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9:17am March 27, 2012
rhamphotheca:

Capybaras 
photo by Claus Meyer/Minden Pictures  
Even the world’s largest rodents can have a tender moment. Here, a baby capybara nuzzles its mother in a Brazilian swamp. Averaging 120 pounds (50 kilograms), these tropical giants are at home on land or in water and feed on aquatic plants and grasses.
(via: National Geo)

rhamphotheca:

Capybaras 

photo by Claus Meyer/Minden Pictures  

Even the world’s largest rodents can have a tender moment. Here, a baby capybara nuzzles its mother in a Brazilian swamp. Averaging 120 pounds (50 kilograms), these tropical giants are at home on land or in water and feed on aquatic plants and grasses.

(via: National Geo)

Notes:
  1. konagrown reblogged this from diosaodiosa and added:
    i would like a capybara
  2. poetryof-reality reblogged this from dendroica and added:
    heh
  3. sethsethinertia reblogged this from dendroica
  4. ragingbitchfest reblogged this from dendroica
  5. sirfloppychicken reblogged this from probablyhuman
  6. probablyhuman reblogged this from bittergrapes
  7. heal------mywoundse69gocrazy reblogged this from jungle--rain
  8. smirkingbenevolence reblogged this from soilrockslove and added:
    Capybaras are like Pleistocene Giant Guinea Pigs. I can totally see a herd of them meandering across some Ice Age...
  9. withasmoothroundstone reblogged this from soilrockslove
  10. zookeeperconservationist reblogged this from gastornis
  11. missjordanleigh reblogged this from lessaismore
  12. nofrigatelikeabook reblogged this from bittergrapes
  13. lessaismore reblogged this from rainbow-arsenic-pixie-sticks and added:
    ROUSes
  14. glassdragon reblogged this from the-science-alliance
  15. soilrockslove reblogged this from bittergrapes
  16. the-science-alliance reblogged this from bittergrapes
  17. wildography reblogged this from raging-rawrpants