.
“We prepare native
pigs because unlike hybrids, they live on natural feeds like root crops,
vegetables and other plants that we grow in our backyard gardens and farms —
making their maintenance less expensive, hence, the bigger profit,” Annie told
the PNA in the local dialect.
Besides, meat
consumers today, particularly those who are health conscious, prepare native
pork for having more flesh and less fat being raised through organic feeds, she
added.
According to the
Bureau of Agricultural Research (BAR), a native pig project could raise good
periodic income for farmers in just selling piglets and opens bigger
opportunities for them to sell the specialty “lechon.”
It has been a
tradition for farmers in most parts of the country to raise native pigs that
they sell for full-sized lechon or for “Lechon de Leche,” a roasted piglet in
its tender meat and crispy skin.
Its preferable
taste compared to commercial breeds may be attributed to its being native
breed.
The flavor of
native lechon is also attributed to the production system.
Being raised
free-range or just roaming around the farm, the pigs become lean from the daily
exercise and are able to access vegetation in the area.
The BAR is funding
a native pig multiplier project in the Bondoc Peninsula whose success is being
eyed by the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization for replication
in other parts of the country.
The project is
being implemented by the University of the Philippines Los Banos (UPLB)
Agricultural Systems Cluster-College of Agriculture.
“A farmer with two
sows, each producing seven weanlings three times in two years, will have added
income of P33,700 from piglet sales alone,” Dr. Mary Jean Bulatao, the UPLB
Native Swine Project team leader, said in a BAR statement reaching PNA over the
week.
BAR is also
expanding the project to other provinces as its director, Nicomedes Eleazar, in
the same statement said “we want to raise livelihood opportunities in mostly
upland areas.”
Production of
native swine will also enable farmers to meet a requirement for a specialty
product that has a growing market in Metro Manila, according to Eleazar.
The native swine
project’s production and repayment scheme called “dos por sinco” adopted in the
Bondoc Penisula under the project, he said, have worked well in selected
communities.
Each
farmer-beneficiary received two ready-to-breed gilts (the dos part). This has
enabled farmers to have a year-round supply of piglets.
The project also
provided five weanlings (the cinco part) to farmers for immediate fattening.
This should
generate cash to farmers in three to four months while waiting for the gilts to
mature as sows and produce piglets.
Under the project,
Eleazar said, farmer-beneficiaries also plant their farms with feed resources
such as root crops and some herbal plants for supplements.
The main feed
resource is the Gabing San Fernando whose corm is reported by UPLB to be
capable of substituting corn by 60 to 90 percent as the feed ingredient’s
energy source.
The native pigs’
feed is a combination of two or three of different feed ingredients that are
cooked together.
The choices are
gabi tubers, gabi leaves and trunks, rice and corn bran, matured coconut meat,
cassava, banana trunk, market wastes, kitchen refuse, kangkong, papaya, oraro
rejects, malunggay, mixed vegetable refuse, ipil-ipil leaves, sweet potato
leaves and madre de agua.
Boars and
lactating sows are given rice or corn bran added into cooked feed. Feeding is
two times a day.
Eleazar said the
business is profitable, given that for a 25-kilo native pig, a farmer can enjoy
a P780 income per head.
If a farmer
decides to raise five heads in a five to six-month cycle or a total of 10 heads
per year, he will have an extra income of P7,800 yearly.
“These may be
modest added returns but very important to the farmers. These become a
significant buffer income in times of unexpected needs. Farmers are now
starting to treat this activity as a business enterprise,” he said.
BAR has also
partnered with the Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI)-National Swine and Poultry
Research and Development Center based in Tiaong, Quezon, which is engaged in a
study on “Animal Genomics to Increase Productivity of Native Pigs” and part of
it is to characterize and conserve the pigs native to the Philippines, Eleazar
added. (PNA)
BAR, BAI look into commercial
profit of raising native pigs
by Patrick Raymund A. Lesaca
|
Dr. Nicomees P. Eleazar during a site visit
to the native swine project in Tiaong, Quezon.
PHOTO: AVELASCO |
Characteristically
small, usually black in color, spotted, and are resistant to parasites and
diseases, native pigs can adapt to local conditions and can tolerate heat and
cold environments better than the imported breeds. They can thrive well on
locally-available feeds, including kitchen and farm refuse, and can cope with
low quality feeds and maintenance. The usual farm practice, especially in the
far flung villages, is the "bahala na" system-allowing pigs to
scavenge for their own survival.
Philippine
native pigs are traditionally known as best for "lechon" or roasted
pig. This Pinoy delicacy, prepared the roasted way, commands good price and is
highly preferred by food connoisseurs during special occasions. Our lechon is
tastier, with crispier skin and leaner meat, compared to the imported ones.
To
conserve and maximize the potential of expanding the lechon market, the Bureau
of Animal Industry-National Swine and Poultry Research and Development Center
(BAI-NSPRDC) based in Tiaong, Quezon conducted a study on the
"Conservation, Evaluation and Commercialization of the Philippine Native
Pigs". This was funded and supported by the Bureau of Agricultural
Research (BAR) under its banner program, the National Technology
Commercialization Program (NTCP). The two-year project is led by Dr. Rene C.
Santiago, DVM, also the agricultural center chief of BAI-NSPRDC. Project
implementation called for collaborations with the local government units (LGUs)
of Quezon and selected farmer-cooperators in Laguna and Quezon.
The
objective of the project is to establish a production system involving raising
native pigs under farmers' management and propagate such on a commercial scale
and improve the antiquated system of swine raising resulting in better
production. The socio-economic importance of production and commercialization
is a crucial aspect of the project.
Production
of native pigs can be a viable alternative for swine producers who cannot cope
with the high price of commercial swine feeds and for those who do not have
enough capital for housing and feeding. This animal can be raised without the
use of chemical inputs and, as a breed, has high economic potential for those
engaged in organic swine production. In addition, native pigs are very rich
sources of genetic materials for local breed development and improvement
programs, hence it is a necessity to conserve and preserve this breed.
|
Dr. Nicomedes P. Eleazar of BAR (3rd from
left) and Ms. Teresa Perez-Saniano (2nd from right) of Earthkeepers during
BAR’s visit at the project site of native swine in Tiaong, Quezon.
PHOTO: AVELASCO
|
BAI-NSPRDC
started the project where production of breeder native pigs was carried out
which were subsequently distributed to selected farmer-cooperators in some
municipalities in the second and fourth districts of Quezon province and in the
fourth district of Laguna.
The
BAI-NSPRDC selected 20 heads of breeder sows with two boars from their stock
farm in Tiaong, Quezon for use in the production of breeders to be distributed
to the cooperators of the project. The breeders produced piglets that were
raised, selected and distributed.
Nine
beneficiaries were identified based on their capability, willingness and
cooperation. The farmer-cooperators and technicians attended training and
seminars on the production and management of native pigs. After the training,
each farmer-cooperator was provided with a set of 5 female and 1 male native
pigs as breeder stocks. Each farmer was also provided with a one-time subsidy
for housing in the amount of PhP10,000 and feeds worth one thousand pesos
PhP1,000.
A
prototype pig pen was also constructed inside the compound of BAI-NSPRDC for
demonstration purposes to farmers. This type of pig pen used locally-available
materials such as bamboo, nipa, coco-lumber and coconut husk and coir dust as
bedding. One module of pig pen requires a floor area of roughly 4 x 4 square
meters.
To
validate and ascertain the progress and development of the project, a BAR-
Technology Commercialization Unit (BAR-TCU) Evaluation and Monitoring Team
composed of Ellen Garces, Eve Juanillo, and Patrick Lesaca conducted project
reconnaissance in May 2010. The project visit included interviews with Dr. Rene
Santiago, team leader, and Ms Fe Bien, agriculturist of the project. The team
also visited the farmer-cooperators in their respective areas and saw the
progress of the project.
Dr.
Santiago narrated to the monitoring team that the identification of
collaborating municipalities is dependent on the need of the locality for the
project, environmental considerations and willingness of the local government
units. These criteria are of paramount importance to the success of the
project. The farmer cooperators, on the other hand, were chosen based on their
capability and knowledge in swine raising in general.
The
monitoring team noted the good relationship between the project proponents and
farmer-cooperators. Native swine cages were well maintained. Feeds and
alternate sources of livestock were available. More importantly, the
conservation of native pigs can be said to already be achieved. It is expected
that the project will boost the needed stocks of native pigs which would be
made available for multiplication and livelihood production.
VIII.
REFERENCES
http://tabi.la/images/stories/TABI_FACTSHEET1_FA_web.pdf
http://www.pvma.com.ph/animals/7049
FARM BUSINESS MANAGEMENT
[Research paper about Wild Boar (Native Pig)]