What Is A Javelina: Ways Of Dealing With Javelinas In Your Garden

Javelina Animal In Dry Grass

Image by twildlife

The javelina is an animal that haunts the American Southwest. What is a javelina? Wild pigs are common in many areas of the world and although the javelina resembles a pig, it is a peccary. Peccaries are in the same genus as our domesticated and wild pigs but on a slightly different branch of the group.

If you live in Arizona, for instance, and see a hairy, pig-like creature, it is probably a javelina. They range wild in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and south throughout Mexico, Central America, and Argentina. These tropical peccaries survive on a variety of foods; however, javelinas in a garden can pose a problem, where the abundance of cultivated produce is extremely attractive.

What is a Javelina?

If you live in the southwestern United States, down into
South and Central America, you may have experience dealing with javelinas.
Javelinas are in the order Artiodactyla, just like our common pigs. Where pigs
are ‘Old World’ animals, javelina are ‘New World’ animals and in a completely
different family.

They will eat almost anything, making javelina garden pests a real problem where food and water are abundant in the landscape. They will even eat puppies and kittens! The animals resemble small, hairy boars but are actually hoofed animals that travel in herds.

Dealing with Javelinas

Javelinas are opportunistic when it comes to their food. Since their range is so large, they are adapted to a great many menu items. They like prickly pear cactus, berries, nuts, bulbs, flowers, fruits, snakes, eggs, carrion, frogs, fish, you name it.

Javelinas in the garden will wreak havoc as they enjoy the smorgasbord that you work so carefully to preserve. Dogs can be effective deterrents to javelina garden pests but don’t feed pets outdoors, and if you do, remove any leftovers promptly. Javelinas will also enter the garden if there is a constant source of water.

The recommended method of peccary control in areas where they are common is a 4-foot (1 m.) high fence. If a fence isn’t practical, a low-voltage wire 8-10 inches (20.5-25.5 cm.) above the ground is sufficient.

You can usually keep them away by emptying any containers of
standing water, keeping garbage cans tightly closed, picking up dropped fruits,
and generally keeping your landscape clean and tidy so they are not tempted to
enter.

Note: Javelinas are a game animal and a license is
needed to hunt them. Killing them in the landscape is frowned upon and not
recommended as peccary control.

This article was last updated on 12/27/21
Read more about Animals

The javelina is an animal that haunts the American Southwest. What is a javelina? Wild pigs are common in many areas of the world and although the javelina resembles a pig, it is a peccary. Peccaries are in the same genus as our domesticated and wild pigs but on a slightly different branch of the group.

If you live in Arizona, for instance, and see a hairy, pig-like creature, it is probably a javelina. They range wild in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and south throughout Mexico, Central America, and Argentina. These tropical peccaries survive on a variety of foods; however, javelinas in a garden can pose a problem, where the abundance of cultivated produce is extremely attractive.

What is a Javelina?

If you live in the southwestern United States, down into
South and Central America, you may have experience dealing with javelinas.
Javelinas are in the order Artiodactyla, just like our common pigs. Where pigs
are ‘Old World’ animals, javelina are ‘New World’ animals and in a completely
different family.

They will eat almost anything, making javelina garden pests a real problem where food and water are abundant in the landscape. They will even eat puppies and kittens! The animals resemble small, hairy boars but are actually hoofed animals that travel in herds.

Dealing with Javelinas

Javelinas are opportunistic when it comes to their food. Since their range is so large, they are adapted to a great many menu items. They like prickly pear cactus, berries, nuts, bulbs, flowers, fruits, snakes, eggs, carrion, frogs, fish, you name it.

Javelinas in the garden will wreak havoc as they enjoy the smorgasbord that you work so carefully to preserve. Dogs can be effective deterrents to javelina garden pests but don’t feed pets outdoors, and if you do, remove any leftovers promptly. Javelinas will also enter the garden if there is a constant source of water.

The recommended method of peccary control in areas where they are common is a 4-foot (1 m.) high fence. If a fence isn’t practical, a low-voltage wire 8-10 inches (20.5-25.5 cm.) above the ground is sufficient.

You can usually keep them away by emptying any containers of
standing water, keeping garbage cans tightly closed, picking up dropped fruits,
and generally keeping your landscape clean and tidy so they are not tempted to
enter.

Note: Javelinas are a game animal and a license is
needed to hunt them. Killing them in the landscape is frowned upon and not
recommended as peccary control.

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