Miami Herald, 9/22/16, by Jenny
Staletovich
For the first time, wildlife
officials have found Burmese pythons breeding in the Florida Keys, bad news for
disappearing Key Largo woodrats, cotton mice and other small mammals consumed
by the voracious snake.
On Thursday, the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission reported that three hatchlings were found over
three weeks in August in North Key Largo. They are the first hatchlings
documented in the area, suggesting the exotic snakes invading marshes on the
mainland have now staked out new territory where the last known population of
docile woodrats build their intricate nests in woody hammocks.
The Key Largo woodrat,
nearly driven to extinction by loss of habitat and feral cats, faces a new
threat: breeding pythons.
The Key Largo woodrat, nearly
driven to extinction by loss of habitat and feral cats, faces a new threat:
breeding pythons. Clay DeGayner
“While we have documented Burmese
pythons in the Keys for a while now, this is the first time we have
documentation of hatchlings,” FWC section leader Kristen Sommers said in a
statement. “This is not surprising considering the proximity to the known
breeding populations in the Everglades.”
Pythons first began appearing in
the Everglades in the 1980s, likely freed by unhappy pet owners. By 2000, they
were fast becoming the state’s most notorious invasive species.
The snakes have been blamed for
driving down the population of raccoons, rabbits and other small mammals in
Everglades National Park. Last year, a study concluded they had taken over as
the top predator in the region. The South Asian snakes are also adept at
altering habits to live in their swampy new home, capable of swimming and
inhabiting more diverse environments, according to a five-year study completed
by the U.S. Geological Survey last year.
The Keys have had sightings
before — 31 were reported in the last five years — but never hatchlings. While
no nests or eggs were found last month, the hatchlings are almost surely the
offspring of wild pythons, which might have swam to the island, said USGS
biologist Bryan Falk.
“There’s been observations of
them swimming in Florida Bay in open water and they obviously arrived [in Key
Largo] by swimming,” he said. “They may have been breeding [before] but we
didn’t make any observation.”
A state environmental worker
spotted the first 18-inch snake in North Key Largo on Aug. 2, Sommers said. A
second, about the same size, was spotted the next day in the same location. On
Aug. 23, a third snake was found. Only one of the snakes was captured alive,
making it impossible to conduct genetic tests to determine whether the snakes
came from the same clutch, Falk said.
The snake will be sent to the
Florida Museum of Natural History in Gainesville, where it will be housed and
cataloged as the first official documented Key Largo python, Falk said. Sommers
said all three snakes were found near the Crocodile Lake National Wildlife
Refuge, although officials are not disclosing exact locations for privacy
reasons.
If the snakes are breeding in
North Key Largo, the chubby reddish-brown woodrats that inhabit the refuge
could be in more dire trouble. Woodrats were added to the endangered species
list in 1984 when just about 6,500 remained. By 2010, when the state launched a
failed attempt at introducing captive bred rats, the number was down to about
300. In a not-surprising twist of fate, a woodrat led biologists to the first
documented python: a team following a radio-collared rat instead found the
python, digesting their target.
The spread of the snakes also
raises concerns over other endangered species including the Lower Keys marsh
rabbit and the petite Key deer on Big Pine. Both rabbits and deer regularly
turn up on python menus.
In an effort to keep Key Largo
from becoming a snake pit, wildlife officials said Tuesday they would begin
sending postcards with information about pythons to residents, asking for help
tracking them down. Anyone who spots a python should take a picture and report
it to the state hotline at 888-Ive-Got1 or online at www.IveGot1.org. Over the winter, when snakes
are easier to find sunning themselves, the team will plot out a new strategy to
tackle the invasion, Sommers said.
“The challenge will be the same
as it has been for the last 10 years. Even if we remove all the pythons from
the Keys, the likelihood that more are going to get there is really high, so
consistent surveying is really important,” she said. “And for the public to be
our eyes on the ground is really important because they can help direct our
efforts.”
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