No such thing, everything we eat is GMO, just a matter of how it was genetically modified.
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If we ever get a huntable population here I will be keeping a good pair of hounds in my kennel. One of the best way of hunting them in my opinion.
To the OP, the question wrt wild boars surviving in the Canadian climate is addressed in this news article.
http://globalnews.ca/news/3517136/wi...-saskatchewan/
Wild boar are no different from pigs in their ability to multiply rapidly, the average litter consists of 4–6 piglets, with the maximum being 10–12. Having watched a 650 lb boar tear up an area within minutes there is no doubt in my mind the damage that they can cause left unchecked. They need to be stopped and relying on hunting alone is a recipe for disaster. I have spent enough time in Florida to see the mayhem they have caused there.
Neither pheasants not huns are invasive species in Ontario. Nor are chinooks, coho, etc.
Invasive species reproduce successfully and expand their population size and range rapidly, to the detriment of native species. These do not. European hare likewise.
The starling was an invasive species.
"Invasive" and "introduced" are not the same thing.
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If you introduce wild hogs here, you'll never get rid of them. I've done all my hunting in Louisiana and Mississippi (until this year!) and hogs are everywhere.
The good thing is that there's no season or rules for when you can hunt them. June spear hunt with night vision goggles? Allowed. Chase them down on ATV swinging a cavalry saber? You can do that. Drop an ACME safe on them from an office building? Okay.
The big problem is that you're introducing another predator for turkey and deer in a place that has no shortage of predators. They not only compete for the same mast in the backcountry, they'll eat turkey eggs, young hatchlings, and they'll even kill and eat fawns. We did our best to kill every hog we could at our camp, but you'll never get rid of them.
Sure, it's cheap, readily available protein, but so is Asian Carp. I don't see anyone anxious to introduce them up here.
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Not a good look for Ontario.
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/03/31...ins-herds.html