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tugboatwa
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...0,6384797.story
QUOTE
Snake hunters scour Everglades for Burmese python
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission has licensed seven experts to track and destroy the intruders, who are upsetting the ecosystem's delicate balance.

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Robert Duyos / Sun Sentinel
Jeff Fobb is one of seven experts licensed to stalk and kill Burmese pythons in Florida's Everglades.

By Robert Nolin, August 2, 2009

Reporting from Fort Lauderdale, Fla. -- Go ahead, stretch out in the soft grass. It's comfortable. You're surrounded by a smorgasbord of prey. You may belong half a world away, but here in the Everglades, life is good.

Except you're a Burmese python, and the state wants to hunt you down and kill you. It hasn't put a bounty on your head, but it may as well have: If caught, you're decapitated.

In this moonlit world of marsh, bug and fanged danger, snake hunter Jeff Fobb is top predator.

He's one of seven snake experts licensed by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to stalk the slithering python, whose intrusion into the Everglades upsets the ecosystem's delicate balance.

Of the six snakes captured since the three-month trial eradication program began July 17, Fobb and his team have accounted for four: three hatchlings found at once and a 6-footer snared Thursday night.

"The best thing that's going to come out of this is the collection of scientific information for the state," says Fobb, who as part of his license must weigh, measure and determine the sex of the snake, log in its GPS coordinates, kill it humanely and examine its stomach contents.

But first he has to find them.

Throughout the night Thursday, the snake hunters traversed Everglades access roads, shining headlamps into the roadside where pythons lurk to ambush prey.

Marinating in a mix of sweat and bug spray, Fobb and another reptile enthusiast, Michael Tisdale, trekked a 10-mile route under a hazy sky.

"I'm not looking at making money," says Fobb, 43, a longtime snake expert with the elite venom response unit of the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue. "This is an excuse to go fool around in the Everglades."

The exotic snakes, which escaped or were released by owners, have been in the Everglades for years, competing for food with native species. They can grow 6 feet in a year, up to 20 feet and 200 pounds.

The trial program, in which certified snake experts are licensed to hunt pythons on state land from Lake Okeechobee south, is designed to thin the snakes' ranks and gather data.

Officials with Everglades National Park, where several private agents hunt pythons on federal land, say the snakes could number 5,000 to 140,000. "They have huge clutches, 40 to 100 eggs," park spokeswoman Linda Friar says.

On Thursday's hunt, Fobb, and Tisdale, 46, encounter minor marsh denizens: owls, yellow striped lubber grasshoppers and bufos, the largest of Florida's frogs and toads.

Unseen but ever present are deadlier swamp inhabitants: water moccasins, diamondback rattlesnakes, coral snakes and pygmy rattlers.

The ubiquitous poisonwood plant is another hazard. Brush against its sap and your flesh may swell and discolor. The mosquitoes come in waves.

Another licensed hunter, Robert Sonner, 41, joined the trek with three volunteers from the wildlife center he operates. One of those helpers, Willie Cabrera, 25, is accompanied by Chino, a Shar-Pei mix. "Our Burm bait dog," Cabrera jokes.

Cabrera snags the night's sole python. "I just saw it there and grabbed it," he says.

The hunters carry snake hooks, like long-handled question marks, but they usually snatch a python by hand, tail first, then behind the head. "So it doesn't wrap around you," Cabrera says.

The snake still tries to strike, stretching wide its mouth with six rows of recurved teeth. "This size, they'll make you bleed a little," Cabrera says.

But the hunters maintain control. "We have hands -- that's the advantage," Fobb says. "Hands and brains."

At hunt's end the snake, a 70-inch female, is stretched across a pickup's tailgate. Another helper, Lauren Rosenthal, 27, places a knife at the base of its skull. The cut must be quick and sure, like a chef chopping a carrot.

Once the head is severed, Fobb uses a small rod to pith it, or scramble its brains, ensuring a quick death. Veterinarians recommend this as humane.

"It breaks my heart to kill them, but we're protecting our native wildlife," Sonner says.

Adds Fobb, "That's the least pleasant part of this experience."

rnolin@sunsentinel.com
colstonewall1
I'm definitely NOT a snake lover, but why do they HAVE to kill them?? Why not relocate 'em??

I will never understand people keeping them as pets. I'm sure there are some on this forum who keep them as pets, so please don't take that as an insult, because it wasn't meant as such. I just don't understand the attraction, but I'm not judging you. And it seems sorta cruel to me to keep a snake cooped up in an aquarium it's entire life. Maybe it's just me.
Bitter Monk
Where exactly are they supposed to relocate them? They're an invasive species.
bipedalist
I'd say another Bay of Pigs might be the closest option.......pack 'em in shipping containers like toxic electronic waste, descend on the unsuspecting third world country
and suddenly you have an equipment malfunction with a lot of escapees. I know........just kidding here! I'm a Dr. Gruder's integrity course drop-out! laugh.gif
TKD
It's probably to late now. They will be in the US for good. sad.gif
Furious_George
I thought it was a pretty funny article.

But the hunters maintain control. "We have hands -- that's the advantage," Fobb says. "Hands and brains."

Looks like these hunters are being out witted a little.
They said there could be up to 140,000 snakes and 7 guys caught only 6 (3 of which were babies clutched together) in 2 weeks. They said it's a 3 month program.......Well that's just not going to cut it. That would equate to roughly 36 snakes for the trial period. That means they would have to hire 3889 people to get them all during one summer. They need to step it up or the program should be terminated because anything less than getting nearly all of the snakes........ the snakes will just repopulate like they did in the first place.



They should save the native species. They should also process and freeze the meat for hungry people. We as Americans don't usually eat python but millions and millions around the world would love to have it. Just a thought. It would be like India having a Chicken McNugget problem and they just discard their catch. Starving people here would be very angry.
Furious_George
Oops my math was wrong. I divided by 7, 1 too many times. Silly finger. It would take 27,222 people to get them all during one summer at that rate. Big difference.
Drew
The funny part is, that they are finding only the ones that are on or near trails and roads. They aren't even touching the ones that are in the deep stuff. It's not like you can just hike along the glades at night off-trail.

The hunt gets extended
http://www.flanews.com/?p=6792

vilnoori
Aren't there exotic meat suppliers that would buy the meat? If they're big enough, that is? Or is there absolutely no demand. I've read snake meat tastes like chicken. Wouldn't mind trying it myself, as long as it isn't one long "chicken neck."
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