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October 28, 2017

Be aware of the Chupacabras

Although the earliest reported sightings of the chupacabra were in the 1990s, the legendary creature has become deeply seated in the public consciousness. Those who believe that the chupacabra exists insist on its reality in spite of there being no photographical or scientific evidence of the species.1 Nonetheless, “flesh and blood chupacabras have supposedly been found as recently as June of 2017, making the monsters eminently more accessible for study than, say, the Loch Ness monster or Bigfoot.”2 The term chupacabra literally means goat sucker, referring to reports of this creature killing goats and drinking their blood. Therefore, the chupacabra has a symbolic link to the vampire. As interesting as the chupacabra might be, the sociological and psychological effects of these reports are equally fascinating. Since 1995, more than two hundred reports of chupacabra have surfaced, all from North America and most from Puerto Rico.3 These reports have led to negative effects in the affected communities, including widespread panic and unnecessary killing of wildlife.

Chupacabras | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository

The chupacabra has been spotted mainly in the United States and Mexico, and especially in Puerto Rico where the legend was originally born. As journalist David Moye points out, several residents of a small town in Texas have not just reported seeing the chupacabra, but also claim to have preserved chupacabra corpses.4 The scientific explanation most typically given for the chupacabra is not that it does not exist at all, but rather that it is simply a wild animal mistaken for the mythical creature. The most common explanation is that the chupacabra is a coyote with mange, which often appears “quite debilitated,” and which may prey on easy targets like livestock.5 Moye also states that some believe the chupacabra to be a type of raccoon. DNA analysis on a suspected corpse has revealed that in at least one case, the suspected chupacabra was nothing more than a “hybrid of a coyote on the maternal side and a Mexican wolf on the paternal side.”6 Nevertheless, not all sightings of the chupacabra are canine in appearance. Almost all the earliest sightings until 2000 were decidedly un-canine and described as “a bipedal creature that was three feet tall and covered in short gray hair, with spikes out of its back.”7

Chupacabra drawing | Courtesy of Flicker

Although the chupacabra stories started to surface in the 1990s in Puerto Rico, Benjamin Radford, author of a book on the chupacabra, points out that there were earlier sightings throughout the twentieth century.8 The stories and the folklore surrounding the chupacabra have dramatically changed over the years, perhaps accounting in part for the shift in its appearance from an odd bipedal creature with spikes to one more canine in appearance and behavior.9 Bale describes the extent of the original reports of the chupacabra, noting that in 1994, residents of Canóvanas, Puerto Rico, had reported dozens of wildlife fatalities not limited to goats. Following the Puerto Rican reports, over two-thousand more farm animals were reported dead via a “grotesque creature about three feet tall, with membraned wings, a hunched back, large eyes, covered with either scales or quills.”10 Some reports also offer the chupacabra the additional sinister feature of “glowing red eyes.”11 Given its fearsome appearance and the trail of destruction left in its wake, it was no wonder that the affected communities started to panic. Whenever and wherever chupacabras had been spotted, residents of the community would go so far as to completely board up their residences, take up arms, and hire guards to protect their loved ones.12 In fact, some ranchers even started to sell off their herds to minimize their financial losses in anticipation of both drought and further chupacabra attacks. In California, a wave of chupacabra sightings led livestock owners and ranchers to declare “open season” on protected wildlife like mountain lions, leading to mandatory police controls of affected areas.13

Chupacabra | Courtesy of Flicker

The panic surrounding chupacabras became so widespread and potentially devastating to local communities that the governments of Mexico, Puerto Rico, and even the United States were forced to step in. As Bale points out, international press conferences ensued, including reports from “prominent biologists” who offered their theories about what the chupacabra could have been, plus another autopsy of a corpse conducted in Miami, which yielded results of the creature to be either a “puma or a dog.”14 Likewise, in 2007, biologists in Texas analyzed the DNA of a chupacabra and found it to be nothing more than a coyote.11 The biologists’ conclusions did little to assuage fears, as the analyses seemed inconclusive, lacking concrete and definitive evidence about what the creature might have really been and why so many continued to see something bipedal and vampiric. Even when the stories started to change, morphing the chupacabra into a canine creature, ranchers and farmers continued to cling to their claims and spread rumors.

The “confusion and contradiction” surrounding chupacabras comes from both sides of the debate, with reported sightings being too diverse and lacking in cohesive description to be seriously credible, and yet with scientific explanations also lacking substance.16 Given the diversity of reports, both in terms of their geographic locations, the description of the creature itself, and its effect on wildlife, it has been as difficult to debunk the existence of the chupacabra as to prove its existence. Unlike Bigfoot or the Loch Ness monster, there have actually been specimens that have been examined and tested, as well as thousands of animal victims of the chupacabra. Therefore, the legend of the chupacabra continues to proliferate and sink quickly into popular culture. Panic is less likely to be the reaction to a chupacabra reporting now, being replaced by a sense of pride in local customs and a mistrust of the government. In essence, the chupacabra plays perfectly to the tune of global conspiracy theorists.

The chupacabra is now known globally, even though its terrain remains geographically restricted, just as with the Loch Ness monster or any similar creature like the yeti. Mainstream news networks, from NBC and CNN to Univision and BBC, have all picked up on chupacabra stories, albeit reporting those stories in a clearly skeptical way.17 The television shows X Files and Scooby Doo both dedicated episodes to chupacabras, who also appeared on countless t-shirts and of course, Halloween costumes.18 A good number of these popular culture references are, of course, tongue-in-cheek, which has revealed an ancillary phenomenon: what Bale calls “a popular commentary on modernity,” similar to the Frankenstein legend.19

There is another important sociological and political effect from the chupacabras: the divide between the guardians of secularism and modernity versus those who believe in the importance of tradition and religion. Whereas it is easy for progressive, secular societies to dismiss the chupacabras out of hand, those who honor the legend, even for humorous purposes, acknowledge that folklore and storytelling play a significant role in human society. Folklore can link people together, offering the means by which to escape the harsher realities of war and climate change. There is also the fact that the people who have reported chupacabra sightings genuinely believe in the creature, and that it threatens their livestock and ways of life. When people from urban areas or communities in far away places start to wear a chupacabra t-shirt, it seems insulting to those who actually do believe that it exists and is a serious public safety concern. In fact, the people of Canóvanas, Puerto Rico, and small rural ranching communities in Mexico felt denigrated and “manipulated” by the mainstream media who painted them as “ignorant hicks,” and Bale also claims that the legend represents the means by which urban legends are used to expose or mirror angst in the public consciousness.20 Thus, chupacabras are at least an opportunity to study the symbolism and function of cryptozoology, as well as a means of studying the ways people manufacture supernatural stories for political or sociological purposes.

El Chupacabra | Courtesy of Fubar and Grill

Interestingly, the chupacabra is never depicted as a creature that harms humans; it only targets livestock. This differentiates the chupacabras from vampires. Yet given that the chupacabra does inflict harm on human communities, it is a sinister symbol of terrorism and oppression. The stories occasionally run dry for several years, only to resurface with a vengeance when a farmer loses hundreds of goats or cattle at once and blames chupacabras. As Robert Jordan points out, too, the elusive platypus was once believed to be a fake creature relegated to cryptozoology as late as the eighteenth century.21 Therefore, the chupacabra may indeed exist. The question would then be: what does the chupacabra actually look like, if half the reports describe one thing and the other half something totally different?

Whether or not the chupacabra exists, the legends and stories are compelling in their own right. The stories are unique to North America, just as the Loch Ness monster is unique to Scotland. Furthermore, the descriptions of the chupacabra have changed significantly, showing how legends and stories can morph while still preserving their core essence and meaning. Finally, the chupacabra represents at once the reactions of rural people who are frequently painted as being backwards, as well as the condescending reactions of urban people who believe themselves to be superior, nonplussed by superstition or legend.

  1. Benjamin Radford, Tracking the chupacabra: the vampire beast in fact, fiction, and folklore (UNM Press, 2011), 133.
  2. Robert Michael Jordan, “El Chupacabra: Icon of Resistance to US Imperialism,” (Master’s Thesis, University of Texas at Dallas, 2008), 4.
  3. Robert Michael Jordan, “El Chupacabra: Icon of Resistance to US Imperialism,” (Master’s Thesis, University of Texas at Dallas, 2008), 7.
  4. Moye David, “Living Chupacabra Captured By Texas Couple?” Huffington Post: Weird News, (April, 2014).
  5. Robert Michael Jordan, “El Chupacabra: Icon of Resistance to US Imperialism,” (Master’s Thesis, University of Texas at Dallas, 2008), 5.
  6. Moye David, “Living Chupacabra Captured By Texas Couple?” Huffington Post: Weird News, (April, 2014).
  7. Robert Michael Jordan, “El Chupacabra: Icon of Resistance to US Imperialism,” (Master’s Thesis, University of Texas at Dallas, 2008), 4.
  8. Benjamin Radford, Tracking the Chupacabra: The Vampire Beast in Fact, Fiction, and Folklore (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2011), 43-44.
  9. Jeffrey M. Bale, “Political paranoia v. political realism: on distinguishing between bogus conspiracy theories and genuine conspiratorial politics,” Patterns of Prejudice (Taylor & Francis Online), Volume 41, Issue 1 (February 1, 2007): 51.
  10. Jeffrey M. Bale, “Political paranoia v. political realism: on distinguishing between bogus conspiracy theories and genuine conspiratorial politics,” Patterns of Prejudice (Taylor & Francis Online), Volume 41, Issue 1 (February 1, 2007): 48.
  11. Funk & Wagnalls New World Encyclopedia, 2016, s.v. “Chupacabra.”
  12. Jeffrey M. Bale, “Political paranoia v. political realism: on distinguishing between bogus conspiracy theories and genuine conspiratorial politics,” Patterns of Prejudice (Taylor & Francis Online), Volume 41, Issue 1 (February 1, 2007): 54.
  13.  Funk & Wagnalls New World Encyclopedia, 2016, s.v. “Chupacabra.”
  14. Jeffrey M. Bale, “Political paranoia v. political realism: on distinguishing between bogus conspiracy theories and genuine conspiratorial politics,” Patterns of Prejudice (Taylor & Francis Online), Volume 41 Issue 1 (February 1, 2007): 57-58; J. Gabbatiss, “The truth about a strange blood-sucking monster,” BBC Earth (10 Nov, 2016).
  15. Funk & Wagnalls New World Encyclopedia, 2016, s.v. “Chupacabra.”
  16. Benjamin Radford, Tracking the Chupacabras (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2011), 69.
  17. J. Gabbatiss, “The truth about a strange blood-sucking monster,” BBC Earth, (10 Nov, 2016).
  18. Jeffrey M. Bale, “Political paranoia v. political realism: on distinguishing between bogus conspiracy theories and genuine conspiratorial politics,” Patterns of Prejudice (Taylor & Francis Online), Volume 41, Issue 1 (February 1, 2007): 57.
  19. Jeffrey M. Bale, “Political paranoia v. political realism: on distinguishing between bogus conspiracy theories and genuine conspiratorial politics,” Patterns of Prejudice (Taylor & Francis Online), Volume 41, Issue 1 (February 1, 2007): 60.
  20. Jeffrey M. Bale, “Political paranoia v. political realism: on distinguishing between bogus conspiracy theories and genuine conspiratorial politics,” Patterns of Prejudice (Taylor & Francis Online), Volume 41, Issue 1 (February 1, 2007): 60, 292.
  21. Robert Michael Jordan, “El Chupacabra: Icon of Resistance to US Imperialism,” (Master’s Thesis, University of Texas at Dallas, 2008), 3.

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64 comments

  • Jasmine Jaramillo

    I’ve heard of the chupacabra before I’m not sure that I believe in it but I do find the stories interesting. I remember watching shows that would talk about chupacabra attacks they would talk to farmers and try to show fake film trying to pass it on as footage. This article did a great job of telling the story of the chupacabra simply. I know since there is a lot of information on the subject it must have taken a lot to stay on topic and not ramble on.

  • Hector Garcia

    I feel like this article was not only able to deliver the story of the chupacabras, but it was also able to give us an in-depth analysis of the chupacabras. The chupacabras has become of symbol of terror and it has gotten to the point where farmers have armed themselves. This article was also able to deliver how the chupacabras has become a creature that every farmer despises.

  • Irene Astran

    People think it is farfetched to believe in Big Foot, but here we are making shows about catching it! I find it interesting that people felt so scared of this creature if it was never known for harming people, but I can imagine the creature was scary enough to instill fear anyways. I appreciate that you added the hybrid variation that some suspected made this creature up. This information gives this story a more scientifically basis as to what creature could have appeared so bizarre.

  • Yahaira Martinez

    i remember when i was little and similarly to the story of la llorona, my parents used this chupacabra legend to scare me into behaving and doing whatever they basically wanted me to do. to this day my little siblings still are scared of this infamous chupacabra and its tendency to eat goats and are still iffy on whether or not it actually exists. this article took me back to my childhood and took me back to an era where i didnt want to be anywhere near a goat.

  • Noah Laing

    I found this article very interesting and was curious to see if the author would be biased on if Chupacabra’s are real or not, however this was a well written non biased article that displayed the most valuable information about the subject. The reason I was so interest in reading this article us because I believe I’ve actually seen a Chupacabra before. It was dead so I got to take a good look at it and I tried to see it as a wolf or raccoon, as this article states could be an explanation, but it wasn’t. I’ve never seen anything like it and compared it to pictures online and it looked the exact same. Interesting article that holds a lot of debate.

  • Anais Del Rio

    Even to this day you can hear families telling their young kids to not stay out late because “Hay viene la Chupacabra.” It was crazy to know the legend started in Puerto Rico and not in Mexico that everyone originally believed. I never thought that the legend could have a deeper meaning somewhere else such as people being afraid of this creature that terrorizes their livestock.

  • Samuel Stallcup

    I remember one time a chupacabra was caught by a woman and they showed it on the news. It was this brown, small and hairy dog-like creature, and it was quite ugly, too. But after reading this article, I can say now that what they found on TV was not a chupacabra, rather a wolf of some sort, yet I’m still sure that people will say it was the real thing. Great article.

  • Jason Garcia

    As a child, my parents and grandparents would scare my siblings and I with the Chupacabra myth. I never knew the roots of the legend, I never knew the different societies that lived with the Chupacabra as if it was a fact. I always imagined a Bigfoot-like creature as the Chupacabra not as a coyote or an alien-like creature. This article was an extremely interesting and was such a fun read, from the different people that believe in legend to the details in describing what the individual sightings of the Chupacabra what look

  • Marlene Lozano

    Growing up I knew about the Chupacabra but thought the stories came from Mexican folktales and was just a Texas thing. It amazes me that the tale is known throughout all of North America. It is interesting how the description of the Chupacabra would change with the different areas it was sighted in. Also, depending on the location where a Chupacabras corpses were the DNA would link it to different animals. I find the Chupacabra to be an interesting topic and love the amount of detail that went into this article.

  • Julian Aguero

    I’m really surprised that the earliest reported sightings were in the 90’s! I’ve always thought it was an accent folk tale from Mexico or Puerto Rico. It really is disturbing that all these animals keep dying in mysterious ways with very little explanation. I immediately want to put this off as a folk tale but I would like to speak with all of these ranchers who truly believe in the Chupacabra and listen to their experiences to get a different perspective. I like the fact at the end of the article about the “elusive platypus” and how it was believed to be a fake creature “as late as the eighteenth century.” Makes me think twice about how confident I am that Chupacarbas do not exist.

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