Scientific Classification
KINGDOM: Animalia
PHYLUM: Chordata
CLASS: Mammalia
ORDER: Rodentia
FAMILY: Caviidae
GENUS: Hydrochoerus
SPECIES: H. hydrochaeris
Conservation Status
Capybaras are the world’s largest living rodent and can stand up to two feet high, grow over three feet long, weigh between 75-150 pounds.
Capybaras are semi-aquatic as they spend time on land and in the water. Their webbed feet make it easy to navigate in the water, while their coarse fur allows them to dry off quickly.
Capybaras have developed many traits that allow them to excel in water. Their eyes, ears, and nostrils are on the tops of their heads allowing them to see, hear, and smell underwater! Not only can they hold their breath for up to five minutes, but they can sleep underwater with their nose just above the water’s surface.
The capybara has a lot of predators such as jaguars, eagles, piranha, pumas, and ocelots. If a capybara senses danger, it will bark at intruders to alarm them and tell other capybaras to run or jump into nearby rivers. If the group is attacked, they will form a defensive huddle with young capybaras in the center.
There hasn’t been a definitive reason that so many animals in the animal kingdom get along with capybaras. Scientists believe that besides the capybara being so easy-going, it’s because capybaras are naturally social animals. Some can also have symbiotic relationships with capybaras such as birds eating the bugs out of a capybara’s fur while the capybara gets clean.