Nutria: A Historical Nuisance
It is the quality of nutria fur that first inspired people
to bring them from South America (Argentina and Chile) to North America
in the late 1800s. Fur-farming attempts failed due to high mortality
rates and low reproductive success in captivity. Accidental and intentional
releases led to the establishment of wild populations of nutria in at
least 15 other states. Sightings have been reported in 40 states and
three Canadian provinces. While nutrias have made their way to many
watersheds in the United States, Louisiana has the unfortunate distinction
of hosting the largest wild population of this animal. Recent estimates
put the population of nutrias in southeast Louisiana as high as 6,000
animals per square mile.
Nutrias
have a body similar to a large rat and a head that resembles a beaver.
They are easily identified by their hairless round tail and four large
front teeth that are bright orange in color. Their soft, grayish-brown
underfur is covered by coarse brown guard hairs.
The hind feet of a nutria are webbed making them excellent swimmers.
Full-grown, nutrias weigh between 12 to 16 pounds. Nutrias
are vegetarians and will graze upon a variety of wetland plants, including
water hyacinths (another exotic species), cypress seedlings, cordgrass
and duckweed. Nutria have also been known to feed on lawn grasses
and shrubs in residential areas.
This large population of nutrias got its start in 1937 on Avery Island,
the home of Tabasco hot-sauce magnate E. A. McIlhenny when McIlhenny
imported a handful of nutria to begin a fur farm. The animals readily
adapted to their new home and successfully bred in captivity. Hurricanes
along the Louisiana coast in 1939 and 1940 have been given reponsibility
for the escape of these animals from several fur farms in the area,
including McIlhenny's. It was hoped that the alligator, the only natural
predator of nutria, would keep the population in check, but within two
years nutria had spread to Texas and Mississippi. The nutria population
grew to tremendous numbers, an estimated 20 million animals by the late
1950s (Lowry, 1974), which supported a vibrant trapping and fur industry
for several decades in Louisiana. Between 1962 and 1986 Louisiana trappers
harvested more than 1 million nutria each year. Around 1986, the fur
industry in Louisiana fell on economic hard times, making trapping of
nutria economically unattractive. At the same time, reports of nutria
damage in the coastal wetlands began to escalate.