Still time to stop wildlife explosion
RCReptiles.com Forum Index RCReptiles.com
Ball Python Forum (Return to RCReptiles.com)
 
Ball Pythons for SaleBall Pythons for Sale  Ron's Ball Python BlogRon's Ball Python Blog  FAQFAQ
ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages
SearchSearch   RegisterRegister     Log inLog in   WAP enabled and accessible through your wireless cell phone!

Google
 
Still time to stop wildlife explosion

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic   RCReptiles.com Forum Index -> Herp News and Events
Author Message
reptilehunter



Joined: 20 Jul 2006
Posts: 565
Location: Tampa, Florida

PostPosted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 3:34 pm    Post subject: Still time to stop wildlife explosion Reply with quote


Still time to stop wildlife explosion
McClatchy-Tribune News Service


The following editorial appeared in the Miami Herald on Friday, Nov. 17:

---

The invasion of exotic animals in South Florida, especially giant pythons in the Everglades, has escalated beyond the point where state and federal wildlife agencies can hope to eradicate them. Even controlling some of the species will take a mammoth effort.

Toward this goal, wildlife agencies last week announced plans to step up efforts to capture more of the big snakes by using other pythons with embedded transmitters to pinpoint their locations. They also will develop chemical attractants to lure the pythons into traps.

These are sensible moves to deal with a creature that creates bone-chilling dread among many residents and visitors. But lawmakers and wildlife agencies should adopt even more aggressive rules to retard the introduction of exotic species into Florida and to severely penalize those who irresponsibly release the animals.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission will consider rules that will require owners of pythons and other large snakes to have permits and keep them in locked cages. They also would require dealers to insert microchips in the animals, making it easier to track and identify those who release them.

Adopting these rules would send the right message. But the rules, if adopted, should be supported with tougher penalties, including the possibility of jail time, for those who release dangerous animals into the wild.

Although the likelihood of a fatal human/python encounter is remote, the fact that more pythons are in the Everglades increases the odds that such encounters eventually will occur. Already, pythons have been found close enough to South Florida farms and homes to make a meal out of a turkey and a house cat.

Florida's laxity in allowing exotic animals into the state and in monitoring the people who own them is evident in the fact that there are as many as 400 nonnative types of animals in the state, including 44 kinds of amphibians and reptiles.

The impact of this unwanted intrusion is all around us. Iguanas now run rampant in neighborhoods from Key Biscayne to Coral Springs, devouring gardens and destroying flowering plants. In some places in South Florida and throughout the state, residents are allowed to keep tigers, cougars, venomous snakes and reptiles in their homes and backyards for no other reason than they want the animals as pets.

Meanwhile, the price tag for controlling non-native species in Florida, which now is at more than $100 million a year, continues to soar. The growing presence of giant pythons in the Everglades should be a warning. State lawmakers and wildlife agencies need to adopt tougher laws now before the animals get completely out of hand.

---

© 2006, The Miami Herald.

Visit The Miami Herald Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.herald.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.





Back to top
RonCrawford
Site Admin
Site Admin


Joined: 04 May 2006
Posts: 2042
Location: Pottsville, PA (USA)

PostPosted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 4:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm very curious about these "chemical attractants" they plan to use. It's probably pheremone based and I'm guessing they'll lure in adult males with it.
Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Ball Pythons in the Wild 2 hour DVD video
Post new topic   Reply to topic    RCReptiles.com Forum Index -> Herp News and Events All times are GMT - 4 Hours
Page 1 of 1

 


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group