Visayan Warty Pig

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Visayan Warty Pig

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Suidae
Subfamily: Suinae
Genus: Sus
Species: cebifrons
Binomial name
Sus cebifrons
Linnaeus, 1758

The Visayan warty pig, Sus cebifrons is a critically endangered species of pig. The Visayan warty pig can only be found on two of the Visayan Islands in the central Philippines, and as a result, faces unique challenges to their survival in the wild. The challenges include little room to escape from predators, food shortages and hunting - these are the leading causes of the Visayan warty pig's status as critically endangered. Due to the small numbers of remaining Visayan warty pigs in the wild, little is known of their behaviors or characteristics outside of captivity.

Contents

The Visayan warty pig is endemic to six islands in the Philippines archipelago. It is now extinct in four of the islands. There are 2 subspecies, one on Negros and one on Cebu.

The Visayan warty pig receives its name from the three pairs of fleshy "warts" present on the visage of the boar. Biologists speculate that the reason for the warts is to assist as a natural defense against the tusks of rival pigs during a fight. The boars also grow stiff spikey hair.

The Visayan warty pigs tend to live in groups of four to six. The diet of the pig mainly consists of roots, tubers, and fruits that can be found in the forest. They may also eat cultivated crops. Since approximately 95% of their natural habitat has been cleared by local farmers who cut down the forest to plant crops, the propensity of the pigs to eat cultivated crops has risen dramatically. Because the land that is cleared for farming is often unproductive after a few years, the food sources of the Visayan warty pig are extremely limited, a factor that has contributed significantly to the pig’s dwindling numbers.

Visayan warty pig piglets are often seen during the dry season between the months of January and March in their native habitat of the western Visayan Islands. The mean number of piglets is three to four per litter.

In Europe, there are only 4 zoos to keep the species. They all keep the Negros Island variety. The four zoos are Rotterdam, Poznan, Chester and Edinburgh Zoo. In America, There are more zoos that hold this animal. None are the Negros Island Subspecies. San Diego was the first zoo outside the Philipines to keep and breed Visayan warty pigs. Los Angeles and Rotterdam have also bred the species.

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