29 Dec, 2024 @ 14:16
1 min read

Watch: Locals film ‘cute’ wild boars and their babies outside Costa del Sol shopping centre – and seem unaware of the dangers

THIS is the moment a sounder of boars was filmed searching for food outside a Costa del Sol shopping centre.

Footage shared on Instagram this week shows adult and baby specimens rooting around bins next to the Miramar complex in Fuengirola.

Locals can be heard gushing over the animals as they record them on their mobile phones and stand just inches away from them.

While they may appear cute, boars can become incredibly aggressive, particularly mothers travelling with their young, as they are naturally very protective and will fiercely react to any perceived threat.

A police officer in Madrid was bitten by a boar this year after the animal went ‘on a rampage’ through the streets.

Meanwhile, experts last month warned they could also pose a huge health risk for Spain. 

In fact, they are often carriers of hepatitis E, an infection which causes around €50,000 deaths a year. 

Rise of the pigs! Wild boars in Spain have learned how to ransack streetside rubbish containers

Now, a team of Spanish scientists have discovered wild boar strains of hepatitis E viruses show ‘molecular similarity’ to human strains, suggesting the animals may be transmitting the illness to humans. 

“We need to be very careful,” said Jordi Serra-Cobo, one of the researchers. “If we don’t do anything, sooner or later we’ll have a big problem on a global scale.” 

The study was carried out in Barcelona, where around 3.2 million people live with 5-15 wild boars per kilometre squared. 

Hepatitis E is ‘endemic’ in the area, where young wild boars were seen to carry the virus.

It is not the first time scientists have warned of the dangers of wild boars. 

A 2015 study showed the animals could also transmit Japanese encephalitis and Nipah Virus- a deadly disease which currently has no cure. 

It is said that wild boars move into populated areas due to urbanisation of the countryside and the abandonment of farmland. 

In urban areas, they often tip bins over and eat their contents, so one prevention measure would be making it difficult for the boars to turn bins on their sides. 

For hunters or park rangers, the scientists also recommend washing your hand thoroughly with soap and water. 

They also warn against letting boars into public parks, where dogs could get infected from boar excrement.

Laurence Dollimore

Laurence Dollimore is a Spanish-speaking, NCTJ-trained journalist with almost a decade’s worth of experience.
The London native has a BA in International Relations from the University of Leeds and and an MA in the same subject from Queen Mary University London.
He earned his gold star diploma in multimedia journalism at the prestigious News Associates in London in 2016, before immediately joining the Olive Press at their offices on the Costa del Sol.
After a five-year stint, Laurence returned to the UK to work as a senior reporter at the Mail Online, where he remained for two years before coming back to the Olive Press as Digital Editor in 2023.
He continues to work for the biggest newspapers in the UK, who hire him to investigate and report on stories in Spain.
These include the Daily Mail, Telegraph, Mail Online, Mail on Sunday and The Sun and Sun Online.
He has broken world exclusives on everything from the Madeleine McCann case to the anti-tourism movement in Tenerife.

GOT A STORY? Contact newsdesk@theolivepress.es or call +34 951 273 575 Twitter: @olivepress

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