The biggest threat to the Visayan warty pig is habitat loss caused by
commercial logging and
slash-and-burn farming. In total, it is extinct in 98% of its original native range due to loss of forest cover. They are also hunted for food; and by farmers who see them as pests since they can damage crops when foraging. Visayan warty pigs are also vulnerable to genetic contamination, as they readily hybridize with feral
domestic pigs.
Breeding programs The current conservation program for
S. c. negrinus includes successful breeding programs at the
Rotterdam Zoo for pigs of Negros origin, and at the
San Diego Zoo for pigs of Panay origin.
Captive populations In addition to a few other conservation programs in the
Philippines, the
Crocolandia Foundation and the
Negros Forests and Ecological Foundation both have this species in captivity. In
Europe, 32 zoos –
Jersey Zoo,
Rotterdam Zoo,
Planckendael Zoo,
Poznan Zoo,
Colchester Zoo,
Chester Zoo,
Belfast Zoo,
Edinburgh Zoo,
Yorkshire Wildlife Park,
Blackbrook Zoological Park,
Děčín Zoo,
Ostrava Zoo,
Newquay Zoo, and
Parken Zoo in
Eskilstuna, among others – maintain the
Negros Island variety of this species. Moreover, several zoos in the
United States also maintain the species. The
San Diego Zoo was the first zoo outside the Philippines to keep and breed Visayan warty pigs. Elsewhere in North America, zoos in
Seattle,
Los Angeles,
Portland,
Phoenix,
Tucson,
Miami,
Tampa,
Saint Louis,
Attleboro,
Melbourne,
Gainesville,
Jacksonville,
Boise,
Cincinnati, and
Apple Valley have also kept the species. The
Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium have acquired the species and they went on-show to the public in June 2015. The
Austin Zoo also exhibits this species. == See also ==