Or a state-sponsored bounty. Though you don't want to encourage breeding them. Maybe reward all county taxpayers with a three-month-long tax holiday if they can be rid of nutria for a year.
They need to train dogs (very easy) to sniff them out. Man usually cannot detect them. This is how it's done in Germany, which has the very same problem when a lot got out of Danish farms.
Thats such a political argument, this is ecology, your POV on origins isn't correct in this case.
Introducing a new species that has never lived somewhere could maybe introduce really bad side effects?
Imagine a new predator that somehow eats everything and reproduce 10x more than any other species in the introduced ecosystem, causing it to simply be destroyed?
Same goes with plants, why do you think airports prevents you from importing fruits and seeds? Because they could cause irreversible damages.
You can Google tons of cases of invasive insects being mistakenly imported being a bane to farmers and the like.
> Imagine a new predator that somehow eats everything and reproduce 10x more than any other species in the introduced ecosystem, causing it to simply be destroyed?
Everyone knows that if you encounter an R.O.U.S, You're supposed to retreat into the fire swamp.
I don't think they exist.
Every Louisianian reading this is laughing and screaming at the same time
Or East Tx, Nutria were everywhere in the bayous in Houston so…I’m not sure what the problem is haha
They should open up trapping season on them. Apparently their fur is used in fashion.
I could use a new winter hat.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutria_fur
Or a state-sponsored bounty. Though you don't want to encourage breeding them. Maybe reward all county taxpayers with a three-month-long tax holiday if they can be rid of nutria for a year.
IIRC Texas has put up bounties for feral hogs, but I'm not sure how much it's helped.
They need to train dogs (very easy) to sniff them out. Man usually cannot detect them. This is how it's done in Germany, which has the very same problem when a lot got out of Danish farms.
I read / skimmed twice but didn't see, this invasive species is native of where?
Native to South America. Imported to various places for fur trade ( 1900s). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutria
s/Nutria/People/g
Sadly not capybaras
I don't understand how "invasive species" is a coherent concept. Ok, so they're not originally from the area. Who is?
Thats such a political argument, this is ecology, your POV on origins isn't correct in this case. Introducing a new species that has never lived somewhere could maybe introduce really bad side effects? Imagine a new predator that somehow eats everything and reproduce 10x more than any other species in the introduced ecosystem, causing it to simply be destroyed? Same goes with plants, why do you think airports prevents you from importing fruits and seeds? Because they could cause irreversible damages. You can Google tons of cases of invasive insects being mistakenly imported being a bane to farmers and the like.
> Imagine a new predator that somehow eats everything and reproduce 10x more than any other species in the introduced ecosystem, causing it to simply be destroyed?
Like Homo Sapiens ? /s