The Prague Post - Argentina's giant rodents dyed Hulk green by algae

EUR -
AED 4.268706
AFN 76.672415
ALL 96.924601
AMD 442.479427
ANG 2.080576
AOA 1065.869923
ARS 1577.88264
AUD 1.783749
AWG 2.093673
AZN 1.983457
BAM 1.957896
BBD 2.329514
BDT 140.890231
BGN 1.956313
BHD 0.438185
BIF 3409.665044
BMD 1.162344
BND 1.505531
BOB 7.992557
BRL 6.373712
BSD 1.156648
BTN 102.672246
BWP 15.570804
BYN 3.938367
BYR 22781.950283
BZD 2.3262
CAD 1.63131
CDF 2725.697255
CHF 0.92966
CLF 0.028484
CLP 1117.419708
CNY 8.298006
CNH 8.283453
COP 4562.492365
CRC 582.025618
CUC 1.162344
CUP 30.802127
CVE 110.384602
CZK 24.310956
DJF 205.962275
DKK 7.468714
DOP 72.818272
DZD 151.417472
EGP 55.480209
ERN 17.435166
ETB 169.927855
FJD 2.642355
FKP 0.872028
GBP 0.870097
GEL 3.16152
GGP 0.872028
GHS 13.185286
GIP 0.872028
GMD 84.851075
GNF 10036.788528
GTQ 8.859599
GYD 241.982188
HKD 9.039739
HNL 30.370645
HRK 7.536991
HTG 151.524177
HUF 391.14458
IDR 19276.203331
ILS 3.836548
IMP 0.872028
INR 102.69719
IQD 1515.141659
IRR 48876.582478
ISK 141.608401
JEP 0.872028
JMD 186.049985
JOD 0.824121
JPY 175.61515
KES 149.43136
KGS 101.647388
KHR 4653.041579
KMF 493.995968
KPW 1046.120563
KRW 1651.040859
KWD 0.356666
KYD 0.963844
KZT 624.716882
LAK 25101.982081
LBP 103574.92361
LKR 350.139377
LRD 211.659333
LSL 20.238528
LTL 3.432101
LVL 0.70309
LYD 6.3008
MAD 10.633784
MDL 19.431054
MGA 5205.595486
MKD 61.625837
MMK 2440.191649
MNT 4182.639274
MOP 9.262236
MRU 46.354827
MUR 52.773653
MVR 17.783982
MWK 2005.655876
MXN 21.452554
MYR 4.911489
MZN 74.28493
NAD 20.238528
NGN 1693.163971
NIO 42.565754
NOK 11.774281
NPR 164.274578
NZD 2.031378
OMR 0.446918
PAB 1.156638
PEN 3.961324
PGK 4.935305
PHP 67.412521
PKR 327.482819
PLN 4.259748
PYG 8141.786617
QAR 4.217169
RON 5.088275
RSD 117.167852
RUB 92.405622
RWF 1678.804544
SAR 4.359135
SBD 9.574605
SCR 17.269831
SDG 699.145439
SEK 11.053432
SGD 1.505986
SHP 0.872059
SLE 27.024448
SLL 24373.780394
SOS 661.010519
SRD 45.307783
STD 24058.182361
STN 24.526363
SVC 10.119965
SYP 15113.322052
SZL 20.221823
THB 37.794209
TJS 10.629454
TMT 4.079829
TND 3.407892
TOP 2.722328
TRY 48.623406
TTD 7.855444
TWD 35.527036
TZS 2852.314133
UAH 48.340561
UGX 4007.341962
USD 1.162344
UYU 46.480962
UZS 14052.225611
VES 228.980334
VND 30623.706792
VUV 141.900323
WST 3.25584
XAF 656.662846
XAG 0.02217
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.141294
XCG 2.084559
XDR 0.816681
XOF 656.665674
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.625552
ZAR 20.120844
ZMK 10462.497639
ZMW 26.110066
ZWL 374.274423
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75.55

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.1800

    23.72

    -0.76%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1900

    14.9

    -1.28%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    16.58

    +0.54%

  • AZN

    0.6100

    85.12

    +0.72%

  • RIO

    0.0600

    68.22

    +0.09%

  • RELX

    0.3000

    45.43

    +0.66%

  • NGG

    0.9500

    74.25

    +1.28%

  • BP

    -0.5900

    33.11

    -1.78%

  • BTI

    0.2900

    51.1

    +0.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.3000

    24

    -1.25%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    14.04

    -0.07%

  • BCC

    2.0400

    74.12

    +2.75%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    11.35

    +1.59%

  • BCE

    -0.8700

    23.33

    -3.73%

  • GSK

    0.4600

    44.15

    +1.04%

Argentina's giant rodents dyed Hulk green by algae
Argentina's giant rodents dyed Hulk green by algae / Photo: JUAN MABROMATA - AFP

Argentina's giant rodents dyed Hulk green by algae

First a river ran blood red. Now Argentina's beloved giant rodent, the capybara, has been coated in Hulk-green slime as pollution turns the country's waterways traffic light colours.

Text size:

The capybara, also known as a carpincho or chiguire, is the world's largest rodent, measuring up to 1.35 meters (4 feet four inches) in length and weighing up to 80 kilograms (176 pounds).

An AFP photographer snapped several of the tufty creatures that had been stained pea green along the Uruguay River north of Buenos Aires on Thursday where a rotten smell hangs in the air and dead fish lay strewn on the banks.

Each year, bacteria cause a thick greenish layer to coat the shores around the Salto Grande hydroelectric dam, on Argentina's border with Uruguay. The phenomenon has increased in intensity in recent years.

These cyanobacteria "are photosynthetic organisms that perform an important function in the ecosystem," Diego Frau, a biologist at the National Institute of Limnology told AFP.

But in high concentrations they can be destructive and toxic, he said.

High temperatures and high levels of nutrients in the water, partly driven by livestock farming, causes the algae to spread.

Climate change is causing the green tide, which can last for several weeks, to become "increasingly recurrent," damaging ecosystems, he said.

In people, mild exposure to the bacteria can cause skin conditions or "flu-like symptoms" such as diarrhea, vomiting and headaches, Martin Novoa, a biologist at the Faculty of Food Sciences at the National University of Entre Rios, told AFP.

Prolonged exposure can lead to liver and nervous system complications, he added.

At least 15 municipalities in Buenos Aires province have issued health alerts over the bacteria.

The outbreak comes a week after a stream running through a town near Buenos Aires turned blood red and emitted a foul smell.

The stream flows through an area of textile and hide processing factories.

Residents accused factories of dumping waste in the river.

Environmental officials are studying the cause of the discoloration, which lasted a few hours.

U.Pospisil--TPP