They’re trampling farm fields, grinding up yards, and gobbling up soybeans and even forest saplings in rural areas of western Sussex and Kent counties.
Some weigh more than 200 pounds, and they often roam wild in feral packs that risk spreading endemic diseases, such as salmonella and swine flu, to other animals and people.
They’re potbellied pigs, abandoned by owners who bought them as 35-pound pets that were sold as cuddly teacups, micros, or minis. But the animals have grown, perhaps had litters, and escaped or been turned loose by owners after they increased in size and lost their luster. They can live more than 20 years.
State veterinarian Dr. Karen Lopez of the state Department of Agriculture estimated this week there are up to 300 of them meandering around southern Delaware. She’s had to euthanize a dozen abandoned potbellied pigs in recent years.
Lopez has had enough, though.
Last fall her office issued a public warning, urging owners to call her department for guidance on securing or housing them, spaying or neutering, or animal identification.
But officials also began taking steps to declare potbellied pigs as Delaware’s only “invasive animal species” and enact a regulation to forbid people from having, breeding, selling, or exhibiting them.
The department’s new rule, which has the power of law and took effect June 1, does allow current owners to obtain a permit that allows them to keep potbellied pigs. The state is giving owners until August 12 to apply and comply with the new regulation.
The permit is free of charge and residents may apply for a permit online.
But after Aug. 12, no one can apply for a permit, or have a potbellied pig in Delaware without subjecting it to euthanasia if it’s discovered roaming around or gets reported to the state.
Delaware’s new rule is believed to be the only statewide one in the nation, according to Lopez and Susan Magidson of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, who runs the nationwide online Pig Placement Network.
Lopez says the new regulation and the punitive action it authorizes are necessary steps to protect property and deter the spread of disease.
“We all know that pets get loose,’’ she said. “We want to know if these animals are yours so that we can return them to you safely, because otherwise, they are so destructive, and a danger to our natural resources and a threat as far as livestock and human diseases, that we cannot have them on the landscape.”
‘Owners will just turn them loose to become stray’ animals
To obtain a permit, current owners must:
- Stop breeding their pigs
- Provide adequate housing and secure fencing
- Notify the state within 12 hours if a pig does escape
- Have separate housing for males and females capable of reproducing
- Allow Lopez or another state official to inspect the property to ensure compliance and examine the animals for possible disease
If owners qualify for a permit, the pig will be tagged with a visible form of identification.
Under the rule, if a pig is found at large without an ID tag and officials cannot find the owner to determine if they have a permit, a state or federal agent can kill the animal “immediately on-site.”
Lopez stressed that issuing permits to responsible owners — not euthanizing animals — is the state’s goal. To that end, she expressed delight that her office has already received permit applications for nearly 30 animals.
“We’re really happy for that and we’re going to start processing them,” the veterinarian said.
She doesn’t blame the pigs, or even naive owners who paid upwards of $3,500 for one pig for the situation that spurred the permit rule.
“They’re marketed as teacup pigs or micro mini pigs,’’ Lopez said. “And at that time, they are really cute and they make great pets. But as they get older, they may become more difficult to manage.
“People are not as interested in having them as pets, and because there are very few solutions for rehoming them, the owners will oftentimes just turn them out and loose to become stray or eventually potentially feral animals. And that’s not something that we can have going on in the state of Delaware.”
She said homeowners who have had potbellied pigs running around their properties or neighborhood have sent photos of the damage they have caused.
“If you can imagine what a rototiller will do in a garden, that’s basically what they will do to a backyard,’’ Lopez said. “Beyond that, they’ll move into a farmer’s fields of crops and eat their crops.“