Snake Catchers From India Hunt Pythons in Florida Everglades

The tribesmen removed 13 pythons in just over a week, including 4 from Crocodile Lake National Wildlife Refuge.

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The tribesmen removed 13 pythons in just over a week. (Photo Courtesy: Twitter/<a href="https://twitter.com/PythonEggs">@PythonEggs</a>)
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The tribesmen removed 13 pythons in just over a week. (Photo Courtesy: Twitter/@PythonEggs)
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Florida has gone halfway around the world to get help for its python problem.

Wildlife officials recruited tribesmen from India to hunt the Burmese pythons —believed to be decimating native mammals in the Everglades.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission hopes the Irula tribesmen — well-known for their snake-catching skills — reveal a reliable way to track and spot the tan, splotchy snakes that all but disappear in the wetlands, unless they're basking in the sun alongside a road or canal.

Since the Irula have been so successful in their homeland at removing pythons, we are hoping they can teach people in Florida some of these skills.
Kristen Sommers, head of the wildlife commission’s exotic species coordination section

The tribesmen removed 13 pythons in just over a week, including four from the Crocodile Lake National Wildlife Refuge in Key Largo. One of the snakes was a female measuring up to 16 feet.

The tribesmen seen with a python. (Photo Courtesy: Twitter/@TheTRCP)

Two tribesmen from the province of Tamil Nadu in southern India are joined in their hunt, this month, by dogs trained by University of Florida and Auburn University researchers to sniff out pythons.

A year ago, the state's public "Python Challenge" netted 106 snakes. Over 1,000 people signed up for the month-long hunt. In an average year, about 200 pythons are caught in Florida.

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