Burmese Pythons Squeeze South Florida

“If you are standing in front of a large snake right now don’t panic…”
So says the greeting message for the Florida Keys python hotline, 888-IVE-GOT1. Over the years enough pet Burmese pythons in south Florida have been released into the wild that one National Park Service scientist has estimated now there could be as many as 30,000 of them in the Everglades National Park area. (Between 1996 and 2006 about 99,000 were imported into the United States).
- » See also: Mistaken Identity: Hunters Kill Endangered Pygmy Hippo During Pig Hunt!
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Burmese pythons can grow up to 20 feet long and weigh up to 200 pounds. Their appetite for local wildlife is endangering protected species that are vulnerable to any predators, especially ones as capable as the huge snakes. Research by the University of Florida identified the remains of the following wild Florida animals in the digestive tracts of the invading pythons: alligator, rabbit, two types of rats, domestic cat, cotton mouse, gray squirrel, fox squirrel, raccoon, oppossum, bobcat, muskrat, rice rat, white-tailed deer, Key Largo woodrat, and six species of birds. In 2006 it was discovered by scientists that pythons are breeding in Everglades National Park. A female can lay 80 eggs at a time.









Wow, looks pretty scary dude!
RT
http://www.anonymity.us.tc
Declare open season on them, supposedly they make good eating.
Love the image’s quote.
This should remind us how utterly misguided our propensity to collect and especially “make pets” of animals from other areas is. Those involved in the exotic pet trade make a great deal of money and cause great harm, not only to the animal populations in which they trade but, as this article points out, to the ecosystems in the areas to which they are delivered!
man! which one is killing which though!??