Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Hunters may be paid by hour to kill pythons

- By Jenny Staletovic­h Miami Herald

South Florida water managers may amp up the state’s failing war against the Burmese python with a new weapon: a paid python posse.

The South Florida Water Management District will consider a proposal today to hire hunters, paying them by the hour, plus a bonus for every snake killed, as part of a twomonth, $175,000 pilot project. Hunters would patrol only district land in MiamiDade County, which includes the vast water conservati­on area where remote tree islands offer hiding places perfectly suited for the well-camouflage­d snakes.

The district declined to provide more details until after the presentati­on is made to the governing board.

Controllin­g the pythons has vexed biologists and wildlife officers who have been outgunned by the slithery invaders, which can lay clutches of up to 50 eggs at a time. The snakes started turning up in the marshes, either dumped by unhappy owners or escapees from breeding facilities, in the 1980s and by about 2000 were firmly establishe­d. In September, state wildlife officers confirmed pythons have also spread to the Keys after they found hatchlings for the first time.

Over the years, biologists have tested a variety of strategies to contain the snakes, including releasing females outfitted with radio trackers to act as ‘Judas’ snakes, snake-sniffing dogs and an iPhone app that lets people immediatel­y report a snake sighting. This past year, the state hired a pair of Irula tribesmen, whose ancestors helped hunt pythons to extinction in India, to track down snakes. While it failed to significan­tly reduce the number of snakes and was largely meant to enlighten the public, the state’s Python Challenge drew the most attention, with headlines around the world.

The district also happens to employ one of the state’s most prolific snake slayers, Bob Hill, who has killed hundreds of pythons since 2004.

Paying hunters to rid the conservati­on area of snakes is something the Miccosukee Tribe, which has a perpetual lease on the land and uses the area for hunting and other cultural purposes, has long sought.

“The only way we are going to solve this problem is with the public’s help. Of course there will need to be strict controls on access. But I think it’s a great idea,” Truman Duncan, the tribe’s water resources director, wrote in an email.

In January, the tribe’s research coordinato­r surprised area scientists by saying the tribe was banning all research on its land because the tribe considered the snakes sacred. He told the Miami Herald a change in leadership led to the decision. But last week, during a meeting of a district advisory committee, Duncan said the claim was untrue and that the coordinato­r had been let go.

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