Are you ready for hunting season?

The Southwest Florida Water Management District hopes so! The district's land managers plan to hold a series of hog hunts on district land this fall and winter to help reduce the wild hog population.

Beginning at 9 a.m. on Monday, Oct. 8, prospective hunters can purchase permits for these hunts on the District's website at HogHunts.WaterMatters.org. Permits will be available on a first-come, first-served basis through 5 p.m. Friday, Oct. 19, or until they are sold out. The cost is $75 for each permit. All hunts will adhere to the hog-dog format. No still hunts will be available.

Do you have a favorite hunting spot in Florida? Share your best advice on this related story or in the comments section here. Wild hogs, which are not native to Florida, feed on roots, tubors and grubs by rooting with their broad snouts and can leave an area looking like a plowed field. They also prey on native wildlife, compete with native species for food and transmit diseases to other wildlife, livestock and humans. Additionally, hogs may facilitate the spread of exotic plant species by transporting seeds and/or providing germination sites through rooting.

The district allows hogs to be controlled through hunts when damage they cause is at unacceptable levels. Damage from hogs is occurring more frequently and with increasing severity.

Here's where and when the hunts will be held:

Alston Tract at Upper Hillsborough Preserve Pasco County

Oct. 30-Nov. 1 (day hunts) Conner Preserve