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BAD NEWS

Copy and Paste:

Everglades invaders targeted:

Invasive species like the giant Burmese pythons that slither through the Everglades could be banned under a bill that aims to stamp out dangerous nonnative animals.


Exotic pets a growing danger in South Florida BY LESLEY CLARK AND CURTIS MORGAN
[email protected]


Water managers dispatched two experts to Washington, D.C., recently to back a controversial congressional bill targeting an Everglades problem that seems to get bigger every year.

The latest, largest evidence emerged last week: A Burmese python stretching 16 ½ feet, the longest yet of hundreds, perhaps thousands of the exotic constrictors the South Florida Water Management District has pulled off its lands and levees in the past few years.

More sobering: The female, found on the L-67 levee south of Tamiami Trail, was pregnant, carrying a clutch of 59 eggs -- more proof the giant snakes are breeding in the wild.

''These are not little snakes running around. These are massive, dangerous animals,'' said district spokesman Randy Smith.

The surge of invasive serpents is the prime reason the district, which oversees 2.2 million acres of state-owned marshlands, has thrown its support behind a House bill that could end the import and breeding not just of pythons, but a whole host of tropical invaders that have settled in South Florida.

But at its first hearing in April, the bill ran into what a cosponsor quipped was a ''hornet's nest of opposition'' from pet owners, breeders, hobbyists and pet stores. They expressed outrage to lawmakers in telephone calls, e-mails and YouTube videos -- including one titled Pets in Peril, Politicians Gone Wild -- arguing that the legislation would bar the ownership of anything more exotic than a Doberman or a Siamese cat.

''One-third of our nation has nonnative species as pets, and apart from dogs, cats and goldfish, which are exempt [in the bill], virtually every species in those homes falls under'' the legislation, said Marshall Meyers, chief executive officer of the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council. The board of directors of the trade group -- which comprises pet retailers, wholesalers and hobbyists -- spans the spectrum from executives with retail giants Petsmart and PETCO to the owner of the Gourmet Rodent in Jonesville, Fla.

The bill, warned Meyers in a ''pet alert'' summoning pet owners to action, ``could shut down major segments of the pet industry virtually overnight.''

Proponents, including a coalition of 15 major environmental organizations such as the National Audubon Society and the National Wildlife Federation, call the fears unjustified. They say the bill targets only species that pose a threat. Still, some suggest the language in the bill is vague.

EXEMPT ANIMALS

''There were some legitimate concerns, no one doubts that,'' said Peter Jenkins, director of international conservation at Defenders of Wildlife. He notes that pet owners were alarmed when some animals -- ferrets, gerbils, guinea pigs and others -- weren't named as species that would be exempt from the bill.

''It needs to be clear that many of these are entirely exempt,'' Jenkins said. ``We're only talking about 10 to 15 species that have been identified, that are risky, that are likely invaders.''

The bill aims to stop destructive species, he said, like the raccoon-size Gambian pouched rat, which Florida banned in 2007, and the Burmese python that has been called the poster child for the legislation.

''We're spending billions of dollars at the state and federal level to restore the Everglades, and unfortunately both plant and animal exotics get into the ecosystem and really knock things out of balance,'' said U.S. Rep. Ron Klein, D-Boca Raton, one of four South Florida legislators who have co-sponsored the bill. ``To me it's common sense, looking at science and what is good for the Everglades.''
 
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