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'Python Patrol' Hunts Snakes in Florida

RJK890

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http://news.aol.com/article/pythons...com/article/pythons-florida-everglades/405144

'Python Patrol' Hunts Snakes in FloridaBy KIM SEGAL and JOHN ZARRELLA, CNN:
Animal News, National News:
MARATHON, Fla. (March 30) -- Juan Lopez reads meters with one eye and looks for snakes with the other. Lopez is a member of the "Python Patrol," a team of utility workers, wildlife officials, park rangers and police trying to keep Burmese pythons from gaining a foothold in the Florida Keys.
Officials say the pythons -- which can grow to 20 feet long and eat large animals whole -- are being ditched by pet owners in the Florida Everglades, threatening the region's endangered species and its ecosystem.
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Abandoned Pythons Endanger EnvironmentRobert Sullivan, AFP / Getty Images5 photos Florida owners are increasingly dumping their pet pythons in Everglades National Park, where the enormous snakes flourish and breed. Now, a team known as the "Python Patrol" is trying to prevent the reptiles from gaining a foothold in the Florida Keys. A 12-foot Burmese python captured in the backyard of a Miami home in 2005 is shown.(Note: Please disable your pop-up blocker)

"Right now, we have our fingers crossed that they haven't come this far yet, but if they do, we are prepared," Lopez said.
Burmese Pythons are rarely seen in the middle Florida Keys, where Lopez works. The Nature Conservancy wants to keep it that way.
The Python Patrol program was started by Alison Higgins, the Nature Conservancy's Florida Keys conservation manager. She describes it as an "early detection, rapid response" program made up of professionals who work outside.
Eight Burmese pythons have been found in the Keys.
"If we can keep them from spreading and breeding, then we're that much more ahead of the problem," Higgins said.
Utility workers, wildlife officials and police officers recently attended a three-hour class about capturing the enormously large snakes. Lt. Jeffrey L. Fobb of the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Venom Response Unit taught the participants how to capture pythons.
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Giant AnimalsBNPS.co.uk9 photos Monster Stingray: A stingray caught off the coast of Thailand is the largest freshwater fish ever snagged by a rod and reel, according to the British press on Feb. 24. Fisherman Ian Welch was almost pulled off the boat by the 772-pound monster. The stingray was pulled ashore, tagged and released.(Note: Please disable your pop-up blocker)

"There's no immutable laws of snake catching. It's what works," Fobb said as he demonstrated catching a snake with hooks, bags, blankets and his hands.
"We're doing it in the Florida Keys because we have a lot to protect," Higgins said. "The Burmese pythons that are coming out of the Everglades are eating a lot of our endangered species and other creatures, and we want to make sure they don't breed here."
Where the snakes are breeding is just north of the Keys in Everglades National Park. An estimated 30,000 Burmese pythons live in the park.
The Everglades, known as the "River of Grass," is a vast area with a climate perfect for these pythons to hide and breed. And breed they do: The largest clutches of eggs found in the Everglades have numbered up to 83.
The snakes grow like they're on steroids. With a life span of 30 years, these pythons can weigh as much as 200 pounds. And the larger the snake, the bigger the prey. Biologists have found endangered wood rats, birds, bobcats and other animals in their stomachs.
Two 5-foot-long alligators were found in the stomachs of Burmese pythons that were caught and necropsied, officials say.
Officials also say Burmese pythons can travel 1.6 miles a day by land, and they can swim to reach areas outside the Everglades.
This nonvenomous species was brought into the United States from Southeast Asia. Everglades National Park spokeswoman Linda Friar says biologists believe that well-intended pet owners are to blame for their introduction into the Everglades.
"These pets were released by owners that do not understand the threat to the ecosystem," she said.
Higgins says 99,000 of the popular pets were brought into the United States from 1996 to 2006, the most recent data available. She says they are an easy species to breed, and you can buy a hatchling for as little as $20.
The problem with these pets, Friar says, is that they get too big for their owners to handle. Making the owner aware of what to expect when the animal becomes full-grown is a priority.
"The pet trade is pretty supportive in educating people," Friar said. She hopes a "Don't let it loose" message campaign makes an impact on pet owners.
Florida Sen. Bill Nelson, a supporter of restoring the Everglades, has introduced a bill that would ban importing the python species into the United States. The senator saw the need after learning about the effect these snakes were having on the park.
"Finding out many endangered species are being found in the stomach of the python," Nelson spokeswoman Susie Quinn said, "we need to do a better job at protecting the resources." advertisement
In the meantime, Lopez and the Python Patrol will continue to protect the Florida Keys by capturing the snakes and turning them over to biologists to perform necropsies. The Nature Conservancy plans to expand the program to all the areas that surround the Everglades, making these predators their prey.
"I would like to find them and get rid of them," Lopez said.
 
YEAH!

I love it. Get some volunteers out there. Harvest some belts and wallets. I've always been curious if burms are good eating or not.

Where was that one video about harvesting snake skins? Why isn't there someone in Florida doing that?
 
I still don't understand why they won't let us (those of us interested in the reptiles to begin with) do a hunt. Why is it that we can go out and buy a license to catch alligators (to eat, stuff, make shoes out of--whatever), but we can't do the same with the pythons they have so much trouble with?
I just don't get it...
 
Troi, I could be wrong but I don't believe there are any restrictions what-so-ever on collecting burms in Florida. However they may not want anyone hunting anything within the National Park. Some of the small island communities have restrictions. Also they have hired individuals to hunt iguanas within the Miami city limits.
 
That's a step in the right direction, Kevin, but what are they doing with the iggies that are being caught? How does one find out about stuff like this? I may have to check into organized hunts at some point.
 
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