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with local food pantries resilience hubs – anybody that wants to be part of the meat club – once <br />these pigs are trapped and processed we could come up with some kind of distribution so as to <br />get that meat to folks who are interested in it. Any questions about that particular point? And <br />the point of this was to also get mana’o from the Commission as well. My hope is that we can <br />really establish a partnership between whoever is going to be executing this project and doing <br />the studies and making sure that there is a presence on/in every district around Hawaii Island <br />‘cause I don’t think that the feral pig problem is just the lower Puna problem. I know that folks <br />are seeing this all over the place. Any questions about trapping? <br /> <br />SW: So, I’ll just note that these are questions from the Commissioners. If any members of the public <br />have a question, you can write it on the comment cards provided \[unclear\]. <br /> <br />BL: Brian, District – 4. Yes, I’ve, we’ve been over this with the trapping things we’ve discussed how it <br />intelligent pigs are and these new traps they work wonderful at the beginning – then you talk to <br />Abraham and myself and everything else – these pigs figure out the traps. You’re gonna have a <br />high success rate at the very beginning but once these pigs figure it out that’s gonna go down. <br />I’ve had traps and the pigs just walk around it for weeks at a time and not do anything, so, we <br />got to remember we’re dealing with intelligent animals, and like I said, just as before we need to <br />revoke the snare ban that we did eleven years ago which was the beginning of the pig problem – <br />‘cause pigs don’t seem to figure out the snares – they’re used to walking through the jungle and, <br />snares have a very high success rate. I know we get some dogs, but they’re supposed to be on <br />leashes anyways and we getting a lot of, you know, I get a lot of reports of dogs being killed by <br />pigs. I have a friend whose dog is constantly being torn of and waiting for the day it doesn’t <br />come back from the pigs, so… That’s just my opinion on traps, I mean, the short-term solution <br />and it works for the younger pigs, but, you know, they eventually figure it out. <br /> <br />AK: Thank you. I am not expert on pigs in my community and issues – I’m trying to be helpful and <br />come up with solutions and so I really appreciate your folks’ feedback and if you have other <br />ideas on how we can make \[unclear\] to – what they’re looking to do \[unclear\]. The second point <br />was actually something that was suggested by our agricultural specialist in Research & <br />Development – Glenn Sako – he talked about the Black Soldier Fly as being a potential solution <br />to helping to break down the pig carcass after it’s been processed and so what we would like to <br />do is identify these three Community Partners that are willing to host these specialized tubs <br />where the carcass is then transferred to and then the Black Soldier Fly begins to eat the carcass <br />and it’s larvae is apparently protein rich and can be used as animal feed and so ironically that <br />would be used to support the growth of domesticated pigs. But, again, that is a potential option <br />to just investigate as protein rich animal feed as part of this project we would monitor the <br />decomposition process – I don’t know if this has been done on a large scale that’s why measure <br />the yield of the larvae and then evaluate the quality of this as an animal feed and all of this we <br />would be, of course, documenting and determining if this is something feasible that we would <br />want to scale. Is anyone familiar with this? <br /> <br />LT: Yeah, um, Leomana – District 3 – when I was working as a teacher down at Kua o Ka Lau before <br />the lava flow took over. The soldier fly project we had all of our excess food waste from the <br />school going to a small-scale solider fly project and the reason the soldier flies work is because <br />they don’t have a mouth. They don’t eat once they become air borne – they have about 10 days <br />until they die and all they do is lay the larvae and then fly around and kill all the other flies. So, <br />4 <br /> <br /> <br />