Feral
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![A feral horse (an American mustang) in Wyoming](../../../upload/thumb/e/e9/Whorse2.jpg/180px-Whorse2.jpg)
A feral organism is one that has escaped from domestication and returned, partly or wholly, to its wild state. Rarely will a local environment perfectly integrate the feral organism into its established ecology. Therefore, feral animals and plants can cause disruption or extinction to some indigenous species, affecting wilderness and other fragile ecosystems.
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[edit] Definitions
Next to the meaning of the word feral described here, from Latin fera, "a wild beast", the word has a second unrelated meaning, from Latin feralis, "belonging to the dead", "funeral". [1]
[edit] Animals
![Soay sheep in St Kilda, Scotland - The sheep stock of this tiny island has been occasionally hunted rather than bred for many centuries.](../../../upload/shared/thumb/e/e8/Soay-sheep-arjecahn.jpg/150px-Soay-sheep-arjecahn.jpg)
A feral animal is one that has reverted from the domesticated state to a stable condition more or less resembling the wild.
[edit] Plants
Domesticated plants that revert to wild are usually referred to as escaped, introduced, or naturalized. However, the adaptive and ecological variables seen in plants that go wild closely resemble those of animals.
[edit] Variables
[edit] Susceptibility
Certain familiar animals go feral easily and successfully, while others are much less inclined to wander and usually fail promptly outside domestication.
[edit] Degree
Some species will detach readily from humans and pursue their own devices, but do not stray far or spread readily. Others depart and are gone, seeking out new territory or range to exploit and displaying active invasiveness.
[edit] Persistence
Whether they leave readily and venture far, the ultimate criterion for success is longevity. Persistence depends on their ability to establish themselves and reproduce reliably in the new environment.
[edit] Tenure of Domestication
Neither the duration nor the intensity with which a species has been domesticated offers a useful correlation with its feral potential.
[edit] Examples of Feral Animals
- The goat is one of the oldest domesticated creatures, yet readily goes feral and does quite well on its own.
- The dromedary camel, which has been domesticated for well over 3,000 years, will also readily go feral. A substantial population of feral dromedaries, descended from pack animals that escaped in the 19th and early 20th centuries, thrives in the Australian interior today.
- Also in Australia, the introduction of rabbits for sport led to an explosive growth in population, and rabbits are now a major pest in Australia.
- The cat returns readily to a feral state if it has not been socialized properly in its young life. See Feral cats. These cats, especially if left to proliferate, are frequently considered to be pests in populated neighborhoods, and may be blamed for devastating the bird and rodent populations, and digging up people's gardens. A local population of feral cats living in an urban area and using a common food source is sometimes called a feral cat colony. As feral cats multiply quickly, it is difficult to control their populations. Animal shelters attempt to adopt out feral cats, especially kittens, but often are overwhelmed with sheer numbers and euthanasia is used. In rural areas, excessive numbers of feral cats are often shot. More recently, the "Trap-Neuter-Return" method has been used in many locations as an alternate means of managing the feral cat population.
- Sheep are close contemporaries and cohorts of goats in the history of domestication, but the domestic sheep is quite vulnerable to predation and injury, and thus rarely if ever is seen in a feral state.
- Cattle have been domesticated since the neolithic era, but can do well enough on open range for months or even years with little or no supervision. Their ancestors, the Aurochs were quite fierce, on par with the modern Cape Buffalo. Modern cattle, especially those raised on open range, are generally more docile, but when threatened can display aggression. Although cattle, particularly those raised for beef, are often allowed to roam quite freely, they failed to establish long term independence, with, arguably the possible exception of the Longhorn and Brahman breeds, which have small populations of semi-feral animals roaming the southwestern United States and northern Mexico that, while technically owned by someone, have never actually been caught. Such cattle are sometimes called Mavericks. However, most cattle, however untamed, are generally too valuable not to be eventually rounded up and recovered.
- The horse, domesticated about 5000 B.C., is feral in open grasslands worldwide, but most notably in Spain, where such animals are called Sorraia, in Australia, where they are called Brumbies, and in the Americas, where they are called Mustangs. They are also often referred to as "wild horses," but this is a misnomer, as they are feral. There are also truly "wild" horses that have never been tamed, most notably Przewalski's Horse. While the horse was originally indigenous to North America, the wild ancestor died out at the end of the last Ice Age. In both Australia and the Americas, modern "wild" horses descended from domesticated horses brought by European explorers and settlers that escaped, spread, and thrived.
- The pig was early brought to eastern North America by Hernando de Soto [1], and escapees thrived, quickly becoming a prized prey for Native American hunters. The original population has since been augmented by free-ranged pigs allowed to run loose by pioneers and settlers. Across the Southern and Midwestern regions of the United States there are multiple highly tenacious populations descendant from escapees, mixed in places with released wild European swine. They have been hunted, shot on sight, tracked with dogs, trapped and even poisoned. Likewise in Europe, the French harvest about 10,000 swine per year as wild game (also possibly mixed wild-feral), and recently a large city park within urban Paris was disrupted and closed for months while wildlife officials struggled to evict, shoot or trap a boar that had claimed the refuge as its own.
- Pigeons were formerly kept for their meat.
- Dogs can revert to wildness, becoming predators little less effective than the big cats of like size. In Antarctica, dogs abandoned at the end of explorations survived by preying upon penguins. Feral dogs often lack the fear of humans that wild wolves show; their cunning, power, size, strength, and agility make them destructive of livestock and dangerous to humans. Feral dogs also played a key role in the extinction of the lion in Europe.
- Colonies of honey bees often escape into the wild from managed apiaries when they swarm; their behavior, however, is no different from their behavior "in captivity", until and unless they breed with other feral honey bees of a different genetic stock, which may lead them to become more docile or more aggressive (see Africanized bees).
[edit] Harmful and beneficial effects of feralization
- Ecological impact: A feral population can have a significant impact on an ecosystem by predation on vulnerable plants or animals, or by competition with indigenous species. Feral animals constitute a significant share of invasive species, and can be a threat to endangered species.
- Genetic pollution: Animals of domestic origin sometimes can produce fertile hybrids with native, wild animals. Cases include the mallard duck, wild boar, the rock dove or pigeon, the wild cock (Gallus gallus), carp, and more, recently salmon[citation needed]. Another example is the dingo, itself an early feral dog, which hybridizes with dogs of European origin. On the other hand, genetic pollution seems not to be noticed for rabbit. There is much debate over the degree to which feral hybridization compromises the purity of a wild species. In the case of the mallard, for example, some claim there are no populations which are completely free of any domestic ancestor.[citation needed]
- Economic harm: Feral animals compete with domestic livestock, and may degrade fences, water sources, and vegetation (by overgrazing or introducing seeds of invasive plants). Though hotly disputed, some cite as an example the competition between feral horses and cattle in the western United States. Another example is of goats competing with cattle in Australia, or goats that degrade trees and vegation in environmentally-stressed regions of Africa. Accidental crossbreeding by feral animals may result in harm to breeding programs of pedigreed animals; their presence may also excite domestic animals and push them to escape. Feral populations can also pass on transmissible infections to domestic herds.
- Economic benefits: Many feral animals can sometimes be captured at little cost and thus constitute a significant resource. For example, prior to the Free-roaming Wild Horse and Burro Protection Act of 1971, American mustangs were routinely captured and sold for horsemeat. Even today, feral goats and dromedaries in Australia are often captured and exported for their meat. At certain times, some animals were sometimes deliberately left to go feral, typically on islands, in order to be later recovered for profit or food use for travelers (particularly sailors) at the end of a few years.
- Scientific value: Populations of feral animals present good sources for studies of population dynamics, and especially of ecology and behavior (ethology) in a wild state of species known mainly in a domestic state. Such observations can provide useful information for the stock breeders or other owners of the domesticated conspecifics (i.e. animals of the same species).
- Genetic diversity: Feral populations sometimes preserve or develop characteristics which do not always exist in the fully domesticated equivalent. Therefore, they contribute to domestic biodiversity and often deserve to be preserved, be it in their feral environment or as domestic animals. For example, feral species that are usually subjects of eradication in Australia or New Zealand are currently the subject of study to determine if there is a need for their preservation.[citation needed]
- Cultural or historic value: American mustangs have been protected since 1971 in part due to their romance and connection to the history of the American West.
[edit] References
- ^ Source: Nuttall's Popular Dictionary. Pub. Fredrick Warne & Co. Ltd. London and New York.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
Note: Links that treat feral animals as a mere pest issue are the norm.
- National Wild Horse and Burro Program
- Feral Camels, Information from Australian Department of Agriculture regarding Australia's estimated 300,000 feral camels.
- Alley Cat Allies, a feral cat advocacy organization