The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) recently shared a list of the five invasive animals that people can hunt, catch and cook. Chefs and hunters shared their insights.
“Save a Swamp, Sauté a Nutria,” the agency said. Nutrias can help boost the flavor profile of common dishes or be used as a ...
Fried, grilled or turned into tacos, these invasive species are “surprisingly tasty” and Americans are urged to help control ...
Invasive nutria are wreaking havoc on delicate wetland ecosystems, and wildlife officials think eating them might be part of ...
The invasive marshland rodent is wreaking havoc but California residents can do their part by catching and eating them, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says.
Could your dining choices make you an eco-hero? The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service certainly thinks so. They’re encouraging ...
Nutria are "oversized, wetland-loving rodents were brought to the U.S. for the fur trade and now they’re devouring marshlands ...
“EAT ME! Please? I'm invasive and delicious,” the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wrote in a Feb. 24 Facebook post advising ...
The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service recently marked National Invasive Species Awareness Week with an interesting suggestion: to ...
The decision to feature such graphic images on the front page with the article "By Tooth and Tale" on the Venice nutria rodeo is not only in poor taste but also raises serious ethical concerns.
Crews are now getting help from outside the state. The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Conservancy supplied an $11 million grant to bring in detection dogs from the East Coast. The dogs are experts at ...
Find out which species made the list below. Nutria, a native species to South America, are invasive not just in the San Joaquin Delta area but also in the Gulf of America coast (formerly the Gulf ...