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Not a leopard gecko concern but please read THANKS SO MUCH

reptilehouse Jul 19, 2003 10:14 PM

I got so much help with my leopards I thought I would post this here as well as the other forums as well!! If any one can voice there concerns for these niles and help save one or any that would be great. There are alot of kind harted people here in this forum and help would be great.

Atached is what was posted on AOL today. They are consedering killing them or relocating them CAPE CORAL, Fla. - Biologists in southwest Florida have set out to trap a species of giant, carnivorous lizards normally native to Africa that appear to be spreading through the region.

Cape Coral has become a haven for Nile monitor lizards, and their population in the Gulf Coast city has possibly reached the thousands, said Todd Campbell, a University of Tampa assistant professor of biology who has started a project to monitor the monitors. Options being studied include relocating or killing the animals.

The first official report of a monitor lizard in Cape Coral was in 1990. Since then, Cape Coral has received 145 reports.

Nile monitor lizards, which can easily grow to 5 feet, might have become established in Cape Coral in one of two ways, Campbell said. Some may have been released into the wild after being kept as pets, or the roaming lizards might all be descendants of a single pregnant female who was released.

Campbell and his assistants, working with state and federal grants, are trying to learn whether monitor lizards have become a threat to native species. The animals can hunt prey in the water, in trees and even underground.

``They likely eat anything they can fit in their mouths,'' said Gregg Klowden, a University of Florida biologist working on the project. ``In my opinion, burrowing owls are like popcorn snacks for them.''

In Africa, the lizards eat crocodile eggs, fish, mussels and snails.

``They certainly wouldn't have any problem with baby alligators,'' Campbell said, adding: ``These things eat oysters, so to crunch a gopher tortoise shell would be nothing. They probably eat armadillos, foxes, ground doves, reptiles, amphibians. There's one story of a lady finding a hatchling monitor eating goldfish out of her pond.''

07/18/03 20:03 EDT

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
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Replies (1)

DeltaWoods Jul 20, 2003 12:37 AM

I saw this article today also. Doesnt seem like the Florida wild life stands a chance against the monitors. Funny, they dont make animals over here like they make them in Africa! I hope they decide to relocate them or set them up for adoption or something. Im sure some expert herpers would take them. I would hate to see them all killed.

Rob Woods

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