Posted by:
webwheeler
at Wed Feb 3 13:27:22 2010 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by webwheeler ]
The snake craze that caught on among American pet owners in the mid-1990s grew out of control — literally — when python owners began releasing the 20-ft. (6 m) creatures into the wild once they became too big for their tanks.
But unlike many domesticated animals who can't survive in the wild, the pythons have thrived and multiplied, particularly in the Everglades where they have become a scary nuisance, posing a potential threat to humans and feeding on native endangered species such as Key Largo wood rats, round-tailed muskrats and even alligators.
Though over 1,300 pythons have been removed from the Everglades, concerns over the ever-growing species could lead to an import ban of the high-maintenance, impractical pets.
Source: www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1958657_1958656_1958659,00.html
This article, while interesting, is just another example of the misleading info the public is being fed about Burmese Pythons. Time magazine's inclusion of this snake in the top ten invasive species is both sensational and ridiculous, especially considering that the Burmese Python, Python molurus bivittatus, is not even listed among the top 100 of the worlds most invasive species according to the Global Invasive Species Database here:
www.issg.org/database/species/search.asp?st=100ss&fr=1&str=&lang=EN
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Burmese Python on Time's Top 10 Invasive - webwheeler, Wed Feb 3 13:27:22 2010
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