HUSZÁR, Szilárd: Spread of territorially and locally non-native plant species through hunting activities around Tornaľa (Bodva Hills). Bachelor thesis - Technical University in Zvolen. Faculty of Forestry; Department of Phytology. – Bachelor thesis supervisor: RNDr. Judita KOCHJAROVÁ, CSc., 62 pages. The bachelor thesis focuses on the spread of territorially and locally non-native plant species through hunting activities around Tornaľa - selected area of Bodva Hills. The activities causing the most significant changes in the species composition of local vegetation include the placing of feed of plant origin on baits and feeding grounds. Feed grain is used to introduce the fruits or seeds of numerous weeds from which adult fruiting plants, completely foreign in the given environment (including dangerous so-called invasive species), can grow. The aim of the thesis is to collect data on the introduction, occurrence and tendencies of further distribution of these species in the selected territorial unit. The theoretical part of the bachelor thesis deals with the issue of feeding and baiting of wild animals, non-native and invasive plant species, characteristics of the studied area and the examined forest vegetation in field research. In the practical part of the thesis, the individual localities and findings found during the field research are described, as well as the results of the analysis of feed grain from local sources, which is used for feeding and baiting in the studied area, in terms of the presence of weed diaspores, or non-native species, and the representation of species identified in feed samples with data from field research are compared.