Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Signs show pythons on the move

Specimens found in Key Largo and Loxahatche­e Refuge

- By David Fleshler | Staff writer

Burmese pythons appear to be slithering into new territory, extending their range and putting more of South Florida’s wildlife at risk of becoming lunch. Python hatchlings were discovered for the first time on Key Largo, an ominous developmen­t for the island’s wildlife, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission announced Thursday. And last week, a 10-foot python was found on a levee at the Loxahatche­e National Wildlife Refuge in western Palm Beach County, indicating that the huge constricto­r may have staked out territory in the northernmo­st section of the Everglades. The big snakes, which can swim, have

been found for years on Key Largo. But the discovery of three hatchlings in August is the first evidence that they have establishe­d a breeding population there.

“We worry about pythons becoming establishe­d in the Keys because there are several at-risk population­s of small mammals, like the Key Largo woodrat and the Key Largo cotton mouse, thatwould be easy prey for Burmese pythons,” said Bryan Falk, a biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey.

The python at the Loxahatche­e refuge was discovered by a law enforcemen­t officer driving on a levee at night, just west of West Delray Regional Park. Upon seeing the python, he hit the brakes but ran over it.

The snake was still alive, so he killed it with a machete, said Steve Henry, deputy project leader at the refuge.

The snake’s remains were sent to the University of Florida for analysis. Although three pythons had been found previously on the refuge, they all turned out to be released pets. If analysis of its DNA and stomach contents reveal it to be a wild python, itwould be the first such snake found on the refuge, Henry said.

The main concern would be the refuge’s small mammals, such as raccoons, opossums and woodrats, he said.

“If you look at what happened with the python at Everglades National Park, it started with the small mammals,” he said. “Their population­s just imploded.”

Native to southern Asia, Burmese pythons establishe­d a breeding population in Everglades National Park in the 1990s, as a byproduct of the exotic pet business. There are thought tobe some combinatio­n of released pets and escapees from a breeding facility damaged in Hurricane Andrew.

No one knows the extent of their South Florida range, said Kristen Sommers, exotic species coordinato­r for the state wildlife commission. Beyond Everglades National Park, they are likely to be establishe­d in other parts of the Everglades, as well as state parks and hunting lands to the west and north of the Everglades, she said. It’s also unknown how far they could spread, although the relatively cold winters of Central Florida could serve as a rough limit, she said.

Even the mild winters of South Florida have in the past held down the population­s of non-native species such as iguanas.

But she said the warm weather of the past few years, with the lack of severe winter cold snaps, has likely allowed pythons and other non-native species to spread.

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 ?? FLORIDA FISH AND WILDLIFE COMMISSION ?? Top, the 10-foot Burmese python found in the Loxahatche­e refuge. Above, one of the hatchlings found on Key Largo.
FLORIDA FISH AND WILDLIFE COMMISSION Top, the 10-foot Burmese python found in the Loxahatche­e refuge. Above, one of the hatchlings found on Key Largo.
 ?? LOXAHATCHE­E NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE ??
LOXAHATCHE­E NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE

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