nutria - meaning and definition. What is nutria
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What (who) is nutria - definition

SEMI-AQUATIC SPECIES OF THE SPINY RAT FAMILY
Myocastor coypus; Coypou; Coipu; Neutral rat; Nutrea; Nutria hunting; Ragondin; Nutrias; Nutra rat; Nutria rat; Coypu
  • A nutria in a canal in Milan
  • Trap for capturing nutria
  • view in Full HD]]
  • Skull
  • ''Myocastor coypus''
  • Zoo animal on logs

Nutria         
·noun The fur of the coypu. ·see Coypu.
nutria         
['nju:tr??]
¦ noun the skin or fur of the coypu.
Origin
C19: from Sp., lit. 'otter'.
Nutria fur         
  • Nutria fur in its natural state
FUR OF THE NUTRIA, MYOCASTOR COYPUS
Coypu fur
Nutria fur, also known as coypu fur, is used in the fashion industry. It comes from the nutria, a South American rodent and cousin of the beaver.

Wikipedia

Nutria

The nutria (Myocastor coypus), also known as the coypu, is a large, herbivorous, semiaquatic rodent. Classified for a long time as the only member of the family Myocastoridae, Myocastor is now included within Echimyidae, the family of the spiny rats. The nutria lives in burrows alongside stretches of water and feeds on river plant stems. Originally native to subtropical and temperate South America, it has since been introduced to North America, Europe, Asia, and Africa, primarily by fur farmers. Although it is still hunted and trapped for its fur in some regions, its destructive burrowing and feeding habits often bring it into conflict with humans, and it is considered an invasive species. Nutria also transmit various diseases to humans and animals, mainly through water contamination.

Examples of use of nutria
1. It‘s because nutria ate all the grasses.‘‘ However, a substantial body of evidence points to oil‘s heavy toll.
2. There are other reasons for the disastrous wetlands loss: Human development, cypress logging, ill–advised farming on the coast, hurricanes, slipping–and–sliding geologic faults and even a South American semi–aquatic rodent called nutria imported to Louisiana in the 1'30s.
3. "Acetone, paint thinner. . . . Nothing gets the smell out from under your nails, but a gal‘s got to try." Then she returns to normal life, which includes riding her Harley, organizing charity balls and trapping nutria for fur, at $6 a tail.