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  1. #1
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    Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    Cold took heavy toll on Florida wildlife
    January's cold took a heavy toll on Everglades plants and animals. In the case of the pythons, that's a good thing.
    BY CURTIS MORGAN
    cmorgan@MiamiHerald.com
    Despite four decades of slogging through Everglades marshes and mangroves, wildlife ecologist Frank Mazzotti had never experienced anything like the aftermath of frigid January. The confirmed casualty count so far:

    • At least 70 dead crocodiles.

    • More than 60 manatee carcasses.

    • A bright-side observance of multiple frozen-stiff Burmese pythons, the scourge of the Everglades.

    And also, perhaps the biggest fish kill in modern Florida history.

    ``What we witnessed was a major ecological disturbance event equal to a fire or a hurricane,'' said Mazzotti, a University of Florida associate professor. ``A lot of things have happened that nobody has seen before in Florida.''

    The cold was simply brutal on many tropical plants and animals. Toxic iguana-sicles dropping into the mouths of unfortunate pooches was only the tip of the iceberg that descended for two weeks on South Florida.

    While scientists are still surveying losses, it's already clear that the record chill wiped out shallow corals in the Keys and devastated manatees. A preliminary assessment that Everglades National Park scientists completed last week also documented a broad and heavy toll on everything from crocodiles to cocoplums to butterflies.

    Dave Hallac, the park's chief of biological resources, summed up the impact in a word: ``substantial.''

    Cold spells, like hurricanes and fires, are part of the natural cycle in South Florida, and scientists believe the system will recover -- but some species will certainly rebound more slowly than others.

    ``I wouldn't expect any catastrophic long-term kind of effects,'' said Luiz Barbieri, chief of marine fisheries research for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. ``Most likely, this has happened occasionally over thousands of years. The system has adapted to these episodic mortality events.''

    Still, mortality numbers like this haven't been seen in decades in the park.

    A record number of endangered manatees died from cold stress, most of them -- more than 60 -- found in park waters stretching into the Ten Thousand Islands on the Southwest Coast. More than 70 carcasses of North American crocodile were counted, a significant hit to a species removed from the endangered list only three years ago.

    About 40 species of pineland plants suffered varying degrees of frost damage. On some tree island, cocoplums looked like they were burned. Half of the population of a caterpillar that morphs into the exceedingly rare Florida leafwing butterfly died.

    Then there were the literally countless dead fish -- from tiny pilchards to large snook and tarpon.

    The report -- compiled by Hallac and colleagues Jeff Kline, Jimi Sadle, Sonny Bass, Tracy Ziegler and Skip Snow and based on aerial and water surveys and reports from a host of other observers -- underplayed actual losses. It's impossible to cover an area as vast as the park, and carcasses can sink, float into thick mangroves and easily go overlooked.

    TAKING ACTION

    While the park has experienced colder days, January's chill was long and intense, punctuated with overcast skies, rain and one sub-freezing plunge. Mazzotti called it a ``perfect storm'' that left literally no warm refuges.

    The chill was particularly dramatic in coastal waters. The park recorded temperatures that hovered below 68 degrees, a cold-stress limit for manatees, for 18 days; and below 60, the stress limit for snook, for 14 days.

    ``I'm really worried about the snook down here,'' said Hallac. ``It was amazing to see how many of the large, more mature, spawning-age fish were killed.''

    The FWC has already closed snook season until Sept. 1. After reviewing catch reports and samples taken by scientists in coming months, the agency will decide whether to extend the ban on keeping the popular fish or changing regulations to protect any others, Barbieri said.

    Cold-blooded reptiles and tropical plants and fish fared the worst, but some Glades species weathered the nasty weather well. Birds, for instance, emerged largely unruffled, and some were observed scavenging fish.

    Only one death of an alligator, which reside happily in Louisiana, was reported. Crocs, at the northern end of their range in South Florida, died by the dozens, including one familiar to many anglers who fish Flamingo. The 13-foot, 450-pound croc, tagged as a hatchling in 1986, frequently lurked near the Whitewater Bay boat ramp.

    The cold did benefit the park's battle to control exotic invaders. Frost slammed Old World Climbing Fern, an aggressive vine that smothers natives. Other exotics, from Asian swamp eels to the infamous Burmese python, also took hits scientists intend to further study.

    THE STRUGGLE AHEAD

    Scientists said recovery rates will vary among species. While snook, popular with sports anglers, has gotten the most attention from the public, the cold may have been more crippling to Goliath grouper, Barbieri said.

    The fish, which can grow to massive size, nearly disappeared from Florida but had rebounded so well in recent years that wildlife managers had begun considering lifting a ban on keeping them. Goliaths died in massive numbers in the shallow Glades, considered a prime nursery. They also grow far more slowly than snook, taking six years or more to reach maturity, Barbieri said.

    For some hard-hit areas and species, other outside factors can hinder recovery. Everglades marshes and coral reefs aren't nearly as healthy as they were hundreds of years ago.

    Invasive plants, such as Brazilian pepper, weren't around to crowd out battered natives.

    ``If you're totally healthy and get a cold or flu, it's not a problem. If you've got diabetes and heart problems, it could be a lot more serious,'' Hallac said. ``The park is in that kind of compromised condition.''

  2. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to snakemastercanada For This Useful Post:

    BPelizabeth (02-08-2010),Foschi Exotic Serpents (02-09-2010),kc261 (02-08-2010)

  3. #2
    BPnet Veteran blackcrystal22's Avatar
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    Re: Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    Burms were once the 'worst impact on endangered species' in the everglades. Looks like they have a lot more to worry about now.

  4. #3
    BPnet Veteran Tim Mead's Avatar
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    Re: Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    WOW, very good read thank you..

  5. #4
    BPnet Veteran djansen's Avatar
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    Re: Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    global warming sucks.
    I'm not your friend buddy!

  6. #5
    BPnet Veteran twistedtails's Avatar
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    Re: Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    They might want to check the subway tunnels in New York, I think the rest of the burms have hybridized with retics and are brummating in the subway tunnels.

  7. #6
    BPnet Veteran PyroPython's Avatar
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    Re: Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    I want to propose s374.... A ban on transporting cold weather into the country. It destroued the everglades so it MUST be a national crisis!!!
    0.0.1 Solomon Island boa
    2.0 Normal BP
    1.0 Spider BP
    0.1 Saharan Sand boa
    0.0.1 Red spotted beaked snake
    0.1 Taiwan Beauty
    1.0 Broadband Copperhead
    0.1 Senegal Chameleon
    1.1 Leopard Geckos
    0.1 Columbian B&W Tegu
    0.1.12 Curly Hair Tarantulas
    0.1 Salmon Pink bird-eating tarantula

  8. #7
    BPnet Veteran BPelizabeth's Avatar
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    Re: Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    thank you for that info.....there was a very heated thread some time ago as to the toll it would take on burms. Guess this sums it up a bit!!
    Michelle
    Lets just say it has advanced to ....way too much to list

  9. #8
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    Re: Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    Bill Nelson bought all kinds of those olympic sweaters and mittens to keep the burms nice and warm so he will not lose out on the everglades restoration money he will say and do anything to get his way.

  10. #9
    BPnet Veteran jjmitchell's Avatar
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    Re: Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    The sad thing is the looney tunes in dc will not look at this as an ansewer to the python problem.... they will list all the animals that died and not mention the dead snakes.... That would be counter productive to their goal

  11. #10
    West Coast Jungle's Avatar
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    Re: Jan. cold takes heavy toll (Florida)

    The problem with the cold and the burms is this isnt about reality but a HSUS agenda. Obviously if they cant survive a cold snap in FL they cant survive anywhere else. Boas have have millions of years to migrate from Central America to Sothern Cali or Texas but obviously never have because they CANT survive the climate!

    I say feed Nelson to the gators, LOL

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