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Wild Boar

Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Order:Artiodactyla
Family:Suidae
Genus:Sus
Species:scrofa
Binomial name
Sus scrofa
Linnaeus, 1758
The Wild Boar (Sus scrofa) is the wild ancestor of the domesticated pig. It lives in woodland in northern Europe.

They are extinct in Great Britain, although some are farmed for their meat, and escaped animals are occasionally sighted. They are capable of causing serious injury and are best avoided.

The term Boar can refer to an adult male domestic pig. The difference between the wild and domestic animals is largely a matter of perception; both are usually described as Sus scrofa, and domestic pigs quite readily become feral. The characterisation of populations as wild, feral or domestic and pig or boar is usually decided by where the animals are encountered and what is known of their history.

One characteristic by which domestic breed and wild animals are differentiated is coats. Wild animals almost always have thick, short bristly coats ranging in colour from brown through grey to black. A prominent ridge of hair matching the spine is also common, giving rise to the name ridgebacks in the southern United States. The tail is usually short and straight. Wild animals tend also to have longer legs than domestic breeds and a longer and narrower head and snout. European adult males can be up to 200kg and have both upper and lower tusks; females do not have tusks and are around a third smaller on average.

Wild boars live in groups called sounders. Sounders typically contain around twenty animals, but groups of over fifty have been seen. In a typical sounder there are two or three sows and their offspring; adult males are not part of the sounder outside of the autumnal breeding season and are usually found alone. Birth, called farrowing, usually occurs in the spring; a litter will typically contain five piglets, but up to thirteen has been known.

The animals are usually nocturnal, foraging from dusk until dawn but with resting periods both during the night and the day. This is because hunters are most active during the day.

Wild boars are large but rarely dangerous. They are hunted either for food or because they are damaging crops. One of the Twelve Labors of Hercules was hunting a wild boar. Boar hunting figures in several stories of Celtic and Irish mythology. Such hunting was traditionally done by groups of spearmen.

The Wild Boar was a symbol of Richard III of EnglandRichard III ( October 2, 1452 August 22, 1485) was the King of England from 1483 until his death and the last king from the House of York. After the death of his brother Edward IV, Richard briefly governed as a regent for Edward's son Edward V, but he imp.




Even-toed ungulates

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