The rock python, like the Burmese python and boa constrictor, is not poisonous but kills its prey by
constricting it and suffocating it to death before swallowing it. With the Everglades National Park just across the road, the rock python may already have joined the other giant aliens in the park in wiping out the native fauna. According to Robert Reed of the U.S. Geological Survey in Colorado, the new snake might eat any warm-blooded animal it can ingest. The Burmese python is known to eat dozens of species, including white-tailed deer and even six-foot alligators, and Reed expects the rock python to do the same.
Another potential problem is inter-breeding of the African rock python and the Burmese python to produce a hybrid species. This has been known to happen in captivity, and while most such offspring are infertile, there is a possibility that offspring of the two species could be even hardier and more deadly than their parents, according to Reed. Kristina Serbesoff-King of the Nature Conservancy in Florida said that we should learn from past mistakes and try to eliminate the rock python while it is still confined to a relatively small area. One approach could be a python patrol, similar to the one the Nature Conservancy ran to try to reduce the numbers of Burmese pythons.
If the African rock python is not stopped in its tracks, the scientists agree the problem may be even worse than the Burmese python problem because the rock python is far more aggressive. In its native home the African rock python is known to attack humans, according to Krysko, and if hidden in a swamp, it could strike before you even knew it was there. It could pose a particular danger for pets and small children.
The proliferation of Burmese pythons in the Everglades illustrates the need to control the spread of large, nonnative constrictors like the Northern African python. Both species are closely related and share several characteristics that help distinguish them from beneficial south Florida snakes. Unlike our native species, both pythons routinely grow beyond seven feet in length. Both bear a network of irregular (not diamond-shaped or round) dark blotches along their sides and back, somewhat like the pattern on a giraffe. A single, darkbrown, triangular marking adorns the top of the head of both species. Their scales appear smooth, unlike the “textured” scales of our native water snakes.
African Phyton |
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