Our Newest Non-Native Invasive? "Snake Dogs," Anyone?

redlevel

Senior Member
Man-eating pythons headed to Georgia?
http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/stories/2009/06/24/pythons_georgia.html
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

AIKEN, S.C. — Scientists are studying the possibility that Burmese pythons — which grow up to 25 feet and are capable of eating a man — may be migrating into Georgia and other Southeastern states.

At the Savannah River Ecology Lab in South Carolina, seven slithering Burmese pythons were released last week into a snake pit surrounded by 400 feet of reinforced fence

As they were released by a handful of scientists, some of the serpents hissed and lunged, baring their fangs. Others coiled up under the brush. Two slid into a pond in the center of the pit, disappearing in a snaking trail of bubbles. Some were more than 10 feet long and thicker than a forearm. And for the next year all of them will call this snake pit — an enclosed area of tangled brush and trees — home.

Ecologists will track the exotic pythons, all captured in Florida, to determine if they can survive in climates a few hundred miles to the north, including Georgia. Using implanted radio transmitters and data recorders, the scientists will monitor the pythons’ body temperature and physical condition.

The test could show whether the giant imported snakes, which can grow up to lengths of 25 feet, are able to spread throughout the Southeast.

The fast-growing population of snakes has been invading southern Florida’s ecosystem since 1992, when scientists speculate a bevy of Burmese pythons was released into the wild after Hurricane Andrew shattered many pet shop terrariums.

Now scientists fear this invasive species is silently slithering northward.

“They of course have an impact on native species,” said said herpetologist Whit Gibbons, a professor of ecology at the University of Georgia and a member of the python project. “If you have a big old python eating five times as much as another species that eats the same prey, it’s a competitive thing.” The pythons compete with alligators, among other top predators.

Gibbons said a human is “just another prey item” to a python — especially a small human. Pythons are constrictor snakes and have been known to eat people in their native areas of Southeast Asia, he added.

“A 20-foot python, if it grabbed one of us, would bite us and then within just — instantly — seconds, it would be wrapped all the way around you and squeezing the life out of you,” Gibbons said.

While pythons don’t make a habit of attacking people and most aren’t large enough to eat a person, Gibbons called the possibility a “nightmare.”

“What about the first kitty cat they eat? Or the first little poodle? They’d love poodles, I imagine,” he said.

Mike Dorcas, a professor at Davidson College in North Carolina, has sliced open pythons in Florida to find the remains of white-tailed deer, bobcats and large birds.

Dorcas is leading the experiment at the Savannah River Ecology Lab as part of a collaboration between the U.S. Geological Service, the National Park Service and the University of Florida.

He was prompted by a study released last year showing that the native habitat of Burmese pythons in Asia is a climate match for much of the southeastern U.S.

“The question is really, well, can they survive in a place like South Carolina or North Carolina or Arkansas or Tennessee?” Dorcas said.

One day before releasing the pythons into the pit, Dorcas snapped on latex gloves and surgically implanted radio transmitters into all seven. The transmitters enable scientists to keep track of the pythons’ location and allow them to hunt down any that manage to escape.

What are the chances of escape? “We never want to say never. We’ve made the enclosure as snake-proof as possible but we’ve taken some other precautions,” Dorcas said, noting that all of the pythons are males, so they wouldn’t be able to reproduce.

The ecologists also inserted micro data loggers into each snake to record the internal temperature of the python every hour. After a year, Dorcas will remove the chips and download the information into a computer to discover how the snakes thermoregulate in a cooler climate.

Pythons are masters of disguise — slippery and quick — and all but one of the serpents was invisible within minutes of being deposited into the pit.

So counting pythons in the wild is a daunting task. Scientists don’t have an accurate estimate of how many pythons are in Florida.

“It’s certainly in the thousands, or tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands,” said Gibbons.

______________________________________

That is interesting. There are a couple of key words and phrases in that article; "exotic," "invasive species," and "released."

Twenty five or thirty years down the road, farmers, pet owners, and just people who want to go in the swamps without being eaten will be calling for the eradication of pythons, and other groups will claim that "God put all animals here for a purpose," or that "python hunting is an age-old Southern tradition," or other inane reasons for keeping a population. Of course, by that time, talk of eradication will be moot, because they will have multiplied so rapidly that getting rid of them would be impossible.

I sincerely hope that every one of the pythons released in that pit dies an early death because it is just too cold. I see that Aiken, SC is just a tad South of Atlanta. They could very well not survive there, but thrive in S. Georgia. I hope not.
 

TreeFrog

Senior Member
Uh, what's keeping them from breeding during the study? Or did these guys just hasten the problem they were trying to study?
 

jkoch

Gone But Not Forgotten
Uh, what's keeping them from breeding during the study? Or did these guys just hasten the problem they were trying to study?

They said thet were all male, for a reason!:banginghe
 

specialk

Senior Member
sorry, but my opinion is to turn them into ''good'' snakes::gone:
 

redlevel

Senior Member
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,529709,00.html?test=latestnews
Child Dies After Being Strangled by Pet Python in Florida
Wednesday, July 01, 2009

A 2-year-old Florida girl died after being strangled by a 12-foot pet python, police said.

The child was strangled by the snake overnight after it escaped from its aquarium at a home in Oxford, about 50 miles northwest of Orlando in central Florida, according to Sumter County Sheriff's Lt. Steve Binegar.

Paramedics said the little girl was dead when they arrived.

Deputies told MyFOXTampaBay.com that the child's name is Shaiunna and her mother's live-in boyfriend may face charges for not having a permit for the snake, a Burmese python.

Jaren Ashley Hare, 23, shared the home with Shaiunna and Hare's boyfriend Charles Jason Darnell, 32, deputies said.

Darnell told investigators that he put the snake in a bag inside its aquarium Tuesday night. But when he woke up the morning, the snake was gone. He found it wrapped around the girl in her crib.

Darnell stabbed the snake repeatedly to free the little girl, but the toddler had been bitten on the head, MyFOXTampaBay.com reported.


Investigators are now waiting for search warrant to look through the house. The snake was last seen underneath a dresser, but it's not clear if it was still alive, according to the station.

Deputies say Darnell did not have the $100 permit required to own a python in Florida, which is a second-degree misdemeanor.

Sheriff's officials told the Orlando Sentinel that the snake broke out of its glass aquarium overnight, went to the girl's bedroom and attacked her.

The newspaper said the snake slithered away and was missing.

The snake was a family pet, not one of a fast-growing population of nonnative pythons that has been spreading in the wild in southern Florida. Burmese pythons can grow more than 15 feet long and weigh more than 150 pounds.

Pythons can kill by wrapping themselves around humans.

Jorge Pino, a spokesman with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, said that pythons are not native to Florida and can easily grow to 10 or 12 feet.

Some owners have freed pythons into the wild and a population of them has taken hold in the Everglades. One killed an alligator and then exploded when it tried to eat it.

Scientists also speculate a bevy of Burmese pythons escaped in 1992 from pet shops battered by Hurricane Andrew and have been reproducing since.

"It's becoming more and more of a problem, perhaps no fault of the animal, more a fault of the human," Pino said. "People purchase these animals when they're small. When they grow, they either can't control them or release them."
 

starvin

Senior Member
I should have finished reading the thread, I was trying to put that same pic up.. Ima dummy.
 

tv_racin_fan

Senior Member
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