Black Slavonian
The Black Slavonian pig is a Croatian heritage breed from Slavonia, also known locally as Crna slavonska svinja or Fajferica. It was developed in the late nineteenth century from regional pigs with Mangalitsa-type influence and imported black meat breeds, producing a solid black, lop-eared pig suited to the oak woods, pastures, and farmyards of eastern Croatia. It grows more slowly than modern white commercial pigs, but it lays on flavorful fat and is closely linked with traditional dry-cured products and Slavonian pork.
The breed works best where its foraging ability can be used: fenced woodland, pasture rotations, or semi-outdoor pens with shade, mud, and winter bedding. Acorns and seasonal feeds can be useful, but breeding and finishing animals still need balanced minerals and protein if consistent growth is expected. Black Slavonian pigs remain a conservation and regional-branding concern, so pedigree records and avoidance of casual crossbreeding matter. Keepers should select for strong feet, good mothering, and moderate fat cover rather than pushing the breed into a fast-growth system it was not built for.
Colors: Belted, Black, Black and White, Blonde, Brown, Cream, Ginger, Ginger and Black, Red, Red and Black, Sandy, Solid Black, Solid White, Spotted, Swallow Belly, White