They canvass southern Florida at night, in teams of two, armed with flashlights and bolt guns to stun and smash the brains of intruders.
Invasive iguanas tearing across properties
and destroying local infrastructure have been put on notice by a team of
wildlife biologists from the University of Florida, deputized by the state
to kill them using methods as humane as possible in an ongoing
experiment with collection and removal techniques.
The preferred killing method is blunt force
trauma, Frank Mazzotti, a wildlife ecology professor at the university, told
The Washington Post on Monday. “Death is instantaneous, as is destruction of
the brain. No pain is felt by the animal,” he said.
That means, when available, the scientists
use captive bolt guns that discharge a fast-moving metal rod, commonly utilized
in the cattle industry and the weapon wielded by villain Anton Chigurh in the
2007 film “No Country
for Old Men.”
It also sometimes involves using deadly
blows with other methods, like hitting them with hammers or swinging the
iguanas hard into concrete. The scientists have gone out for six nights so far,
often pulling iguanas right off trees as they sleep. Traps are set up in places
like parks away from residential areas.
Mazzotti said the killing methods are in
line with regulations established by various bodies, including the American
Veterinary Medical Association.
The count so far: about 300 iguanas, some
killed on the spot after they were trapped, with others later taken to be
euthanized. The teams operate along a canal on the northeastern edge of the
sprawling Everglades preserve in Davie, north of Miami.
Iguanas tend to colonize the man-made canals,
the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission says, an accidental
proliferation aid for the lizards traversing the watery veins of Floridian
suburbia. Density along water management areas makes iguanas more of a
nuisance, requiring mass removals. Two nights alone netted about
200 iguanas.
An iguana in Puerto Rico, where they should
not be, either. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)
The university’s work is underwritten by the
commission. The commission provided $63,000 for the research project running
through May that also includes weighing and measuring carcasses before they are
properly disposed of at an authorized landfill, the Sun Sentinel reported.
The iguanas, clearly, are not welcome. They
do not even belong.
The natural habitat of the common green
iguana stretches from Mexico through Central America and throughout the
entire Amazon region in South America, including islands in the Caribbean and
off the Brazilian coast, a map on the commission website shows.
According to the Sun Sentinel, iguanas
arrived in Florida as pets, first appearing in Miami-Dade County in
1966, then in the Keys in 1995 before making a home
of Broward County in 2001 and in Palm Beach in 2003. The total
population is unknown, Mazzotti said, but the southern portion of the state has
reeled from proliferating numbers. Iguanas can lay dozens of eggs at once.
Iguanas are attracted to dense trees and
fruit — kind of what Florida is known for. They destroy landscape
vegetation, and their burrowing speeds erosion, leading to the collapse of sidewalks,
foundations and canal banks, the commission says.
If that is not enough, they can also transmit
salmonella to humans that come into contact with water tainted by their feces —
in swimming pools, for instance.
The commission carefully spells out how
iguanas can be captured and killed. They recommend using
nets, cage traps and noose poles for the famously agile, spiky-tailed
creatures. But then it gets complicated.
You can kill one with a single blow from say,
a shovel, but you must strike true. More than one blow could be animal cruelty
punishable by prison time and up to $5,000, Ron Magill, an animal
ambassador for Zoo Miami, told the Sun
Sentinel.
“Unless you have an animal that you can have
in your hand, [killing humanely] is very hard to do,” Magill said.
Trapping and relocating iguanas to a more
isolated place is also forbidden, Magill explained, because the
practice could transmit viruses and bacteria to ill-equipped wildlife.
Also: Do not poison or freeze them, experts
warn.
Florida exotic pet veterinarian Susan
Kelleher told the Sun Sentinel she considers the head-bashing inhumane and
suggested sedating and euthanizing the iguanas. She did not return a request
for comment. Mazzotti noted they do indeed euthanize iguanas.
Most residents can use pellet guns to kill
iguanas, provided they are legal in their area. One resident, Gary
Fishman, told the Sun Sentinel he has racked up more than 100 iguana kills with
his pellet gun.
“The iguana does not belong here,” he said.
“They need to be annihilated. They can’t be relocated. So they must be
destroyed.”
Mazzotti cautioned against that method.
The scientists have recovered iguanas with
pellets lodged in their skin from botched kills, meaning the lizards, however
loathed, probably suffered.
“That’s not humane,” he said.
Herman
Wong contributed to this report.
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