Pig
| {{{2}}}}>Domesticated Pig |
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Sow with piglet <tr><th bgcolor={{{{2}}}}>Scientific classification <tr><td>
Linnaeus, 1758 </table> The domestic pig is usually given the scientific name Sus scrofa, though some authors call it S. domesticus, reserving S. scrofa for the wild boar. It has been a domesticated animal for approximately 5,000 to 7,000 years. The animal is found across Europe, the Middle East and extends into Asia as far as Indonesia and Japan. The distinction between wild and domestic animals is slight, and domestic pigs have become feral in many parts of the world (for example, New Zealand). Feral pigs can cause substantial environmental damage. The family Suidae also includes about 12 separate species of wild pig, most also classified in the genus Sus. Pigs are intelligent animals, and some are kept as pets. Pigs are reportedly more intelligent and more trainable than dogs and cats. Pigs were brought to southeastern North America from Europe by De Soto and other early Spanish explorers, where escapees became feral and became freely used by Native Americans as food. Sus scrofa has four subspecies, each occupying distinct geographical areas. They are Sus scrofa scrofa (western Africa, Europe), Sus scrofa ussuricus (northern Asia and Japan), Sus scrofa cristatus (Asia Minor, India), and Sus scrofa vittatus (Indonesia). Many different words in English identify different types of pig:
- adult male pigs are called boars
- adult females are called sows
- juvenile animals are called piglets and farrows
- young pigs between 100–180 pounds (50 to 90 kg) are called shoats
- a gilt is an immature female pig
- a barrow is a castrated male pig
- hog is used as a synonym of pig in the United States; in its original sense it means a castrated boar.
- swine is a plural noun meaning pigs
Miscellaneous
- In ancient Greece, a sow was an appropriate sacrifice to Demeter and had been her favorite animal since she had been the Great Goddess of archaic times. Initiates at the Eleusinian Mysteries began by sacrificing a pig.
- The pig is one of the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar. Believers in Chinese astrology associate each animal with certain personality traits. See: Pig (Zodiac).
- Zhu Bajie is a famous literary character from the Chinese novel Journey to the West.
- Pigs are commonly associated with greed and with dirt; the latter probably comes from their habit of wallowing in mud.
- Pigs are not as dirty as people believe them to be. They are in fact very clean animals and the only reason people picture them in mud and covered in dirt is because they do not sweat. Rolling in the mud is their way of regulating their body temperature and keeping themselves cool in warmer temperatures.
Images
See also
- hog lot
- Pigpen
- List of fictional pigs
- Pig War
- Guinea pig (not related to the pig)
- Pig iron
Pig is also the name of an industrial music artist, P.I.G.
PIG is an acronym for Pipeline Inspection Guage
A pig is also a bullet shaped polyurethane plug that is forced through pipelines to clean them. [1] (http://www.pipelinesupplies.com/ProdClass/Pigging%20Products/Poly%20Pigs/PipelinePiggingProducts%20catalog1!.jpg)
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