<h2><SPAN name="THE_PECCARY" id="THE_PECCARY"></SPAN>THE PECCARY.</h2>
<p>Looks very much like a little
Pig, does'nt he, children? Well,
so he is, a species of wild pig
found in the canebrakes of
Texas, and native of South
America.</p>
<p>You would hardly think so
small an animal could be so
ferocious, but the inhabitants of
South America dread and fear
him as much as they do the Wild
Boar. He is a fearless little
creature, too, attacking any object
which comes in his way no
matter how big it is. Even an
Elephant wouldn't scare him,
though, as Elephants are not
found in South America or
Texas, I presume a Peccary
never saw one.</p>
<p>His jaws, as you see, are armed
with tusks, like those of the
Boar, but they are straight
instead of curved, are sharp at
the edges, and although no
longer than your finger can
inflict a terrible wound on account
of the great strength of
the animal's neck.</p>
<p>When a body of them charge
an enemy they will fight till
every one of them is slain.
You will not wonder then that
Men, Horses, and Dogs fly at
the approach of a herd of
Peccaries, the poor Horses being
so easily brought down by
having their legs cut to pieces
by the sharp tusks.</p>
<p>In the canebrakes of Texas,
where the trees are of enormous
size, the Peccaries make their
home. A fallen tree overgrown
with thickets of the cane, matted
together with strong and thorny
vines, is their favorite lodging.
Into one of these hollow logs a
drove of twenty or thirty will
enter at night, each one backing
in, the last one to enter standing
with his nose to the entrance
and acting as sentinel.</p>
<p>On dark, drizzly days they
never leave their lodgings, and
it is on these days that the
farmers who have suffered by
their ravages on grain-crop and
stock, succeed in putting an end
to many of their enemies. As
soon as daylight appears and
the protruding snout and watchful
eyes of the sentinel on duty
can be seen, a sharp report of a
rifle is heard; with a spring the
sentinel leaps out and soon rolls
lifeless upon the ground. Instantly
a low grunt is heard,
and another snout and sharp
pair of eyes appear in the
opening. A flash, a report, and
out he leaps to his death, also;
thus they go on till every
"lodger" is disposed of.</p>
<p>Of all animals the Peccary
alone, it is said, resists the terror
of the gun, its flash and report
serving only to enrage him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum p2"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</SPAN></span></p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50 p2" title="PECCARY." summary="PECCARY.">
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<td colspan="3"><span class="ac w100 figcenter">
<SPAN name="i_017.jpg" id="i_017.jpg"> <ANTIMG style="width:100%"
src="images/i_017.jpg" width="600" height="447" alt="" /></SPAN></span>
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<tr>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">From col. Chi. Acad. Sciences.</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">PECCARY.<br/>
⅕ Life-size.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">Copyright by<br/>
Nature Study Pub. Co., 1898, Chicago.</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>THIS interesting animal, which
is of common occurrence
throughout the forests of
South America, roams through
the woods in large herds and is constantly
migrating, being often driven
by scarcity of food to make long
journeys. Rendgger, the well known
naturalist, states that one may follow
the Peccaries for days without seeing
them. In their wanderings they keep
to the open country, which ordinarily
they rarely frequent, and even streams
cannot stop them. If they reach a
field they cross it at a run, and if they
arrive at the banks of a river they
do not hesitate but swim at once
across it.</p>
<p>They have been seen crossing the
Paraguay river at a place where it
requires about a half hour to do so.
The herd keeps together in a close
throng, the males in advance, each
mother having her young behind her.
The noise made by the animals can be
heard a long distance, not only on
account of the dull, hoarse sounds
which they make, but still more by
reason of the cracking of the dead
branches which they break in their
impetuous progress.</p>
<p>Both day and night the Peccaries
search for food. They eat all kinds
of arboreal fruit and roots, and their
teeth are so strong that they can easily
open the hardest of palm seeds. They
often do great mischief to the crops.
Besides vegetable food they are said
also to eat Snakes, Lizards, Worms, and
Grubs, in this respect being useful animals.
They are much more cleanly
in their habits than the Wild Boars,
and Beehm asserts that they never eat
more than they require, and seek water
only during periods of the most intense
heat, and then they wallow only
in pools. During the day they hide
in tree trunks, in which they sleep
also at night.</p>
<p>The female gives birth to a single
young one, in rare instances to two.
The cry of the young is like that of
Goats. They are easily tamed and
domesticated if treated well. The flesh
is eaten by the poorer classes, the skin
being chiefly used for bags and thongs.
On account of a gland which the
animal bears in its haunches and which
has an evil effect on the meat, causing
it to become unfit for use in a very
short time, the flesh is not considered
to be particularly excellent.</p>
<p>It has been said that the Peccary is
totally devoid of fear. It is small,
rarely exceeding eighteen inches in
height, and yet it is not less dreaded
than the most savage Wild Boar would
be. Many an unlucky sportsman, to
escape a herd of these wild creatures
has been glad to climb a tree in time
to save his life. Men, Horses, and
Dogs fly in haste, for the Peccaries
fight like a well drilled army, and by
swarming about an enemy they are
sure to conquer with their strong, sharp
tusks. They avoid conflict with man,
and shyly run into the thick woods on
his approach, but when fired upon or
brought to bay they seem possessed
only with rage and desire for vengeance.</p>
<p>The Peccary is peculiar in his
anatomy, having several sacs in place
of a single stomach, thus resembling
the cud chewing animals. This
resemblance is traced still further in
the feet, where the metacarpal and
metatarsal bones of the two greater
toes are united into a sort of cannon
bone.</p>
<p>This specimen came from the canebrakes
of Texas.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</SPAN></span></p>
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