The Newest, Cutest Baby Animals from the World's Zoos & Aquariums

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This single capybara baby made its public debut yesterday at the San Diego Zoo in California. At only one day old, this little baby weighs 3 – 5 pounds (1.36-2.27 kgs) and has teeth that let it nibble on grasses!

In fact, the word capybara means "master of the grass" and its scientific name, Hydrochoerus, means "water hog" because of its love for water. The capybara, however, is not a pig as that implies, but the world's largest rodent species. An adult male can weigh up to 141 pounds and a female up to 146 pounds! and end up to be about two feet tall.

Capybara are highly social and live in groups controlled by a dominant male. Capybara females in a group are known to help care for and even nurse each other's young. This is the second capybara born in the past week and at this time, its gender is unknown.

Capybara are found in Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, the Guyanas and Peru, south through Brazil, Paraguay, northeast Argentina, and Uruguay. Semi-aquatic, they frequent dense vegetation surrounding lakes, rivers, swamps, marshes, and ponds.

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Baby mom
Photo Credits: Sand Diego Zoo

6 responses to “One Day Old Capybara Trots Out to Say Hello”

  1. Desiree Avatar
    Desiree

    What a cutie pie….

  2. Jane Avatar
    Jane

    What is the average number of babies born in a capybara birth/litter?

  3. Anne Packrat Avatar
    Anne Packrat

    Good lord that is cute.

  4. katz Avatar
    katz

    Drove to San Diego from LA just so I could see this little guy.

  5. Lani Avatar
    Lani

    Regarding what you are calling ‘killer whales” they are NOT and never have been whales. They are ORCAS which are the largest species of DOLPHINS. On a site like this it really is a disservice to those wanting factual information about animals for you to not call an animal by its correct name.
    True your article refers to them both as killer whales and Orcas but it does not specify that Orca is the correct name for this animal but perpetuates the incorrect name for this animal.
    Please re-list this gorgeous animals as Orcas and in the article immediately correct this misnomer and then only refer to them as Orcas.
    I happen to live in an area that has several resident as well as transient pods of Orcas living here too.

  6. Andrew @ ZooBorns Avatar

    Hi Lani,
    Thanks for the feedback. Orcinus orca is still most commonly referred to as the killer whale by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, Environmental Protection Agency and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). For better and worse these are the organizations we look to to guide our naming conventions.
    You are correct that killer whales are the largest species within the family delphinidae, which is within the suborder odontoceti (all toothed whales). The term “whale” itself is a broad one, which describes various marine mammals. We believe it to be as applicable or inapplicable to sperm whales, beaked whales or narwhals as it is to members of delphinidae.
    Some of the history and different perspectives on the matter is covered on the Wikipedia page under common names – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killer_whale#Common_names

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