The Chupacabra – Myth or Real?

Since the 1970s, people in Puerto Rico have reported mysterious attacks on their livestock and pets that resulted in death. In all of these cases, the animals have had puncture wounds on their necks and chest that caused them to bleed to death, but there is rarely any blood found at the scene. While no known cause has ever been determined, these reports, which continue to this day, have spawned the belief that a mystical, possibly alien creature is responsible. This creature is known as the "chupacabra", which is Spanish for "goat sucker."

First Reports of the Chupacabra

The first documented attacks occurred in 1975 in Moca, Puerto Rico. The people initially blamed satanic cults and referred to the perpetrator as El Vampiro (the Vampire) de Moca. As more killings were reported, the mystery grew and a comedian named Silverio Perez coined the term "chupacabra." Since then, similar killings have been reported in 13 other countries including the Domincan Republic, Chile, Argentina, Peru, Mexico and the United States.

 

Common Depictions of the Chupacabra

No chupacabras have been captured and no officially accepted chupacabra pictures have ever been taken. But, similar descriptions have been cobbled together over time to become the chupacabra images we recognize today. In artists' depictions of the creature, the chupacabra is usually about three to four feet in height and the chupacabra's head generally has large black eyes. Overall, it has a lizard like appearance, with reptile-like skin, fangs and sharp pines that go along its head and down its back. 

  

chupacabras.jpgChupacabras in Recent News

 As recently as August of 2007, sightings of chupacabras in Texas have been reported. When a women named Phylis Canion found a dead animal that looked like the famed chupacabra near her ranch in Cuero, Texas, it made national news. Canion believed her finding could be the mythical beast because it had vampire-like teeth and blue, mostly hairless skin.

"There have been so many stories for so long. The chupacabra is a mythical thing and maybe it is, but this is something...a cross between something. What? I don't know, I'd love to find out," Canion told a KENS-TV reporter.

When biologists who studied the creature got the DNA results back, it was determined that the animal was a mix of wild dog or grey fox. Read the initial news story.

 

Could the Chupacabra Be Real?

Most scientific experts agree that the likelihood the chupacabra is real is very low, but many people who have seen the aftermath of livestock attacks in both North and South America disagree. In fact, the growing popularity and belief in chupacabras has made them a phenomenon similar to Big Foot. America's leading cryptozoologist and author of Cryptozoology A to Z, Loren Coleman, has even called the animal "the single most notable cryptozoological phenomenon of the past decade."

With so few scientific answers, the mystery of the Chupacabra will likely remain a mystery until one is captured and the DNA is determined to be a creature of unknown origin.

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