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Everglades Exotics

Whitebear

Silent Prop
R. I. P.
http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/science/12 ... index.html


EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK, Florida (AP) -- "SNAKE!" Hearing this shout, Skip Snow slammed on the brakes. When the off-roader plowed to a halt, he and his partner, Lori Oberhofer, leaped out and took off running toward two snakes, actually -- a pair of 10-foot Burmese pythons lying on a levee, sunning themselves.

After slipping, sliding and tumbling down a rocky embankment, Snow, a wildlife biologist, grabbed one of the creatures by the tail. The python, Oberhofer says, did not care much for that.

"It made a sound like Darth Vader breathing," she says, "and then its head swung around and I saw this white mouth flying through the air."

Snow saw the mouth, too -- the jaws open 180 degrees, the gums an obscene white, the needle-sharp teeth bared in an almost devilish grin. He let out a shriek, then blinked, and when his eyes opened the python's head was hanging in mid-air, less than a foot from his own.

Oberhofer, with a Ninja-like thrust, had snared the python in mid-strike.

"I snagged it right behind its head, on its neck," the 43-year-old wildlife technician recalls. "It was pure reflex -- a defensive move. I don't know if I could ever do it again."

The python hadn't succumbed yet, however. "They defecate on you, on purpose, hoping to make you reconsider what you're doing," Oberhofer says. "It's not pleasant."

In the end, the humans were victorious, if not sweet-smelling: Both snakes were bagged, trucked off to the Everglades Research Center, euthanized and necropsied -- meaning their innards were dissected, then meticulously inspected, for the benefit of science.

So goes python control in the Everglades, a painstaking, around-the-clock slog against a voracious, foreign snake species that has established a stronghold in this watery wilderness and put native wildlife at risk.

Critters that pythons find most delectable -- raccoons, possums, muskrats and native cotton rats -- are already under attack, as are birds such as the house wren, pied-billed grebe, white ibis and limpkin.

Scientists also worry that these slithery giants -- which have been known to grow as long as 26 feet -- may soon start to feast on native species whose survival is in doubt.

"The Everglades doesn't work by itself anymore," says Leon Howell, 58, who has been associated with the park for the last 21 years as a visitor, naturalist, fishing guide and, presently, park ranger. "This whole landscape has to be managed today: water, fire, exotics -- you name it."

Which explains the evolution of Snow and Oberhofer into a human firewall against non-native exotics. Without them, Howell figures, "there'd be pythons all over the place."

A decade ago, Snow and Oberhofer spent their days reintroducing rare, native birds to the pinelands and monitoring "indicator" species, such as wading birds, alligators, bald eagles, panthers. Then, in the late '90s, pythons began turning up.

..............more in the link

Scotty
 
Sounds like we need to get a grant to remove them. IM looking for something to do when I get home LOL !

Scotty :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
 
I think I may know a Grant that can gett'em!
DSC005171.JPG


That is if he ain't to busy getting his gators.
He may have already got him a couple for all I know.
 
Since they're not a native critter I don't see any reason why you can't take em as you find em. Don't be lookin for me to be grabbin one by the tail though. That's why they make scattershot in .38 caliber.

Bet they'd taste a lot like gatortail.

olf
 
FWC needs to put a Bounty on them and other NON NATIVES. Species that is.
My little sister says there is 2 PACA fish (dang thing has human style teeth) in the retention pond in their neighborhood in Winter Springs. Coyotes need a Bounty also.

Bob
 
Once again airboats will probably play a leading role in controlling this problem with little consideration of importance as they continue to tighten the noose on airboaters. :?
 
jdotson":147qmzpb said:
How about granted access to restricted national park areas with a free "python permit"!

I was thinking the same thing JD. I'd do a little work to be able to ride around in there, and it'll give the tourists from Ohio something to snap a photo of.

matt.
 
Hmm...maybe we can organize a relocation of ALL non-natives and put 'em somewhere like, I don't know, NEW YORK!
 
Heres one of the ones Itook out of a garage in Pasco county, alittle over 11' I cannot tell you how many I have been called out on, but I can tell you its been at least a dozen different types and thats not putting the numbers to each type.
Large%20python%20008_3.jpg
 
Nope! Tasted like $$$$$$$ And I am doing my part! I fellow up north bought him for $300.00 and paid $100.00 air frieght to get him/her up there. I figured they could use a few up there.LOL. Anyway if it did escape that far north, good ole nature would take care of it. Tooooooooo Colddddddddd to survive. I've given alot of them away to some institutes that do something with em, and sold a few when they were out of the ordinary. I never had to worry about having company over the holidays. LOL Later, Cajun
 
Cajun

Ever tanned any of their hides? Guess their brain isnt big enough to tan their hide so ya just use pork brains form Publix?

Scotty
 
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