WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — A burgeoning population of huge pythons — many of them pets that were turned loose by their owners when they got too big — appears to be wiping out large numbers of raccoons, opossums, bobcats and other mammals in the Everglades, a study says.

The study, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that sightings of medium-size mammals are down dramatically — as much as 99 percent, in some cases — in areas wherepythons and other large, non-native constrictor snakes are known to be lurking.

Scientists fear the pythons could disrupt the food chain and upset the Everglades’ environmental balance in ways difficult to predict.

“The effects of declining mammal populations on the overall Everglades ecosystem, which extends well beyond the national park boundaries, are likely profound,” said John Willson, a research scientist at Virginia Tech University and co-author of the study.

Tens of thousands of Burmese pythons, which are native to Southeast Asia, are believed to be living in the Everglades, where they thrive in the warm, humid climate. While many were apparently released by their owners, others may have escaped from pet shops during Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and have been reproducing ever since.

Burmese pythons can grow to be 26 feet long and more than 200 pounds, and they have been known to swallow animals as large as alligators. They and other constrictor snakes kill their prey by coiling around it and suffocating it.

The National Park Service has counted 1,825 Burmese pythons that have been caught in and around Everglades National Park since 2000. Among the largest so far was a 156-pound, 16.4-foot one captured earlier this month.

For the study, researchers drove 39,000 miles along Everglades-area roads from 2003 through 2011, counting wildlife spotted along the way and comparing the results with surveys conducted on the same routes in 1996 and 1997.

The researchers found staggering declines in animal sightings: a drop of 99.3 percent among raccoons, 98.9 percent for opossums, 94.1 percent for white-tailed deer and 87.5 percent for bobcats. Along roads wherepython populations are believed to be smaller, declines were lower but still notable.

Rabbits and foxes, which were commonly spotted in 1996 and 1997, were not seen at all in the later counts. Researchers noted slight increases in coyotes, Florida panthers, rodents and other mammals, but discounted that finding because so few were spotted overall.

“The magnitude of these declines underscores the apparent incredible density of pythons in Everglades National Park,” said Michael Dorcas, a professor at Davidson College in North Carolina and lead author of the study.

Although scientists cannot definitively say the pythons are killing off the mammals, the snakes are the prime suspect. The increase in pythons coincides with the mammals’ decrease, and the decline appears to grow in magnitude with the size of the snakes’ population in an area. A single disease appears unlikely to be the cause since several species were affected.

The report says the effect on the overall ecosystem is hard to predict. Declines among bobcats and foxes, which eat rabbits, could be linked to pythons’ feasting on rabbits. On the flip side, declines among raccoons, which eat eggs, may help some turtles, crocodiles and birds.

Scientists point with concern to what happened in Guam, where the invasive brown tree snake has killed off birds, bats and lizards that pollinated trees and flowers and dispersed seeds. That has led to declines in native trees, fish-eating birds and certain plants.

In 2010, Florida banned private ownership of Burmese pythons. Earlier this month, U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced a federal ban on the import of Burmese pythons and three other snakes.

Salazar said Monday that the study shows why such restrictions were needed.

“This study paints a stark picture of the real damage that Burmese pythons are causing to native wildlife and the Florida economy,” he said.

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35 Comments

  1. This is a sad situation that isn’t going to get any better. With that many pythons loose, they will easily form breeding colonies and damage to, or extirpation of, local fauna will be even more devastating. Imagine a 99% in any specie, such as what apparently has happened to possums.

  2. It doesn’t surprise me that there are people who haven’t got the brains to know better than letting these dangerous animals loose. Won’t be long and some of these lovelys will be slithering into housing areas and snacking on somebody’s kid. I’m waiting for the headline: “Child age 3 eaten by python.”
    It’s going to happen, it’s only a matter of time.

    1. Yes I know.  I can’t believe it hasn’t happened already.  If I was a parent down there I’d be terrified of my child being outside. 

        1. OMG How awful!  How in the hell could somebody have one of those things in their house when they have children?

          If my husband brought one of things home he would soon discover that a hatchet + a python = a python jigsaw puzzle.

    2. It’s already happened in Florida.  I watched a documentary about the proliferation of these snakes in the Everglades.

  3. Pets should not be non-native species of wildlife. When they are set loose, the ecosystems change and never for the better. The Everglades will never be the same due to non-native species of snakes; Maine deals with non-native species of fish. Even non-native types of plants can create problems. It is almost too late to ban the importation of the Burmese python, but it is better late than never.

  4. I would say…….start shooting them. Wouldn’t boots, shoes and purses look great made out of this skin??????

  5. This picture reminds me of the Maine  legislature,where the snake are the democrats and the alligator is the Maine taxpayer being squeezed for every last dime  over the last 35  years,until they have the alligator is on its last leg.

    1. And the guy pouring cement into the wetlands and complaining about taxes,  over-regulation and ‘alien’ species’ taking good jobs is the Republican.

  6. I wonder if there’s a way to have an open season on them.  I bet if there was a bounty on them you’d see thousands of those things being killed.  It’s too bad the state of Florida couldn’t hire a huge number of hunters and train them on how to safely kill those things.  Maybe they could make a dent in the population.

    1. People in other states kill snakes all the time, I bet there are guys down there that kill them on sight with a shotgun.

  7. Here is a way for Maine’s problems ………. Give any non-Mainer a one way ticket to the Florida Everglades.

  8. I’m sure they are just filling a niche made by man and they’ll naturaly balance, just like our coyotes here….right WAM?

  9. Maine is the only state in the Union without poisonous snakes. When I see a snake in my wood pile on a hot day in the summer…I run.

    1. Not always true timber rattlers used to exist in the state, and some would have you believe they still do.

      1. I really wish you had not told me that. A co worker and I fear snakes so much that we looked it up a while back. Must haven gotten bad info. I’m going to cut down every tree I own.

        1. I have spent a lot of time in the woods and have never seen one, I think you’ll be ok.  There hasn’t been a confirmed sighting in a very long time, I would be surprised to hear a legitimate sighting of one in Maine.

  10. I can think of no earthly reason for these things to be kept as pets.  They’re dangerous and anybody who thinks they develop devotion to humans, like dogs and cats, are delusional.  They see people as prey- it’s been borne out in case after case where owners and, worse yet, children have been killed.  I say ban them, permanently.

  11. Judas Horatio Priest! I’ll be damned if there is a reason for these things to exist- 20 feet of serpentine coils sounds like my perfect idea of a nightmare, and if those things are considered pets then I guess I am really as far behind the times as I think. Long live the tundra!!

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