Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Following a decline in demand for nutria fur, nutria have since become pests in many areas, destroying aquatic vegetation, marshes, and irrigation systems, and chewing through man-made items such as tires and wooden house panelling in Louisiana, eroding river banks, and displacing native animals. Damage in Louisiana has been sufficiently severe ...
In the year 2000, nutria were estimated to be destroying 100,000 acres of Louisiana wetlands per year, according to the state’s Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. Last year, that figure had ...
In 2010, both the BBC and The New York Times reported that nutria was being promoted as a socially acceptable way to wear fur, with a fashion show held in Brooklyn sponsored by the Barataria-Terrebonne National Estuary Program, a conservation body working to preserve Louisiana swampland threatened by the nutria.
McIlhenny is sometimes blamed for the introduction of exotic nutria, also known as coypu, into Louisiana where they are a major ecological problem. Although he was neither the first to introduce their farming in the area nor to release them into the wild, he was a major proponent of the animals' introduction and an avid self-promoter, making ...
California and 19 other states, including Oregon and Mississippi, are overrun with the animal, ... For a nutria recipe, Higgins suggests a Louisiana tradition. “Nutria gumbo,” she wrote ...
Lake Martin, located in St. Martin Parish, is a wildlife preserve and one of Louisiana's swamplands. [1] The swamplands are home to a few trails as well as many different kinds of animals such as herons, egrets, ibis, bullfrogs, cottonmouths, alligators, and coypu (nutria) rats. Despite its classification as a wildlife reserve, however, there ...
Animals. Business. Food. Games. Health. Home & Garden. News. Shopping. ... watch for news from Zoo of Acadiana in Louisiana. Their weather prognosticator is Pierre C. Shadeaux, who is a nutria (a ...
Rodents of Unusual Size is a 2017 documentary film funded by ITVS and directed by the team of Quinn Costello, Chris Metzler and Jeff Springer about giant invasive swamp rats, nutria, threatening coastal Louisiana. The film is narrated by Wendell Pierce with an all original musical soundtrack by the Cajun band Lost Bayou Ramblers.