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Encyclopedia > Hydrochoeridae
Capybara
Conservation status: Lower Risk

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Suborder: Hystricognathi
Family: Hydrochoeridae
Genus: Hydrochoerus
Species: hydrochaeris
Binomial name
Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris
(Linnaeus, 1766)

The capybara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) is the largest of living rodents (the long extinct rodent Phoberomys pattersoni was significantly bigger.) They are native to most of the tropical and temperate parts of South America east of the Andes, always near water. It is the only living member of its family, Hydrochoeridae. It is called carpincho in Spanish and capivara in Portuguese. Although the name originally derives from the Guarani "Kapiÿva".


Description and habits

Full-grown capybaras reach between 105 and 135 cm in length, and weigh 35 to 65 kilos. Capybaras are excellent swimmers, and have partially webbed feet. They mate in the water, use the water to hide from predators, and can stay submerged for several minutes. Capybaras can even sleep underwater, with only the nose exposed.


Capybaras are herd animals. They spend most of their time on the banks of rivers, feeding in the mornings and evenings. The diet consists of vegetation such as river plants and bark.


Economical and ecological aspects

In the regions along the Paraná river in Southern Brazil, Northern Argentina, and Uruguay, capybaras are frequently captured and kept as pets, or occasionally hunted for food. The flesh is described as tasting like swine and has a whitish appearance similar to pork.

Venezuelan farmers who once considered the animal a pest now make a valuable addition to their incomes by selling capybara meat (approximately 400 tons annually). The rodents are rounded up in February so that they can be slaughtered and sold just before the onset of Lent, when the meat is in high demand.


This popular custom is attributed to a curious theological decision by the Catholic Church. When European missionaries first met capybaras in South America during the 16th century, they wrote to Rome for guidance, saying "there is an animal here that is scaly but also hairy, and spends time in the water but occasionally comes on land; can we classify it as a fish?" The question was significant, as the Catholic faith then forbade eating meat (other than fish) during Lent, the period of abstinence lasting 40 days before Easter. Having a second-hand description of the animal, and not wanting the petitioners to turn away from Catholicism, the Church agreed and declared the capybara a fish — a decision that was never reversed.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Hydrochoeridae Rodents Mammalia Chordata Animalia Flora and Fauna Biology Science (49 words)
Hydrochoeridae Rodents Mammalia Chordata Animalia Flora and Fauna Biology Science
Top: Science: Biology: Flora_and_Fauna: Animalia: Chordata: Mammalia: Rodents: Hydrochoeridae:
Science- Biology- Flora and Fauna- Animalia- Chordata- Mammalia- Rodents- Hydrochoeridae
capybara --  Encyclopædia Britannica (673 words)
The capybara is the sole member of the family Hydrochoeridae, but it resembles the cavy and guinea pig of the family Caviidae.
South American capybaras may be 1.25 metres (4 feet) long and weigh 66 kg (145 pounds) or more; Panamanian capybaras are smaller and weigh about 27 kg.
The remaining patches of evergreen forest in the highlands are reminiscent of the wealth of vegetation in Brazil in days gone by.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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