Another FL problem......Key Largo this time..

I think the Keys have lost their luster years ago due to poor development/ overpopulation as well as environmental destruction but this just adds another issue for the locals.......


When snakes invade, call the wranglers

By CAMMY CLARK

The Miami Herald

Sunday, February 01, 2009

KEY LARGO — In Python Catching 101, a few principles are paramount: Stay out of strike range. Don't let a 12-footer wrap around your body and squeeze.

And beware of gushing snake poop — a harmless, but smelly, reptile defense mechanism, instructor Jeffrey Fobb warned a group of wanna-be snake catchers.


Armed with the vital new information — plus thick gloves, metal hooks to keep snakes at bay and a blanket to throw over the snakes' heads — a dozen mostly fearless students last week learned how to capture the enormous natives of Southeast Asia that have begun invading the Florida Keys.

"As far as I know, this is the first class that teaches python wrangling, at least in Florida," said Alison Higgins, land conservation manager with the Nature Conservancy.

The students joined the "Python Patrol," a rapid response program created by the nonprofit conservation organization, working with government agencies, to stop some of the world's largest snakes from continuing their invasion south into the Keys, where they could wreak havoc on wildlife as they have in the Everglades.

"We're concerned for the number of endangered species in the Keys, especially the Key Largo cottonmouse and Key Largo woodrat, whose population numbers are very low," said Art Roybal, a senior biologist at the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. "Small mammals like that can be tasty items to a large snake, like a popcorn snack."

The Python Patrol was formed in 2008 after seven Burmese pythons were found in Key Largo the year before. Pythons had been found in the Keys since the 1980s, but they were thought to be pets that escaped or were let loose.

GROWING PROBLEM

The seven in 2007 were different. Wildlife groups believe they bred in the wild and may have come from the nearby Everglades, over land or by swimming.

The first of the seven was discovered by researchers from Scotland's University of St. Andrews who were tracking a Key Largo woodrat fitted with a radio-transmitter collar. The signal brought them to a seven-foot python, basking in the sun. A necropsy revealed the collared woodrat, and one other, in the snake's belly.

"When the pythons came at us fast and furious — bam, bam, bam — we needed to do something," Higgins said.

The Python Patrol also has an "Eyes and Ears Team" of safety officers, meter readers, mail carriers, road crews and landscapers trained to identify pythons, which can grow to 23 feet, weigh up to 200 pounds and live for 25 years. Any sightings are called into the python hotline: 1-888-IVE-GOT-1.

"Our goal is, the first time you see a non-native snake is the last time," Higgins said.

Anyone who calls in a sighting is asked to keep visual contact with the snake while a dispatcher at the Monroe County Sheriff's Office calls the volunteer snake catchers. Rule of thumb: A snake of 10 feet or longer requires backup.

THE BOOT CAMP

The Nature Conservancy is training 25 responders to cover the islands from Key Largo to Key West. This was the second class, held at the Crocodile Lake National Wildlife Refuge in Key Largo.

Fobb, a lieutenant with Miami-Dade Fire Rescue's Venom Response Team, brought several different types of pythons and an anaconda for his class of wildlife officers, aqueduct employees and mosquito-control workers to practice capturing and bagging.

"I try to bring ones with poor dispositions," Fobb said. "You don't want to give people an unrealistic idea of what to expect when you grab a snake in the wild."

In a dirt parking lot, Fobb made it look easy, straddling one python from behind and slowly inching closer until he could grab it behind the neck.

"There is no exact right way to catch them," he said. "But it's much better to be pooed on than bitten."

The key, Fobb said, is to wear them out. Techniques include using long metal hooks to keep the head from striking, throwing a blanket over the head to act as a blinder and using a second person to distract the snake.

Cindy Fury of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service took her turn, easily grabbing a 12-foot python behind the neck. The battle wasn't over. It wrapped around her legs with such force she couldn't move.

Fury laughed as three people came to her aid, but conceded: "Out there by myself, I would worry a little more."

Tony Emtiaz, aquarium curator at John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park, was the lone casualty. He was bitten on the fingers, through gloves, while trying to bag one.

"Hey, it goes with the territory," Emtiaz said. "I've been bit by morays (eels), which were much worse."

Pythons are not venomous, but their bites can cause infection, Fobb said.

"After attending here, I feel pretty comfortable if I ran into one of these guys in the woods," said Jerry Curtis of the Florida Keys Mosquito Control. "Before, I probably would have panicked."

The catchers don't kill the snakes, but they are later euthanized for research by Everglades scientists.

NEED FOR VIGILANCE

Only three Burmese pythons have been found in the Keys in the past year, but the threat will never be over with the proximity of the Everglades, where eradication is a lost cause, said biologist Ron Rozar of the U.S. Geological Service, which set up a python project last year in the Keys.

"All it takes is a few pregnant females to make it here," Rozar said. "They can lay up to 100 eggs, and you get a pretty high hatchling rate."

The Python Patrol has led to one capture: an 11-foot boa constrictor on Big Pine Key last month. It was believed to be an escaped or let-loose pet.

'People think: 'What's one pet snake let loose in a big wild place?' " Higgins said. "But that's how the problem began in the first place."
 
about two years ago we were coming through baypoint and a 7 foot rattlesnake was crossing the road, my buddy from australia wanted to grab it but it got hit by two school buses and a motorcycle, I said you are not putting that in my truck. (that is about 12 miles from key west)
 
I think the Keys have lost their luster years ago due to poor development/ overpopulation as well as environmental destruction but this just adds another issue for the locals.......


You should try to build in Monroe county(the keys) it takes 5-7 years to get all the permitting done:biggrinjester:
 
You should try to build in Monroe county(the keys) it takes 5-7 years to get all the permitting done:biggrinjester:

I know, my electrician owned a lot for 10 years and just got the house on it last year. The influx of modular homes/ trailers to skirt the building codes is one of their poor development decisions. It is a dumping ground for all of the dead beats that fell out of the continental US and think they are going to live the cheeseburgers in paradise fantasy with Jimmy Buffett playing the guitar in Mallory square every night.

Reality is that the keys are brutally expensive and unless you are rich it isn't going to be fun.....
 
60 minutes had a story on the florida snakes a while back, the problem is basically derived from pet snakes being turned loose and it will definitly get worse as they have a prime feeding ground to continue growing to huge sizes around populated areas...it will make major news the first time a kid becomes dinner.

on another florida animal angle..
 

Attachments

  • dre1050l.jpg
    dre1050l.jpg
    31.5 KB · Views: 10
Now it is the killer bees!

Just seven years after they were first spotted in the Tampa area, African honeybees have become well-established throughout South Florida. Experts estimate that up to 80 percent of all wild bee colonies in our area are now hybridized with this aggressive, often-irritable strain.

Africanized bee colonies reproduce more rapidly than European bees, which are kept commercially for honey and pollination. Africanized bees are frequently on the prowl for new homes in which to build honeycombs.

Sometimes those homes are occupied by people who haven't heard the buzz. And that can be dangerous.

Walking her dogs in Riviera Beach, Nancy Hill had no warning before she and her pets were swarmed by bees nesting in a vacant house next door. The dogs were killed in the October attack, and Hill, 70, was rushed to the hospital with 75 bee stings.



Related links
A look at local bee Infestations Photos
Africanized honeybees: What to do if you're attacked
How to prevent bee attacks
Eliminate nesting sites in your home. If you notice a nest or hive in your house or in the neighborhood, the state's Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services suggests calling a pest control specialist.
If chased by bees, get inside a car or building.
Never use insect spray on bees; it can incite an attack.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

African Honey Bees in South Florida Video
What to do if you see have African Honey Bees In April, Florida recorded its first death caused by Africanized bees. Former Fort Lauderdale Is your Fort Lauderdale restaurant clean? - Click Here. resident Robert Davis, 51, died after he was stung more than 100 times while working in Okeechobee County..

While the state Department of Agriculture recommends all feral bee colonies be destroyed, the Africanized bee is here to stay, said Bill Kern, an urban entomologist with the University of Florida's research center in Davie.

Africanized bees in colonies of up to 1,000 can move into almost any dark space, including a hole in the ground or a cable box on the side of a house.

They are easily riled. "Something as simple as a squirrel running across the branch nearby — that can set them off," said Kern.

Kern teaches emergency workers and those who work outside what to do if swarmed by bees. Rule No. 1, said Kern: "Run and get into a structure or vehicle. Don't jump into water; they'll wait for you to come up."
 
Back
Top