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Nat Theo Nature Lessons Rooted in the Bible

Why Do Capybara Eat Their Poop? Lesson 99

Nat Theo Nature Lessons Rooted in the Bible

Eryn Lynum

Education For Kids, Religion & Spirituality, Kids & Family, Christianity

4.8616 Ratings

🗓️ 28 October 2025

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Discover God’s amazing design in the world’s largest rodent—the capybara! Meet this calm, expert swimmer with chisel-sharp teeth and learn how it points us to keep returning to the goodness of God’s Word again and again.

Here’s our trail map:

  • Why Do Capybara Destroy Everything In Sight?
  • Do Capybara Know How to Swim?
  • Why Do Capybara Eat Their Poop?
  • How Can We Get More and More Goodness From God’s Word?

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Episode Links:



Scriptures Referenced in This Episode:

“The word of God is alive and active…” Hebrews 4:12a (NIV)

“They love the Lord’s teachings, and they think about those teachings day and night.” Psalm 1:2 (NCV)

“Rain and snow fall from the sky

    and don’t return without watering the ground.

They cause the plants to sprout and grow,

    making seeds for the farmer

    and bread for the people.

The same thing is true of the words I speak.

    They will not return to me empty.

They make the things happen that I want to happen,

    and they succeed in doing what I send them to do.” Isaiah 55:10-11 (NCV)

“When your words came, I ate them; they were my joy and my heart’s delight…” Jeremiah 15:16a (NCV)


Terms Learned in This Episode:

  • Rodent: A type of mammal that has special teeth designed for gnawing. Their front incisor teeth keep growing and they must chew on things to keep them short and usable.
  • Rodent Incisors: Special strong, sharp front teeth that never stop growing.
  • Reserve Crown: The hidden part of a rodent’s front tooth that stays under the gum and keeps growing. As the tip of the tooth wears down from chewing, the reserve crown slowly moves up, so the tooth never runs out and always stays sharp.
  • Herbivore: Creatures that eat only plants, such as leaves, grass, fruits, or vegetables.
  • Semi-aquatic: An animal that lives part of the time in the water, and part of the time on land.
  • Cecotrophy: When some animals eat certain soft droppings that they made earlier so they can digest their food a second time.
  • Cecotropes: Soft, nutrient-rich droppings made by some rodents including capybara. These special droppings are eaten by the animal so food can be digested a second time, letting them absorb extra vitamins and nutrients they didn’t get the first time.



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Mentioned in this episode:

Magnify: A Wild & Wonderful Summer Adventure by Nat Theo

Join us for summer Bible & nature study! https://thenaturaltheologyproject.com/magnify

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Have you downloaded the free coloring sheet for this lesson?

0:04.0

Click the link in our show notes to print and color along as you listen.

0:08.1

And join the Nat Theo Club at the link in our show notes to receive a full lesson and activity guide and a bonus video of content every single week.

0:17.0

So you can dive deeper into every lesson.

0:20.0

Explore God's wild and wonderful world in the Nat Theo Club at Aaron Linum.com

0:25.2

slash club or at the link in our show notes.

0:31.4

Hello world.

0:32.7

Wake me up to another good good morning time to go.

0:39.1

Are you ready to explore God's wild and wonderful world?

0:44.0

Welcome to the Nat Theo podcast.

0:46.8

I'm your host, Aaron Linum.

0:48.6

I'm a certified master naturalist, Bible teacher, and author.

0:52.4

And I am so excited to dive into God's written word,

0:56.9

the Bible, and his created world with you.

1:10.8

A few weeks ago, we learned about the largest rodent in North America, the beaver.

1:17.5

Today, we are discovering an even larger rodent.

1:21.8

In fact, it is the biggest rodent in the world.

1:25.4

How large is this rodent?

1:30.9

It can grow to be about two feet tall,

1:43.2

four feet long, and it can weigh up to 150 pounds. That is 0.6 meters tall, 1.2 meters long, and around 68 kilograms in weight. This means that this rodent can

1:49.9

weigh around as much as I do, and if it was standing next to me, it would come up to above my knees,

1:56.7

and it is longer than a golden retriever dog. Can you guess what this rodent is? Today we are learning

...

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