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Introduction
Argentina’s best-known mystery creature is Nahuelito, the lake monster said to inhabit Nahuel Huapi, the great glacial lake beside Bariloche in northern Patagonia. It is usually described as a dark hump, giant serpent, or long-necked animal, but the stronger story is not proof of a hidden prehistoric beast; it is how local lake folklore, early twentieth-century science, tourism, jokes, newspaper excitement, and ordinary misidentification turned a Patagonian landscape into Argentina’s answer to Loch Ness. Other Argentine monster traditions matter too: the Ucumar of the north-west, phantom big-cat stories, imported Chupacabra panics, and older shape-shifting or water-monster folklore. Taken together, they show a country where real wildlife, dramatic terrain, and media-friendly legends often overlap without producing solid zoological evidence.[gob.ar]barilocheturismo.gob.arBariloche Turismo Nahuel Huapi LakeBariloche Turismo Nahuel Huapi Lake

Why Argentina’s monster map starts with a lake
Nahuel Huapi is exactly the kind of place where a lake monster story can survive. It is large, cold, deep, irregularly shaped, and visually dramatic: Argentina’s official tourism site describes it as a glacial lake with seven branches, while a government satellite-education page gives it a surface greater than 550 square kilometres and a maximum depth of around 450 metres. The lake sits inside Nahuel Huapi National Park, which protects more than 717,000 hectares across Río Negro and Neuquén, including Patagonian forest, steppe, and high Andean environments.[gob.ar]barilocheturismo.gob.arBariloche Turismo Nahuel Huapi LakeBariloche Turismo Nahuel Huapi Lake
That geography matters because many sightings depend on distance, water movement, light, wind, and scale. A floating log, line of waves, swimming animal, boat wake, or distant object can look much stranger on a huge mountain lake than it would in a pond. Nahuel Huapi also has a strong tourist setting: Bariloche sits on the lake shore, and the park is one of Argentina’s flagship landscapes. A creature story attached to such a place has a natural audience, especially when visitors already know the Loch Ness comparison.[Argentina Travel]argentina.travelOpen source on argentina.travel.
The legend also has older roots than a single modern photograph. Accounts often link Nahuelito with Indigenous and regional water-monster traditions, especially stories of a dangerous lake or river being imagined as a hide-like creature. The Mapuche-related figure often known as El Cuero is described in folklore as a living hide or water creature that lurks in rivers and lagoons, wraps around prey, and belongs more to mythic warning tale than zoological field report. That does not prove Nahuelito is ancient in its current form, but it does show that Patagonia already had a language for dangerous, uncanny water before newspapers and tourists turned the monster into a plesiosaur-shaped celebrity.[Wikipedia]WikipediaCuero (legendary creatureCuero (legendary creature
Nahuelito: the Patagonian “plesiosaur” that became a national legend
The modern Nahuelito story took shape in the early 1900s, when strange-animal claims met a public fascinated by prehistoric life. One of the key moments came in 1922, when Martin Sheffield, a North American gold prospector in Patagonia, wrote to Clemente Onelli, director of the Buenos Aires Zoo, describing a large unknown animal near Lake Epuyén. The reported animal had a swan-like head, crocodile-like body, flippers, long neck, and immense size — a description almost too perfectly suited to the era’s image of a living plesiosaur.[infobae]infobae.comOpen source on infobae.com.
Onelli treated the report seriously enough to promote an expedition. That search became famous not because it found a monster, but because it joined science, spectacle, press coverage, and public argument in a way that feels very modern. Later accounts describe hunters, rifles, and even plans involving dynamite, which provoked criticism from animal-protection voices as well as curiosity from the public. The expedition returned without a captured animal, but the “living plesiosaur” had already entered Argentine popular culture.[Wikipedia]WikipediaOpen source on wikipedia.org.
The story quickly acquired a comic afterlife. In Bariloche, entrepreneur Primo Capraro reportedly turned the supposed captured plesiosaur into a carnival float, creating a public joke that travelled almost as effectively as the original claim. A 2024 article on the “plesiosaur fever” notes the broader cultural impact: the creature appeared in press jokes, advertising, stories, and even carnival imagery, while a scholarly article on Onelli’s expedition frames the episode as a revealing mixture of science, publicity, and spectacle.[infobae.com]infobae.comOpen source on infobae.com.
What makes Nahuelito durable is that it did not remain only an old 1920s curiosity. Later tellings added a 1910 sighting by George Garret, allegedly made public in 1922; a 1960 claim that the Argentine Navy pursued an unidentified underwater object in the lake; and a set of 1988 photographs published in regional media that showed an ambiguous object near the shore. None of these episodes produced conclusive biological evidence, but each gave the legend a new timestamp and helped it avoid becoming merely a quaint historical anecdote.[wikipedia.org]WikipediaOpen source on wikipedia.org.
What the evidence actually supports
The evidence for Nahuelito is best understood as a chain of claims rather than a body of zoological proof. There are witness stories, press reports, photos of unclear objects, and repeated local retellings. There is not a confirmed specimen, reliable biological sample, clear multi-angle footage, or accepted scientific documentation of a large unknown animal in the lake. Even sympathetic travel and mystery articles tend to present the creature as a legend or mystery rather than a discovered species.[discoveryuk.com]discoveryuk.cominvestigating nahuelito argentinas loch ness monsterinvestigating nahuelito argentinas loch ness monster
The plesiosaur explanation is especially weak. Plesiosaurs were marine reptiles, not lake animals waiting quietly in Patagonian freshwater, and the popular “living fossil” argument runs into a geological problem: several accounts note that the Patagonian lakes involved in the legend formed long after the extinction of the animals people compare Nahuelito with. A local Patagonia explainer states this plainly when discussing why the prehistoric-animal theory does not hold up well.[Patagonia Argentina]patagonia-argentina.comOpen source on patagonia-argentina.com.
More ordinary explanations fit the available evidence better. On a lake as large and deep as Nahuel Huapi, a mistaken sighting could come from a wave pattern, floating trunk, swimming deer or otter, bird, boat wake, unusual light effect, or a known animal seen at the wrong distance. The park’s own biodiversity pages highlight real aquatic and shoreline wildlife, including the endangered southern river otter, which depends on natural lake and river edges. That does not mean every sighting is “just an otter”, but it reminds us that living animals, weather, and perspective already provide a rich supply of misleading moments.[Argentina]argentina.gob.arArgentina BiodiversidadArgentina Biodiversidad
The hoax and media-invention layer is also important. The 1922 carnival float shows that playful fakery entered the story almost immediately, and later photographs have often been debated as ambiguous, staged, or too unclear to bear the weight placed on them. That pattern is familiar from lake-monster traditions worldwide: the legend is not kept alive by one decisive sighting, but by a cycle of local memory, tourism, images, sceptical replies, and fresh rediscoveries.[wikipedia.org]WikipediaOpen source on wikipedia.org.
The Ucumar: Argentina’s northern “bear-man”
If Nahuelito belongs to cold Patagonian water, the Ucumar belongs to the mountains, forests, ravines, and rural imagination of Argentina’s north-west. Reports and folklore place it especially around Salta and Jujuy, where it is commonly described as a hairy, powerful, part-human, part-bear or ape-like figure. Recent local-media stories show that the legend is still active: in June 2025, El Esquiú reported that residents in Metán, Salta, had shared a video said to show the Ucumar in scrubland, while other 2025 reports described viral audio or howling claims.[elesquiu.com]elesquiu.comsalta aseguran haber filmado al ucumar en un monte 543702salta aseguran haber filmado al ucumar en un monte 543702
The Ucumar is not simply “Argentina’s Bigfoot” transplanted from North America, though modern coverage often frames it that way. Regional folklore gives it older and stranger features: it may imitate human voices, appear suddenly, frighten dogs, steal children, or carry sexual threat in stories about abducting women or young men. A Salta folklore page, drawing on collected traditions, describes the legend as widespread across the Argentine north-west, including Salta, Jujuy, Catamarca, Tucumán, and parts of Formosa, Chaco, and Santiago del Estero.[EDI-Salta]edisalta.arOpen source on edisalta.ar.
The most plausible natural anchor is not a hidden giant ape, but a mixture of folklore, fear, misidentification, and perhaps memories of the Andean bear. The spectacled or Andean bear is South America’s only bear, with a range running along the Andes from northern South America into north-western Argentina according to conservation sources, although records and exact historical range can be uncertain. In a region where a real bear-like animal exists or existed near the edge of cultural memory, a “bear-man” legend can feel more locally grounded than a pure fantasy.[iucnredlist.org]nc.iucnredlist.orgIUCN Red List Species of the Day: Andean BearIUCN Red List Species of the Day: Andean Bear
The recent videos have not changed the evidence picture. A distant figure crossing a field, an unidentified howl, or an anonymous social-media post can revive a legend, but it does not establish an unknown primate or hominid. The Ucumar remains valuable as folklore and as a lens on rural landscapes, oral tradition, and anxiety around wilderness; it is not supported by the kind of physical evidence that would move it into mainstream zoology.[elesquiu.com]elesquiu.comsalta aseguran haber filmado al ucumar en un monte 543702salta aseguran haber filmado al ucumar en un monte 543702
Big cats, jaguars, pumas, and why “phantom beasts” are tricky in Argentina
Argentina is a particularly interesting country for big-cat stories because it still has real large felids. The puma is present across much of the country and is described by WCS Argentina as a highly adaptable apex predator, able to live in habitats ranging from jungle to steppe. Argentine government pages also describe the puma as one of the country’s larger mammals with wide national distribution.[argentina.wcs.org]argentina.wcs.orgWildlife PumaWildlife Puma
The jaguar, or yaguareté, complicates the picture further. Argentina’s national conservation plan says the jaguar once ranged as far south as Patagonia at the start of the twentieth century, but habitat loss and illegal hunting reduced its distribution by about 95 per cent, leaving fewer than 250 individuals alive in the country. It is now a critically important conservation animal rather than a mystery beast, surviving in northern regions and returning in some places through reintroduction projects.[Argentina]argentina.gob.arOpen source on gob.ar.
That matters for phantom-cat claims. In countries without native big cats, a “black panther” story often implies an escaped exotic animal or a misidentified dog or domestic cat. In Argentina, by contrast, a witness may genuinely have seen a puma, a rare jaguar in the north, or a large cat at distance — but still misjudge its size, colour, species, or significance. The existence of real predators makes some reports less absurd, while also giving sceptics strong ordinary explanations.[argentina.wcs.org]argentina.wcs.orgWildlife PumaWildlife Puma
The jaguar’s modern conservation story also shows how a once-feared animal can shift from rural threat to ecological emblem. In Iberá, Corrientes, reintroduction work has produced wild-born cubs after decades of regional absence, and more recent reporting described tourists and park staff seeing a young jaguar in an area where the species had long been extinct. For cryptid readers, that is a useful reminder: sometimes the “monster” question is not whether an impossible animal exists, but how memory, fear, and rarity reshape a real animal’s reputation.[El País]elpais.comOpen source on elpais.com.
Chupacabra flaps and imported monster panics
Argentina also appears in wider Latin American Chupacabra tradition, but the creature is not primarily Argentine. The modern Chupacabra panic began in Puerto Rico in 1995, where livestock deaths were attributed to a blood-drinking creature, before the legend spread through the Americas. Later versions shifted between reptilian, alien-like, dog-like, and mangy-canid descriptions, depending on country and media cycle.[Wikipedia]WikipediaOpen source on wikipedia.org.
For Argentina, the Chupacabra is best treated as an imported panic that found local livestock settings where it could be retold. The pattern is familiar: dead goats, sheep, poultry, or other animals are found with wounds; the predator is not immediately seen; rumours focus on missing blood or strange punctures; and the case is folded into a ready-made monster name. In many Chupacabra investigations elsewhere, ordinary causes such as dogs, wild canids, scavenging, disease, poor carcass interpretation, or mange-affected animals have explained the evidence better than a new species.[Wikipedia]WikipediaOpen source on wikipedia.org.
This does not make the stories meaningless. Chupacabra reports are useful evidence of how quickly a monster template can travel. A local livestock loss that might once have been blamed on a puma, dog, witch, or nameless night predator can become a Chupacabra case once newspapers, television, and social media supply the vocabulary. In Argentina, the legend therefore belongs less to ancient country-specific folklore than to a late twentieth-century media ecosystem shared across Latin America.[Wikipedia]WikipediaOpen source on wikipedia.org.
Older folklore: the shape-shifter beside the cryptid
Not every Argentine monster belongs neatly to cryptozoology. The Lobizón, a werewolf-like figure tied to the seventh son, is folklore rather than a mystery-animal claim, but it helps explain the country’s wider monster imagination. The story is part of a broader Guaraní-influenced regional tradition also known in Paraguay and Argentina, where the seventh male child may be associated with transformation into a wolf-like or dog-like being.[Wikipedia]WikipediaOpen source on wikipedia.org.
The belief even left a trace in public custom. International reporting on Argentina’s presidential godparent tradition noted that the country had a custom, later formalised in law, in which the president could become godparent to a family’s seventh child; modern coverage often links the custom to older fears around the seventh son, although the legal and ceremonial practice itself should not be confused with literal belief in werewolves.[CBS News]cbsnews.comOpen source on cbsnews.com.
This is the key distinction: the Lobizón is not a hidden animal allegedly roaming a specific habitat in the same way Nahuelito or the Ucumar is imagined. It is a social and supernatural legend about birth order, transformation, danger, and protection. Including it in Argentina’s monster map is useful because it shows how creature lore can influence behaviour and institutions without ever needing to be a zoological claim.
What Argentina’s cryptids reveal when the evidence is thin
Argentina’s mystery creatures are most convincing as cultural geography. Nahuelito belongs to deep glacial water, mountain tourism, Bariloche’s public imagination, and the twentieth-century romance of prehistoric survivors. The Ucumar belongs to the north-western Andes, forest margins, ravines, bear-man folklore, and modern viral video culture. Chupacabra reports belong to a wider Latin American livestock-panic template. Phantom cats sit uneasily between real pumas, rare jaguars, escaped-animal rumours, and misidentification.
The evidence does not support treating any of these as confirmed unknown species. Nahuelito lacks decisive biological proof; the Ucumar is sustained by folklore and low-quality modern sightings; Chupacabra cases generally fit broader patterns of predator, disease, or media panic; and big-cat stories are often better explained by Argentina’s known wildlife. At the same time, dismissing the stories as “just nonsense” misses why they endure. They attach mystery to places where mystery already feels plausible: cold black lakes, cloud forest, remote farms, empty steppe, and the edge between settlement and wilderness.
The most honest reading is also the most interesting one. Argentina’s monster traditions are not a single bestiary of hidden animals waiting to be discovered. They are a layered record of how people interpret landscape, danger, memory, tourism, science, humour, and real wildlife when something moves at the edge of vision.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to Which Argentine Monster Stories Still Capture Attention?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
Monsters of the Gévaudan
Explores how monster legends develop from folklore, media and eyewitness claims.
Abominable Science!
Directly addresses lake monsters and mystery-creature traditions like Nahuelito.
Field Guide To Bigfoot, Yeti, & Other Mystery Primates Worldwide
Provides global context for mystery-animal reports and folklore.
Endnotes
1.
Source: infobae.com
Link:https://www.infobae.com/historias/2024/11/11/la-historia-de-la-fiebre-del-plesiosaurio-la-increible-busqueda-de-un-dinosaurio-vivo-en-la-patagonia/
2.
Source: elesquiu.com
Title: salta aseguran haber filmado al ucumar en un monte 543702
Link:https://www.elesquiu.com/regionales/salta/2025/6/16/salta-aseguran-haber-filmado-al-ucumar-en-un-monte-543702.html
3.
Source: argentina.travel
Link:https://www.argentina.travel/en/news/seven-reasons-why-the-nahuel-huapi-national-park-is-considered-an-argentinian-natural-wonder
4.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Cuero (legendary creature)
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuero_%28legendary_creature%29
5.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Clemente Onelli
Link:https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clemente_Onelli
6.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuelito
7.
Source: researchgate.net
Title: 385919915 El plesiosaurio de Onelli entre cowboys y tangos
Link:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/385919915_El_plesiosaurio_de_Onelli_entre_cowboys_y_tangos
8.
Source: discoveryuk.com
Title: investigating nahuelito argentinas loch ness monster
Link:https://www.discoveryuk.com/mysteries/investigating-nahuelito-argentinas-loch-ness-monster/
9.
Source: patagonia-argentina.com
Link:https://www.patagonia-argentina.com/en/the-nahuelito-enigma/
10.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ucumar
11.
Source: argentina.wcs.org
Title: Wildlife Puma
Link:https://argentina.wcs.org/en-us/Wildlife/Puma.aspx
12.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chupacabra
13.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luison
14.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuelito
15.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Nahuel Huapi Lake
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuel_Huapi_Lake
16.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Phantom cat
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phantom_cat
17.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mothman
18.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Spectacled bear
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectacled_bear
19.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaguar
20.
Source: researchgate.net
Title: 317332796 Retrospective analysis of cattle poisoning in Argentina 2000 2013
Link:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/317332796_Retrospective_analysis_of_cattle_poisoning_in_Argentina
21.
Source: researchgate.net
Link:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/376982443_Jaguar_status_distribution_and_conservation_in_south-eastern_South_Amercia
22.
Source: portals.iucn.org
Link:https://portals.iucn.org/library/efiles/documents/1999-004.pdf
23.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Argentina’s Loch Ness Monster: The Elusive Nahuelito!
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUzFxmAp3JM
Source snippet
Nahuelito: The Lake's Ancient Secret...
24.
Source: barilocheturismo.gob.ar
Title: Bariloche Turismo Nahuel Huapi Lake
Link:https://barilocheturismo.gob.ar/en/lake-nahuel-huapi
25.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: Argentina Parque Nacional Nahuel Huapi, Río Negro
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/ciencia/conae/educacion-y-formacion-masiva/materiales-educativos/parque-nacional-nahuel-huapi-rio-negro-landsat-8-oli-23-de-noviembre-de-2016
26.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/parquesnacionales/regionpatagonia/parque-nacional-nahuel-huapi
27.
Source: atlasobscura.com
Title: nahuelito argentina loch ness monster bariloche patagonia
Link:https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/nahuelito-argentina-loch-ness-monster-bariloche-patagonia
28.
Source: tn.com.ar
Title: historias para no dormir el monstruo de la laguna
Link:https://tn.com.ar/sociedad/2021/04/24/historias-para-no-dormir-el-monstruo-de-la-laguna/
29.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: Argentina Biodiversidad
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/parquesnacionales/regionpatagonia/parque-nacional-nahuel-huapi/biodiversidad
30.
Source: edisalta.ar
Link:https://www.edisalta.ar/ucumar.html
31.
Source: nc.iucnredlist.org
Title: IUCN Red List Species of the Day: Andean Bear
Link:https://nc.iucnredlist.org/redlist/species-of-the-day/tremarctos-ornatus/pdfs/original/tremarctos-ornatus.pdf
32.
Source: globalbearconservation.org
Link:https://www.globalbearconservation.org/About/leadership_page/60
33.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: primer registro fotografico de puma en el parque nacional islas de santa fe
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/primer-registro-fotografico-de-puma-en-el-parque-nacional-islas-de-santa-fe
34.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/ambiente/biodiversidad/yaguarete
35.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: por que esta en peligro
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/parquesnacionales/conservacion/monumento-natural-yaguarete/por-que-esta-en-peligro
36.
Source: elpais.com
Link:https://elpais.com/argentina/2022-07-21/nacen-los-dos-primeros-yaguaretes-en-libertad-en-argentina-despues-de-70-anos-extintos.html
37.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: 4 de octubre dia mundial de los animales
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/4-de-octubre-dia-mundial-de-los-animales
38.
Source: elpais.com
Link:https://elpais.com/argentina/2026-05-14/turistas-avistan-un-yaguarete-en-una-zona-de-argentina-en-la-que-habia-estado-extinto.html
39.
Source: cbsnews.com
Link:https://www.cbsnews.com/news/did-argentinas-president-adopt-jewish-godson-so-he-doesnt-become-a-werewolf/
40.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: ambiente repudia la caza ilegal de pumas ocurrida en la provincia de neuquen
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/ambiente-repudia-la-caza-ilegal-de-pumas-ocurrida-en-la-provincia-de-neuquen
41.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/jefatura/ambiente/politica-ambiental/biodiversidad/estrategia-nacional-de-biodiversidad/mamiferos
42.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: restituyeron una cria de puma una reserva natural
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/restituyeron-una-cria-de-puma-una-reserva-natural
43.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/parquesnacionales/que-hacemos-en-parques-nacionales/historia
44.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: 29 de noviembre dia internacional del yaguarete
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/29-de-noviembre-dia-internacional-del-yaguarete
45.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/recuperan-11-ejemplares-de-pumas-concolor-que-estaban-en-cautiverio-en-santiago-del-estero
46.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: gestion 2020
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/parquesnacionales/gestion-2020
47.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/parquesnacionales/conservacion/monumento-natural-yaguarete/iniciativas
48.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: rescatan un ejemplar de puma que estaba en cautiverio en una finca particular
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/rescatan-un-ejemplar-de-puma-que-estaba-en-cautiverio-en-una-finca-particular
49.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/normativa/nacional/resoluci%C3%B3n-477-2006-116778/texto
50.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/ambiente-y-pnud-lanzaron-una-convocatoria-para-proyectos-de-conservacion-del-yaguarete
51.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: gendarmeria libera un ejemplar de puma en la rioja
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/gendarmeria-libera-un-ejemplar-de-puma-en-la-rioja
52.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: coordinamos acciones para evitar nuevos atropellamientos de yaguaretes
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/coordinamos-acciones-para-evitar-nuevos-atropellamientos-de-yaguaretes
53.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/jefatura/ambiente/fauna/huemul-emblema-de-los-bosques-patagonicos
54.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: nacieron dos cachorros de yaguarete en los esteros del ibera
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/nacieron-dos-cachorros-de-yaguarete-en-los-esteros-del-ibera
55.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: conservacion de especies autoctonas en areas protegidas nacionales
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/conservacion-de-especies-autoctonas-en-areas-protegidas-nacionales
56.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: TEXT O ORIGINAL
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/normativa/nacional/norma-703/texto
57.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/sites/default/files/completo-compressed.pdf?x58821=
58.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: TEXT O ORIGINAL
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/normativa/nacional/resoluci%C3%B3n-243-2019-324821/texto
59.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/parquesnacionales/regionpatagonia/parque-nacional-nahuel-huapi/ficha-del-area-protegida
60.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/ambiente/contenidos/areas-protegidas
61.
Source: argentina.gob.ar
Title: se consolida el parque nacional patagonia
Link:https://www.argentina.gob.ar/noticias/se-consolida-el-parque-nacional-patagonia
62.
Source: swoop-patagonia.com
Link:https://www.swoop-patagonia.com/argentina/lake-district/nahuel-huapi
63.
Source: cryptidz.fandom.com
Link:https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/Ucumar
64.
Source: cryptidarchives.fandom.com
Link:https://cryptidarchives.fandom.com/wiki/Ucumar
65.
Source: cryptidz.fandom.com
Link:https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/Nahuelito
66.
Source: cryptidarchives.fandom.com
Link:https://cryptidarchives.fandom.com/wiki/Cuero
67.
Source: cryptidz.fandom.com
Title: El Cuero
Link:https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/El_Cuero
68.
Source: felidaefund.org
Title: argentina puma project
Link:https://felidaefund.org/news/updates/small-felids-in-argentina/argentina-puma-project
69.
Source: inexplicata.blogspot.com
Title: argentina ucumar zupai appears in salta
Link:https://inexplicata.blogspot.com/2023/05/argentina-ucumar-zupai-appears-in-salta.html
70.
Source: abookofcreatures.com
Link:https://abookofcreatures.com/2019/11/25/cuero/
71.
Source: theguardian.com
Title: argentina kirchner adopt child werewolf
Link:https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/29/argentina-kirchner-adopt-child-werewolf
72.
Source: biodiversidad.gob.mx
Link:https://www.biodiversidad.gob.mx/planeta/jaguares/jimg/posters/EN/Argentina_Jaguar%20Poster_EN.pdf
73.
Source: businessinsider.com
Title: argentina president adopts boy no werewolf 2014 12
Link:https://www.businessinsider.com/argentina-president-adopts-boy-no-werewolf
Additional References
74.
Source: instagram.com
Link:https://www.instagram.com/reel/DHBFugbvXDl/
75.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/100063699259903/videos/redessociales-apareci%C3%B3-el-ucumar-en-salta-escalofriante-video-desat%C3%B3-p%C3%A1nico-y-re/1468043234175737/
76.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/sevensharp/posts/a-phantom-puma-or-just-a-fat-feral-cat-we-put-what-could-be-the-south-island-pan/10157516578707268/
77.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/WTAM1100/posts/a-woman-in-argentina-captured-footage-of-a-curious-aquatic-anomaly-that-some-sus/5720256201335624/
78.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/BroBible/posts/according-to-local-media-a-recent-video-shows-what-some-believe-to-be-argentinas/1175106187989841/
79.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/100063699259903/posts/redessociales-apareci%C3%B3-el-ucumar-en-salta-escalofriante-video-desat%C3%B3-p%C3%A1nico-y-re/1195482695918361/
80.
Source: barrons.com
Link:https://www.barrons.com/articles/locals-best-of-bariloche-argentina-28c9d7a1
81.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/southernpanthersightings/posts/1809625239918658/
82.
Source: informesursur.org
Link:https://informesursur.org/en/brazil-and-argentina-join-efforts-to-protect-the-jaguar/
83.
Source: connectsci.au
Link:https://connectsci.au/wr/article/43/6/449/40724/Density-and-activity-patterns-of-pumas-in-hunted
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