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Uploaded by on Dec 27, 2008

Python infestation in the Florida keys.

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Pets & Animals

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Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 6 dislikes

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  • OMG YOU RETARDS WHAT ELSE ARE THEY GOING TO EAT ITS CALLED NATURE GOD MADE THOS FOR A REASON AND YOUR GOING TO GET PUNISHED

  • NO ON HR 669

  • @Mrtruimphchopper Hey impersonating crip, put down the USARK Kool-Aid. You're the one who's always talking sexual deviancy. Grow up & give it a break. I don't know why or how you became disabled but It was more than likeky your fault. So instead of trying to learn from the incident you've turned bitter, lashing out at anyone disagreeing with you. Well, you're the only one able to help you.

    If you can't handle reality wheel yourself onto some tracks & play dare with a locomotive.

  • If not to Virginia then at least through the alligators' range, which is most of the south, all by taking shelter in a gator's nest. It provides warmth, shelter & food. This is why I take the tayra with me. She sniffs them out for me. The majority of big burms I've killed this winter were hiding in gator nests.

    So no, I've never owned a python but being raised in & around the florida rivers & swamps does give me some insight to the reptilian mind & how to use their instincts against them.

  • ...Not only does she stay warm, she also has baby gator snacks as soon as they hatch in the spring, if she hadn't eaten the eggs before then. She can more than likely smell them in the nest. Come warmer temps she can then eat other gator hatchlings. When you get enough of them doing that the gators lose the title of apex predator. As it is only 2 or 3 hatchlings out of a clutch of 30 to 50 eggs make it to adult status. I'm hoping you can now understand that pythons have the capability to spread.

  • That's NOT what I'm saying. I'm saying the ones that survived (and there are survivors) the cold will pass that ability onto their offspring. Natural selection & all that. You go back far enough into a cave & you'll warm up, the deeper you go the warmer you get. That's where the gopher & terrapin holes come into the picture.

    As far as old gator nests maybe not but if a big female kills or chases off a female gator that has just built a nest or better yet, just laid & covered her eggs...

  • we are talking about migration out of the everglades the way you made it sound they can adapt to any environment.If that is what you are saying then it is not true I do agree about them being able to make it for awhile in cold weather by staying in old gator nest that is plausible. But look at this cold snap you had this year it wiped out a ton of pythons no one knows for sure how many maybe even the majority.

  • You're using the wrong analogy. One does not have to put their hand in boilig grease to know it will cook their hand.

    During a few warm days last week in this unusually cold winter a troop of boy scouts & their leader spotted four live ones. Yet, according to you they should ALL be dead. Explain, or try to.

  • There have been plenty of serious cold fronts pass through here since then. If what you say is true then please explain their population explosion. You can't. So"...that shoots that out of the water...".

  • That's right, don't let the facts get in the way of what you want to believe.

    You know anything about gators' & crocs' nests? Decaying vegetation is the key. They can make their way to the bottom & let the rotting flora keep them warm, same way it incubates the crocodilian eggs, up to 78*f. Apparently you don't know as much about reptiles (or at least the Everglades) as you want us to believe. "...so that shoots that out of the water...".

    Burms have been here before Hurricane Andrew.

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