Python Hunting Anyone?
Florida’s Python Season
The state’s first licensed hunting season for the Burmese python has ended, with a body count of 37.
A state-sanctioned pilot hunting program aimed at determining location and formulating an eradication plan ended Saturday with 37 of the invasive reptiles being killed.
“This was more about finding where they are and seeing if we can contain their expansion,” Scott Hardin, exotic species coordinator for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, told the Miami Herald.
The constrictors can measure 18 feet long and weigh 160 pounds, and wildlife officials say they could number in the tens of thousands in the South Florida region — mostly in the Everglades.
Snake owners who released pythons when they became too large to manage are believed largely responsible for this troubling phenomenon. The snakes, which are reproducing in the wild, have become a threat to native wildlife.
The wildlife commission is collecting data from the snakes killed so far and will expand the hunting program next year. Meanwhile, licensed hunters after other species can continue to kill pythons in designated areas, including parts of the Everglades around Big Cypress National Preserve.
“If you’re in there hunting, and you see a python, you can kill it,”‘ Hardin said.
Hunters have used nets and snares and guns to subdue the reptiles, but all legal hunting methods are allowed, including bang sticks, harpoons and spear guns.
In a letter encouraging the harvesting of pythons, posted on the commission website, Chairman Rodney Barreto wrote, “You can even have some fancy cowboy boots made from python, but I don’t recommend eating the meat because testing revealed high levels of mercury in the meat — levels well above that considered safe to eat.”



Am I the only one who finds it amusing that a state bureaucrat is talking about “seeing if we can contain their expansion.” Coyotes, wild hogs, feral dogs, nutrias — these are just a few of the species that prove it is virtually impossible to “contain” an expanding population of wild animals once it establishes itself. With non-native species, you have to nip the problem in the bud by killing them all off while their numbers are small enough to do that. It looks like Florida is giving a lot of latitude to the hunters it licenses, so hopefully it will increase the number of licenses and make the whole state a “designated area.”
November 23rd, 2009 at 10:52 pm