Management data of feral swine removals from Mingo National Wildlife Refuge, Missouri, USA from 2015-2019

Feral swine (Sus scrofa) are invasive in North America and are actively managed to reduce human-wildlife conflict and damage to agriculture, natural resources, and personal property. This data package contains the data collected during feral swine removal management activities at the Mingo National Wildlife Refuge in Missouri. Removal data for feral swine include the date, location, method of removal (i.e., aerial gunning, trapping, and ground shooting), number of animals removed, effort employed, and a site designation number. The effort is dependent on the method of removal: number of hours in the helicopter for aerial gunning, number of trap nights for trapping, and number of ground shooting events for ground shooting. The location information has been modified to remove specific locations to avoid violating privacy issues while retaining the relative spatial relationships of the points. The refuge was split into three sites for analysis purposes based on the geography of the refuge.<br>The data were collected as part Wildlife Services management activities.<br>For more information about this study and these data, see Davis et al. (2022). Data were originally published on 02/15/2022. On 04/25/2023 metadata updates included citation for newly published article.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Amy J. Davis (7892549), Randy O. Farrar (19660849), Brad Jump (19660852), Parker T. Hall (19660855), Travis L. Guerrant (19660858), Kim M. Pepin (7892564)
Format: Dataset biblioteca
Published: 2022
Subjects:Environmental sciences, invasive species management, multi-method framework, removal sampling, longitudinal model, Wildlife (or Fauna), Mammals, Sus scrofa, biota,
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Management_data_of_feral_swine_removals_from_Mingo_National_Wildlife_Refuge_Missouri_USA_from_2015-2019/27011533
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Description
Summary:Feral swine (Sus scrofa) are invasive in North America and are actively managed to reduce human-wildlife conflict and damage to agriculture, natural resources, and personal property. This data package contains the data collected during feral swine removal management activities at the Mingo National Wildlife Refuge in Missouri. Removal data for feral swine include the date, location, method of removal (i.e., aerial gunning, trapping, and ground shooting), number of animals removed, effort employed, and a site designation number. The effort is dependent on the method of removal: number of hours in the helicopter for aerial gunning, number of trap nights for trapping, and number of ground shooting events for ground shooting. The location information has been modified to remove specific locations to avoid violating privacy issues while retaining the relative spatial relationships of the points. The refuge was split into three sites for analysis purposes based on the geography of the refuge.<br>The data were collected as part Wildlife Services management activities.<br>For more information about this study and these data, see Davis et al. (2022). Data were originally published on 02/15/2022. On 04/25/2023 metadata updates included citation for newly published article.