• Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    Not my pic, but this is in my city, Curitiba:

    I used to visit that specific park (Parque Barigüi) fairly often, as I worked nearby. For me the fun part wasn’t even interacting with the capybaras, but watch the tourists interacting with them. Not recommended - unlike the ones in the OP, these here are wild and might have ticks, but… well, neither tourists nor capybaras give a fuck.

      • youthinkyouknowme@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        11 months ago

        It’s actually quite risky. Some people died last month in Brazil because of the disease that’s is transmitted by these ticks (Rocky Mountain spotted fever if I got it right from google, febre maculosa in Portuguese).

        • dublet@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          While you might die from having hugged a tick infested Capybara, have you honestly truly lived until you did so?

        • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          I remember news about that. It was in Campinas - there was a huge capybara population boom.

          That city is in a specially bad spot for this sort of disease because it’s heavily populated like Curitiba, but unlike Curitiba it has a huge rural area. Like, you walk in Barão Geraldo neighbourhood and it’s booming, then you walk a bit more and suddenly you’re in the middle of nowhere. The odds of infecting livestock that infects people are fairly high, and with the demographic density in Campinas proper you get it from person to person.

          Still better to do what the OP did though. If you want to hug the oversized rodents, make sure that there’s people taking care of them, and ensuring that they’re OK.

          • youthinkyouknowme@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            11 months ago

            Yep, that’s the one, I think there were even more cases like last week or something.

            Still better to do what the OP did though. If you want to hug the oversized rodents, make sure that there’s people taking care of them, and ensuring that they’re OK.

            Yeah, 100%. Being taken care they seem to be super chill and safe to interact with.

        • LinkOpensChest.wav@lemmy.one
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          11 months ago

          Ticks can carry deadly diseases where I live too, and we’ve got a lot of them.

          With a decent tick repellant for myself and pets, I can’t recall the last time I had one on me.

  • Noedel@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Nice! I got to eat one of those once when staying with a native family in the Bolivian Amazon. It was quite nice.

    • Jaxia@toast.oooOP
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      11 months ago

      Haha! That’s what my husband kept talking about when we saw them. In Peru they eat Cuy which is guinea pig. I have never tried it, nor do I really want to but my husband is ready and willing to eat any exotic animal…

      • Noedel@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Yeah I mean they just eat off the land, which for them involves hunting the Amazon. They had monkey too, which I politely skipped.

    • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      I never ate capybara meat, what people often mention about it is that it’s strong-tasting and grassy. Plus in my city it feels like as much of a sacrilege as hurting the Paraná pines or the azure jays. Like, I think that you’d get an easier time murdering people than those three.

  • Coeus@coeus.sbs
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    11 months ago

    I love seeing the Capys on the Urban Rescue Ranch channel on YouTube, there are 4 of them and they have an ASMR channel.

  • aja@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    Adorable! I’d love a domesticated one. I’d imagine they give great cuddles

    • itsnicodegallo@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      Too bad domestication takes generations. 😭 My buddy loves capybaras so much he has a tattoo of one.

        • itsnicodegallo@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          Nope, but after researching everything you’d need to do to provide a suitable environment for a capybara, it seems super unfeasible. Besides breeding a desire for human companionship into capybaras, they require huge enclosures and access to large bodies of water since they’re semi aquatic. Furthermore, the water would need to be thermally regulated and regularly filtered because that’s where they defecate and stuff.

          You can alter a creature’s biology and behavior with domestication to an extent, but it seems like you’d have to be filthy rich or overhaul what a capybara is just to make having one as a pet a humane option.

          They’ll just have to keep being our buddies in the wild (or in dedicated sanctuaries).

          • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            The biggest issue is poop. They don’t poop just in the water, they poop everywhere. And they often eat their own poop, not just under stress conditions (as dogs do) but even when they’re happy. I’m not sure if they can be conditioned, for example, to only poop in a litterbox, and to leave the poop alone.

            On the other hand, thermal regulation for the water isn’t that big of a deal, they’re more resilient to cold than it looks like:

            I think that this pic is from the same park as I posted early on. It snows once in a blue moon here, but hail is somewhat common in the winter. They handle it fine.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            And even if you successfully domesticate them, there are problems. There is a huge program in Russia that has been going on for decades domesticating foxes and, while it was largely successful, the foxes urinate every time they’re excited. So they just won’t make good pets.

            • itsnicodegallo@lemm.ee
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              11 months ago

              As I understand it, the foxes were specifically bred to not just tolerate human interaction but to enjoy it and crave it. The thing is that that is selective breeding over the course of a couple dozen generations in less than 100 years.

              Most of the animals that are currently domesticated have had 10,000 years of selective breeding, so there are all kinds of specific behavioral or physical traits that they do or do not have.

              Ironically, that kind of hyperspecific breeding for only a few traits is what leads a lot of modern dog breeds to have various health problems associated with their breeds because they are bred for aesthetic and not for health or longevity. A common example is the obsessive compulsive disorder bread into the dog that is associated with the Target brand or the hip dysplasia that is associated with German shepherds due to being bred to have more and more deeply sloped backs.

  • phx@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    If you’re in the interior of BC, Canada, there’s a “kangaroo park” where you can pet the capy’s. Also Wallabies, Goats, rabbits and some other critters

  • sat012e@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Aw, I went to a jungle hotel in Central America that had capybaras on the grounds… never got to see one. They had a sloth sanctuary though and I got to see one of those slow bois.

    Sloth facts: Sloths only poop every three weeks. When they poop, a moth that lives on them deposits its eggs into the sloth poop, and that’s how the eggs will hatch and the babies will go on to find their own sloth host!