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Showing Original Post only (View all)Giant Swamp Rats Are Literally Eating Louisiana [View all]

On the southern edge of Louisiana, there is almost as much water as land. You can't drive to anyone's house, you have to travel by boat, and sometimes there are hours of water between neighbors. It takes a special breed to make a home here, in the swamp, amongst the mosquitos and almost annual hurricanes. But those who do call it home, love it. They see a magical space of strange stillness and subtle rippling greens and grays where time worries no one and the freedom of the water is at your doorstep.
But this Huck Finn way of life is being attacked on multiple fronts. Climate change's stronger storms are beating away at the fragile coastline, and the oil and gas industries are scarring the skyline while luring younger generations away from the local farming and fishing way of life. As if that weren't enough, 20-pound, semi-aquatic rodents, called nutria, which are native to Argentina, are taking over the marshes, devouring the native plants that hold the soil in place, and causing massive coastal erosion. Chris Metzier, an independent documentary filmmaker, has spent months in these swamps on the front lines of this battle, filming his upcoming documentary Rodents of Unusual Size. He sat down with me recently to talk about nutria and the interesting people who are fighting them to save their way of life.
TakePart: How would you describe nutria, and how did they end up in Louisiana?
Chris Metzier: Nutria are something like a cross between a beaver and a New York sewer rat. They were first brought to Louisiana in the 1930s in order to be farmed for their fur, which was growing in popularity. No one knows exactly how they escaped into the wild. Maybe someone let them go when the fur industry was failing, or perhaps it was the work of a hurricane that tore apart a barn they were being kept in. One way or another, they escaped into the swamps and have just gone crazy. This part of Louisiana is just like a big playground for them. And they can breed within months of being born and have multiple litters a year. There are now about five million nutria in this part of Louisiana. There are nutria in other parts of the country, as well, but nowhere have they made themselves quite so much at home as in Louisiana. That's great for nutria, I guess, but they eat everything that grows, and without plants holding the soil in place, it is eroding away at record speedsabout 40 square miles per year, for several decades now. ...........................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://news.yahoo.com/giant-swamp-rats-literally-eating-louisiana-questions-202344859.html
68 replies
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Oh you literally meant swamp rats. Have to take off my political hat for a second.....
Sheepshank
May 2013
#2
lmao! now i know what we are up against lol! just need 5 million princes to be imported to Louisiana
BREMPRO
May 2013
#12
But then who will feed and shelter the 5 million princes!? We'll need 5 million pricess brides...
Fire Walk With Me
May 2013
#45
My first thought also. I wonder does he ever come around anymore? Haven't seen him here in ages.
Mnemosyne
May 2013
#16
Nutria have been there for decades and I even have a nutria felt hat. Something in the ecology
byeya
May 2013
#11
By the time the Nutria fur is processed into felt and compressed it feels like most felt fedoras
byeya
May 2013
#25
Yes he surely did. He got Elaine, while she was running J. Peterman, Co, to buy him a sable.
byeya
May 2013
#40
I don't know why it's not better known. This type of fiction is still popular and it's
byeya
May 2013
#27
I hear they consider soiled diapers worn by Senators a delicacy (n/m)
ProudToBeBlueInRhody
May 2013
#31
I've got 2 pet rats but what they usually do is chase the dog. (and he likes it)
BlueJazz
May 2013
#43
He has a distinctive style. Haven't seen anything quite like it anywhere since.
leveymg
May 2013
#67
They used to be trapped for their fur, which is gorgeous, but the traps were dangerous.
nolabear
May 2013
#62