Albuquerque Journal

Huge Fla. python offers clues to survival in wild

- By David Fleshler Sun Sentinel

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — A monster Burmese python captured in the Everglades has broken the state size record, stretching 17 feet, 7 inches, its belly bursting with 87 eggs, the University of Florida announced.

The snake was brought to the Florida Museum of Natural History Aug. 10 for examinatio­n. After the scientists are done with it, the snake will be mounted for exhibition at the museum for five years and then returned for exhibition to Everglades National Park.

“This thing is monstrous, it’s about a foot wide,” said Kenneth Krysko, manager of the museum’s herpetolog­y collection. “It means these snakes are surviving a long time in the wild, there’s nothing stopping them and the native wildlife are in trouble.”

Feathers were found in the snake’s stomach, and these will be examined by the museum’s ornitholog­ists. The number of eggs was also a state record.

Burmese pythons, native to southern Asia, have establishe­d a breeding population in Everglades National Park, arriving in the United States via the exotic pet industry. Park officials are worried about their consumptio­n of wildlife and competitio­n with native predators.

“A 17.5-foot snake could eat anything it wants,” Krysko said. “By learning what this animal has been eating and its reproducti­ve status, it will hopefully give us insight into how to potentiall­y manage other wild Burmese pythons in the future.”

The previous size record had been 16.8 feet and the record quantity of eggs was 85.

This particular snake had been under surveillan­ce in the wild for more than a month. Two contract employees for the U.S. Geological Survey captured it March 6 in some bushes near the Daniel Beard Center, a research station in the eastern part of the park, said Kristen Hart, a research ecologist for the USGS.

They took it alive and brought it to the USGS office in Davie, where they fitted it with radio transmitte­rs and other devices and returned it to the Everglades.

Like a captured spy who becomes a double agent, the snake now worked for the U.S. government. It became what scientists call a “Judas snake,” used by scientists to locate other snakes as they congregate­d for mating. After following the snake’s movements for several weeks, keeping it under surveillan­ce by air and ground, they recaptured the snake April 19 and took it again to their offices in Davie. But this was the end of the snake’s use to them, so it was euthanized.

They caught her before she laid the eggs. Newly hatched Burmese pythons are about 18 inches long and have a high rate of survival, said Hart of the USGS.

“When they hatch,” she said, “they’re ready to go.”

Skip Snow, a biologist at Everglades National Park who specialize­s in pythons, said the capture was dramatic evidence of the species’ reproducti­ve capability.

“There are not many records of how many eggs a large female snake carries in the wild,” he said in a University of Florida news release. “This shows they’re a really reproducti­ve animal, which aids in their invasivene­ss.”

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