MAMMALS
Wild Boar
The wild boar is a mammal that is characterized by having a long and straight snout, in addition to a large head and trunk compared to its short and thin legs. The muzzle endows him with an extraordinarily sharp smell, coming to use his muzzle as an excavator when looking for food. The boar is a nocturnal animal and during the day it hides in its burrow where it can sleep up to 12 hours. This animal feeds everything, it is omnivorous: fruits (acorns, chestnuts, berries), tubers, roots, cereals, worms, insects, small mammals, snakes, fungi, fallen fruits, snails, eggs and chickens of nesting birds in the ground, deer offspring, carrion, etc. This animal feeds on everything, it is omnivorous: fruits (acorns, chestnuts, berries), tubers, roots, cereals, worms, insects, small mammals, snakes, mushrooms, fallen fruit, snails, eggs and chicks of ground-nesting birds, young deer, carrion, etc. This mammal has the season of heat in autumn and deliveries occur during the first quarter of the year. The males measure from 0.9 to 1.6 m, and the females from 0.9 to 1.2 m. The male is more robust; its weight can vary between 70 and 90 kg, and that of the females between 40 and 65 kg. There are however specimens whose weight can reach 145 kg.