Nearly 10-foot python captured in Everglades on first day of Fla.-sanctioned trapping program
1st day of Fla. hunt nets nearly 10-foot python
By BRIAN SKOLOFF Associated PressJul 17, 09 3:47 PM CDT
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission announced just this week the state would allow a few permitted snake experts to begin hunting, trapping and killing the nonnative pythons in an effort to eradicate themfrom hundreds of thousands of acres in South Florida. The number of pythons in South Florida and throughout Everglades National Park has exploded in the past decade to potentially tens of thousands, though wildlife officials aren't sure exactly how many are slinking around South Florida.
Scientists believe pet owners have freed their snakes into the wild once they became too big to keep. They also think some Burmese pythons may have escaped in 1992 from pet shops battered by Hurricane Andrew and have been reproducing ever since.
Officials say the constrictors can produce up to 100 eggs at a time.
It's a major part of why I left Florida. The critters are horrible.
ReplyDeleteI guess they're not non-native anymore. 10's of thousands!?
ReplyDeleteHey Al...remember the gartersnake I kept in the garage when I was a kid.The unfortunate thing for it was that I thought it lived on balogna and that the garage wasn't heated. It froze rock solid.probably would've starved anyway. You disposed of it by flinging it against the brick wall of the roller rink to see if it would shatter.It didn't.
What you need is a good Chicago winter down there.
My neighbor had a three foot iguana strolling down his driveway yesterday, also non-native. We had a 27 degree Christmas Eve twenty years ago. that thinned out a lot of things.
ReplyDeleteWhy is there so much worry about non-native snakes and such?
ReplyDeleteWell, a ten foot snake could easily eat my dog, and maybe even me. Other than that, I believe they could help control the alligators and illegal aliens.
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