By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Afield DailyAfield Daily
  • Home
  • Hunting
  • Fishing
  • Cooking
  • Camping
  • Gear
  • Videos
Search
More Topics
  • Outdoor
  • Conservation
  • Survival
 
  • Guns
  • Gear Review
  • ATVs
Quick Links
  • Community
  • Customize Interests
  • Bookmarks
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2023 Afield Daily. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Invasive Burmese Pythons Could Move as Far North as Canada
Sign In
Notification Show More
Latest News
It’s OK to Keep Trophy Crappie
Fishing
GALLERY: Team Knighten Industries sweeps the board at Builders FirstSource Qualifier Match 3
Fishing
The Best Tactical Flashlights of 2024
Gear
FantasyFishing.com Insider: Everything you need to know about Kentucky Lake
Fishing
Man Fined After Illegally Stashing 1,000 Pounds of Shed Antlers
Conservation
Aa
Afield DailyAfield Daily
Aa
  • Camping
  • Hunting
  • Fishing
  • Cooking
  • Gear
  • Survival
  • Conservation
  • Videos
Search
  • Home
  • Videos
  • Sections
    • Hunting
    • Fishing
    • Cooking
    • Camping
    • Gear
    • Survival
    • Conservation
  • Quick Links
    • Community
    • Customize Interests
    • Bookmarks
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • HUNTING
  • FISHING
  • COOKING
  • SURVIVAL
  • VIDEOSHOT
© 2023 Afield Daily. All Rights Reserved.
Conservation

Invasive Burmese Pythons Could Move as Far North as Canada

Afield Daily
Last updated: 2023/09/12 at 10:56 PM
Afield Daily

It started in the 1990s in southern Florida. Anglers and hunters in the Everglades began noticing the raccoons, rabbits, armadillos, and other small critters they normally saw before dawn and after dark were no longer abundant. Now, scientists are pointing to an ecological reason for their disappearance: a growing invasion of Burmese pythons.

Fast forward to December 2022 in the Everglades, and researchers with the Conservancy of Southwest Florida caught and killed the heaviest Burmese python yet recorded in Florida, a 17-foot, 7-inch giant weighing 215 pounds. Ian Bartoszek, Ian Easterling, and Kyle Findley, all CSF employees, caught the snake, which topped the previous Sunshine State python weight record of 185 pounds. In the time since then, he and other concerned scientists have found proof that the invasive snakes are slowly spreading to the north.

“We’re seeing [pythons] show up in counties further and further to the north,” CSF Bartoszek told Business Insider in early September. “It really does feel like an alien invasion.”

Taking Root

Not long after outdoorsmen and women in southern Florida noticed a dearth of small prey animals in the 90s, residents started finding large Burmese pythons. They were especially prominent in the Everglades, which lies at the southern tip of the state. The snakes multiplied exponentially in a very short time, and with no natural predators, they grew to huge sizes. (The CSF’s weight record still stands, but the record for the longest python ever captured was broken this July.)

Watch Next: Snake Hunters Catch the Longest Python Ever Recorded in Florida

The snakes got into the wilds of southern Florida through the pet trade. Owners either released them illegally or they got out of enclosures on their own. Florida’s wet, hot environment with abundant small prey and plenty of dense, vegetated cover makes ideal Burmese python habitat. Florida’s climate is similar to their native environments in Thailand, Myanmar, and Vietnam.

Florida’s Burmese python population has decimated native wildlife there. Everglades National Park has reported its bobcat, raccoon, and opossum population decreasing by 87 percent, with marsh and cottontail rabbits and foxes virtually disappearing. They’re also capable of eating deer and even alligators. The U.S. Geological Survey describes the Burmese python invasion as “one of the most intractable invasive-species management issues across the globe.”

Spreading Northward

Over the last few decades, the snakes have been spotted further north in the Sunshine State. They’ve spread into the Miami area and west toward the Gulf Coast, where they’ve been caught as far north as Lake Okeechobee. There are also multiple reports of the snakes being found in neighboring Georgia as well as southeast Louisiana. The assumption is that they’ll eventually be pushed back southward by cold, winter weather, since Burmese pythons struggle to survive at below-freezing temps. But there’s a chance they could evolve to become more cold-tolerant the more they breed and expand across the continent.

Florida’s 2010-2011 winter is a perfect example. There were multiple cold snaps that winter, which killed some snakes. But it also made surviving pythons more cold-tolerant and capable of continuing their northward spread. Scientists have developed computer models predicting that as the climate continues to warm, Burmese pythons could eventually spread as far north as Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and even Canada.

Bartoszek has recorded radio-tagged pythons traveling up to a mile per day, and they’ve been seen swimming 15 miles from shore, Business Insider reports. In just a few decades they’ve spread from the Florida Keys into the mainland Florida peninsula, roughly 130 miles to the north. In a sense, their expansion northward has already begun.

“I just developed this mantra over the years,” Bartoszek told the publication. “Don’t underestimate the Burmese python.”



Read the full article here

[ruby_static_newsletter]
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You Might also Like

Conservation

Man Fined After Illegally Stashing 1,000 Pounds of Shed Antlers

5 Min Read
Conservation

First Grizzly Bear in Bighorn Mountains in a Century Euthanized for Predation

4 Min Read
Conservation

Idaho Man Busted with More Than 1,000 Pounds of Poached Shed Antlers

5 Min Read
Conservation

As Wolf Management Debate Reaches a Fever Pitch, the Interior Department Hires a National Mediator

22 Min Read
Conservation

Wardens Seek Information About Elk Poaching Spree in Idaho

2 Min Read
Conservation

Florida Now Using Gambling Revenues to Fund Conservation

4 Min Read
Conservation

Wildlife Commissioner Fined For Hunting Turkeys Baited with Crickets

2 Min Read
Conservation

Louisiana Approves Black Bearing Hunting Season for 2024

3 Min Read
//

Afield Daily is your one-stop news website for the latest articles and tips about hunting, fishing and camping, follow us now to get the content you want.

Quick Link

  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • TERMS OF USE
  • PRESS RELEASE
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT

Hot Topics

  • HUNTING
  • FISHING
  • COOKING
  • SURVIVAL
  • VIDEOSHOT

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

[mc4wp_form]

Afield DailyAfield Daily
Follow US

© 2023 Afield Daily. All Rights Reserved.

Join Us!

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest articles, podcasts etc..

[mc4wp_form]
Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?