Florida python hunting contest draws hundreds

Daily News Article   —   Posted on January 11, 2013

image587(by Barbara Liston, YahooNews) ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) – A python hunting competition starting on Saturday (January 12th) is drawing hundreds of amateurs armed with clubs, machetes and guns to the Florida Everglades, where captured Burmese pythons have exceeded the length of minivans and weighed as much as grown men.

Python Challenge 2013, a month-long event sponsored by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, is open to hunters and non-hunters alike. …

“I just thought it was as exciting as could be. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” said contestant Ron Polster, a retired salesman from Ohio whose closest encounter with the swamp has been from the highway heading south for the winter.

Participants pay a $25 entry fee and take an online training course, which consists mostly of looking at photographs of both the targeted pythons and protected native snakes to learn the difference.

The state wildlife agency is offering prizes of $1,500 for the most pythons captured and $1,000 for the longest python.

image586

University of Florida researchers capture a 15-foot python that was part of a radio-telemetry study in Everglades National Park. (image from CNN)

A Burmese python found in Florida last year set records as the largest ever captured in the state at 17-feet, 7-inches. The snake weighed nearly 165 pounds.

FWC spokeswoman Carli Segelson said the number of registered contestants reached about 500 this week and was growing, with people coming from 32 states.

The stated goal of the competition is to raise awareness of the threat Burmese pythons pose to the Everglades ecosystem. The snakes are native to Southeast Asia and have no known predators in Florida.

The contest also serves as a pilot program to determine whether regular hunting competitions can cull* the growing population of the invasive species, said Frank Mazzotti, a wildlife expert from the University of Florida who helped create the competition. [*cull – to reduce or control the size of (as a herd) by removal (as by hunting)]

image589b

Python Challenge rules require contestants to kill specimens on the spot in a humane fashion, recommending shooting the snakes precisely through the brain.

“I was hoping there would be a lot of machetes and not a lot of guns,” said Polster, the retired salesman. He said he worries “these idiots will be firing all over the place.”

… Segelson said the wildlife agency will provide training on the use of GPS devices and on identifying venomous snakes at the kick-off event. In the meantime, she said, contestants should be familiarizing themselves with the Everglades environment, just as they should before entering any other strange territory. …

By Reuters at YahooNews.com. Reprinted here for educational purposes only. Visit news.yahoo.com/florida-python-hunting-contest-draws-hundreds-233855237.html for the original post.



Background

BURMESE PYTHONS IN FLORIDA:  Pythons can live up to 35 years and have anywhere from eight to 100 eggs, with the average female reproducing every other year. It is estimated that there are tens of thousands now in the Everglades.