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Re: Python Hunters TV Show
I generally trust National Geographic, they usually do a very good job hiring experts in the fields who know what they are talking about.
Plus, they are good about putting up truthful and scientific information rather than what the media wants and feeds on.
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to blackcrystal22 For This Useful Post:
Exotic Ectotherms (07-26-2010),Oxylepy (07-28-2010),SK_Exotics (07-26-2010)
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Re: Python Hunters TV Show
 Originally Posted by blackcrystal22
I generally trust National Geographic, they usually do a very good job hiring experts in the fields who know what they are talking about.
Plus, they are good about putting up truthful and scientific information rather than what the media wants and feeds on.
I agree 100%. Actually, one of the experts is Greg Graziani...and we all know that he knows his stuff.
1.0 Mojave 100% Het VPI Axanthic "Pleepleus"
1.2 Albino Common Snapping Turtles "Beavis, Patty & Selma"
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Registered User
Re: Python Hunters TV Show
Any idea if episodes are available ANYWHERE online? feel free to pm me if necessary
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Re: Python Hunters TV Show
I was fascinated by the idea that the Burms are filling a depressed meso-carnivore niche in the everglades. I didn't realize that meso-carnivore populations were in decline there.
It certainly makes sense that, if they are, the Burms are shoring up the gap in the food web. Raccoon, opossum, and skunk could all do a lot of damage if overpopulated, let alone what non-natives like the Norway Rat are doing.
It's difficult to see how the Burms aren't fitting right in, based on the evidence so far. They're providing food for a variety of animals, and they're not eating anything an alligator or bobcat wouldn't take (fewer species than that, actually).
The Everglades would be better off with more bobcats and no Burms, but I was shocked to hear that fully 10% of the wildlife there is non-native, now. There is no way to put Humpty Dumpty back together again. That's a mess that simply cannot be cleaned up, at this point.
It's a little aggravating to think that all the fuss over the Burmese may boil down to just one thing--this is the first invader that poses a significant risk to little yap-dogs. Never mind the mass destruction created by animals such as cane toads and walking catfish, or plants like the Chinese Tallow Tree.
There's also a clear and obvious path for the Burms to survive in the long term, there...selective pressure is going to shrink them. They have to be small to survive cold snaps, so the animals that simply stay smaller will do better. Removing all of them seems vanishingly unlikely.
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Re: Python Hunters TV Show
I thought it was interesting when they showed all of the iguanas living at the beachfront resort.... both greens and spinys....both of which are invasive. Not only are they tolerated, they are embraced. It just shows the general public's hysteria about an animal that they don't understand and snakes' bad reputations in general.
1.0 Mojave 100% Het VPI Axanthic "Pleepleus"
1.2 Albino Common Snapping Turtles "Beavis, Patty & Selma"
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Python Hunters TV Show
I often travel to places that the Python Hunters go, not those crazy hammocks in the middle of the glades. But certain roads and hidden areas that they travel. I love the show and its pretty much slapping Floridas new laws in the face because they are basically proving a lot of those theories and speculations about the burms etc wrong. Like stated above by "WingedWolfPsion"
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