Global
warming may cause invasion of pythons in North America Washington,
Feb 25 (ANI): Climate researchers have suggested that pythons could soon spread
out to new parts of North America, due to global warming.
According
to a report in Discovery News, researchers have based their theory on climate
modeling for the year 2100, which predicts the likely places in North America
where pythons might spread. The
invasion of the pythons was first detected in 2003 when researchers discovered
a self-sustaining population of Burmese pythons in the Florida Everglades. The
snakes are thought to be the offspring of a released pet. Since
then pythons have also been found in Big Cypress National Preserve north of Everglades
National Park, in Miami's water management areas to the northeast, Key Largo to
the southeast, and other state parks and public and private lands throughout the
region. Now, the
climate modeling for the year 2100 has shown the possible climate range for pythons
moving northward and swallowing up northernmost parts of Texas and Arkansas, the
southeast half of Kansas, the southern half of Missouri and parts of southern
Illinois and Indiana. Further
east, the big snakes could comfortably creep through Tennessee, Kentucky, Maryland,
Delaware and southern New Jersey. The
research has also predicted that due to global warming, western US states like
California, Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico could see python-friendly climates,
while Washington and Oregon would see python weather for the first time in some
places. "The
climate maps do not take into account other factors which might keep pythons out,
like appropriate food and habitat," said invasive snake expert Gordon Rodda
of the U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) Fort Collins Science Center in Colorado. "Still,
the snakes will likely take advantage of the changing climate and spread north
wherever they can," he added. The
pythons, which can grow more then 20 feet long and weight more than 250 pounds,
are strangling and gulping down everything from endangered rodents to deer, panther
cubs, opossums and alligators. "This
is a quantum leap in snake size," said Rodda. "The largest snake in
North America is the bull snake or indigo snake, neither of which exceeds nine
feet," he added. "Large
pythons are also capable of killing adult humans, although they currently pose
the most danger to endangered Key Largo woodrats and rare round-tailed muskrats,"
said Rodda. (ANI) |