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Florida launches mass python hunt

Death of Shaiunna Hare, two, sparks state to license trappers to hunt up to 100,000 pythons on the loose owing to exotic pet fad

The death of a Florida toddler in the coils of an 8ft (2.5 metre) Burmese python has sparked an official crackdown to eradicate a menacing population of slithering predators in the sun-drenched holiday state.

A small band of newly licensed trappers hit the trail this week of pythons living in the swampy wetlands of southern Florida. Experts believe that as many as 100,000 of the reptiles are loose in the region, in an unfortunate outcome of a fad for keeping exotic pets.

Earlier this month, a two-year-old girl, Shaiunna Hare, was strangled to death in her bedroom near Orlando by a python belonging to her mother’s boyfriend. The snake had escaped its glass cage during the night and wrapped itself around the child’s crib.

The tragedy galvanised Florida’s politicians into action over mounting alarm about the danger posed by pythons, which grow as long as 8 metres, weigh up to 89kg (14 stone) and can eat animals as big as deer.

“It’s just a matter of time before one of these snakes gets to a visitor in the Florida Everglades,” said Bill Nelson, a Democratic senator from the state.

Native to Africa and south-east Asia, pythons are interlopers to Florida and face no predator to keep them in check. Florida locals blame a booming wild population on irresponsible pet owners who release pythons into the wild when they become unmanageably large.

Others trace the problem back to hurricane Andrew which destroyed pet shops, hatcheries and zoos as it swept across the Floridian peninsula in 1992. Wildlife experts fear that if left unchecked, the snakes will decimate the population of smaller mammals, birds and reptiles.

Florida’s governor, Charlie Crist, last week licensed an initial group of fewer than 10 python hunters to begin trapping the snakes. Pursued by a pack of photographers, the hunters snared a 3-metre long python during their first foray on Friday.

“[Pythons] don’t make a lot of noise, when they’re agitated, they may hiss,” said Shawn Heflick, a licensed hunter. “They can hold on pretty tight but they’re well camouflaged and when they sit in vegetation, they’re pretty hard to see.”

Accustomed to alligators, Florida locals are not easily fazed by wildlife. The subtropical state numbers black widow spiders and fire ants among its more exotic residents. But pythons are proving particularly chilling. The snakes reproduce rapidly, laying as many as 100 eggs at a time.

“We do have a serious python problem, and this programme is a good first step in helping to stop the spread of this exotic species,” said Rodney Barreto, the chair of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission.

Curbs have been imposed on keeping pythons as pets – including a compulsory annual $100 (£61) permit and embedded microchips to track escaped pets. But animal rights groups have called for more radical steps.

The Humane Society of the United States said a ban on the trade in pythons would be more effective than any hunt for wild snakes.

“We should not pursue wasteful and futile strategies like bounty programs and public hunts,” said Wayne Pacelle, the society’s chief executive. “They won’t work, and could do more harm than good.”

The Floridian authorities are encouraging anyone who spots a python to call a telephone hotline. In an increasingly elaborate operation, researchers at the University of Florida are even working on miniature drones which can detect the heat given off by pythons from the air.

If the initial hunt proves promising, many more trapping licences could be issued. The hunters are ready for the kill.

“They’ve got beautiful colouration and they’re sleek and powerful,” said Heflick. “They’re actually magnificent animals. They just don’t belong here.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Lawsuit Claims Dentist Dropped Tools Down Man’s Throat…Twice

WINTER PARK, Fla. — A Florida dentist is being sued for allegedly dropping tools down the throat of an elderly patient – twice.

Relatives of 90-year-old Charles Gaal Jr. recently filed the suit in circuit court accusing Dr. Wesley…

The Avett Brothers Box Set

The Avett Brothers Will Release Upcoming Album I and Love and You
Available As Special Deluxe Box Set

The Avett Brothers know it’s been a while since their last record came out… but, all the waiting hasn’t been in vain. The band wanted to give fans something special – something more than just a CD. So, after lots of time spent creating the Brothers have finally something to share.

A Deluxe Box set of I and Love and You will be made available of the new album, pre-orders are being taken now.

The Deluxe Box includes a pre-sale exclusive and includes the Vinyl LP, full mp3 download of the album, and 2 CDs – the full album plus a six-song disc of demos, exclusive to the deluxe box. The package also includes 31 high quality art prints by Scott and Seth, song lyrics and a tear-drop bandanna, all packaged neatly in a 12″ x 12″ linen-covered box. As a gift to loyal fans, the first 1,000 people who order the deluxe box will receive a signed print of the album cover painting.

Orders of the box set and various other formats of I and Love and You are being sold here. The box set is going for $89, Vinyl LP and digital download – $25, CD and digital download – $12 and digital download – $10.

Purchases of the deluxe box this weekend will be at a 10% discount. To receive a discount – when checking out, enter the promotion code: nation.

The Avett Brothers Tour Dates:

07/17/09 Fri House of Blues Orlando, FL

07/18/09 Sat Cuban Club Tampa, FL

07/19/09 Sun Parker Playhouse Fort Lauderdale, FL

07/24/09 Fri House of Blues N. Myrtle Beach, SC

07/25/09 Sat House of Blues N. Myrtle Beach, SC

07/30/09 Thu Lafayette Square Buffalo, NY

07/31/09 Fri The Westcott Theater Syracuse, NY

08/01/09 Sat Newport Folk Festival Newport, RI

08/02/09 Sun Calvin Theater Northampton, MA

08/04/09 Tue Bottle & Cork Dewey Beach, DE

08/08/09 Sat Bojangles’ Coliseum (Formerly Cricket Arena) Charlotte, NC

08/14/09 Fri Mulberry Mountain Harvest Festival Ozark, AR

08/15/09 Sat The Crossroads Kansas City, MO

08/16/09 Sun Sokol Auditorium / Underground Omaha, NE

08/19/09 Wed Telluride Sunset Series Telluride, CO

08/20/09 Thu Steamboat Ski Resort Steamboat Springs, CO

08/21/09 Fri Boulder Theater Boulder, CO

08/22/09 Sat Ogden Theatre Denver, CO

08/25/09 Tue Red Butte Garden Amphitheater Salt Lake City, UT

08/26/09 Wed Knitting Factory Concert House Boise, ID

08/28/09 Fri Paramount Theatre Seattle, WA

08/29/09 Sat Britt Pavilion Jacksonville, OR

08/30/09 Sun Outside Lands Festival San Francisco, CA

09/01/09 Tue Van Duzer Theatre Arcata, CA

09/03/09 Thu Grand Sierra Theatre (Reno Hilton) Reno, NV

09/04/09 Fri The Strawberry Music Festival Yosemite National Park, CA

09/05/09 Sat Orpheum Theatre Los Angeles, CA

09/17/09 Thu North Charleston Performing Arts Center Charleston, SC

09/18/09 Fri Westobou Festival Augusta, GA

09/19/09 Sat The Moon Tallahassee, FL

09/20/09 Sun Bama Theater Tuscaloosa, AL

09/22/09 Tue Lyric Theatre Oxford, MS

09/24/09 Thu Minglewood Hall Memphis, TN

09/25/09 Fri Robinson Auditorium Little Rock, AR

09/26/09 Sat Cain’s Ballroom Tulsa, OK

09/27/09 Sun Granada Theater Dallas, TX

09/29/09 Tue River Center Baton Rouge, LA

10/01/09 Thu House of Blues New Orleans, LA

10/02/09 Fri Zilker Park Austin, TX

10/03/09 Sat Rose State College Midwest City, OK

10/05/09 Mon Lovett Auditorium Murray, KY

10/15/09 Thu Rams Head Live Baltimore, MD

10/17/09 Sat Terminal 5 New York, NY

10/18/09 Sun House of Blues Boston, MA

10/20/09 Tue Englert Civic Theatre Iowa City, IA

10/21/09 Wed Barrymore Theatre Madison, WI

10/22/09 Thu Canopy Club Urbana, IL

10/29/09 Thu Keith Albee Theatre Huntington, WV

10/30/09 Fri The Louisville Palace Louisville, KY

10/31/09 Sat Ryman Auditorium Nashville, TN


Orlando Bloom Home Buglarized

Credit: Thornton/Donnelly/INFphoto.com
Orlando Bloom’s Los Angeles home was buglarized overnight.
According to PEOPLE, at least two unidentified culprits broke into the property and looted a number of the actor’s personal belonging before taking off into the night.
Orlando was not home during the incident.

Faded attraction

Canary Islands

By Steve Kingstone
BBC News, Canary Islands

The sea is calm and the skies clear, as the Spanish coastguard boat speeds out into the Atlantic.

Behind us are the Canary Islands – vast, volcanic hunks of rock, dotted with hotels.

Ever popular with tourists, the archipelago has also long been a destination of choice for African migrants hoping to reach the European Union.

"In April and May, we didn’t have a single boat"

Orlando Ramos Alayon
Spanish Coastguard

The benign summer weather offers perfect conditions for "cayucos", the fragile, single-engined boats which make the crossing from Senegal or Mauritania.

But today, like most days in 2009, the horizon and the radar screen are blank. There is not a vessel in sight.

"This year, the numbers have more than just stabilised – they’re falling," explains Orlando Ramos Alayon, the coastguard skipper.

"There’s permanent vigilance now, both by police and coastguard, at the national and EU level."

Improved vigilance

The tide of illegal migration peaked in 2006, when 600 boats brought 31,678 desperate people to the Canaries in search of better times.

Often, the cayucos would be crammed full with up to 90 migrants, who had paid handsomely to make the perilous journey.

Migrants after arriving on Tenerife (29 March 2009)

Many more – certainly hundreds, and perhaps thousands – died during the crossing. The figure is a matter of guesswork.

But over the past three years, numbers have been falling steadily.

In 2008, 9,181 migrants made it to the Canaries, a 71% drop compared with 2006.

And during the first five months of 2009, numbers were down by half again on the same period last year.

"In April and May, we didn’t have a single boat," explains Mr Alayon proudly.

Without doubt, the fall is partly down to improved vigilance.

Under the EU’s Frontex programme, Spain’s Civil Guard police patrol the waters off West Africa, in partnership with the authorities from Senegal and Mauritania.

In the first six months of 2009, these patrols diverted 762 migrants back to their points of departure.

Additionally, a single, satellite communications network, called Sea Horse, pools information between the two continents.

Jail terms

In Tenerife, the largest of the islands, I was given rare access to the Guardia Civil’s newly-upgraded control room, where radar screens show the real-time locations of all boats approaching the Canaries.

"In the past, the first we knew of them was often when they landed on a beach, but now we can control them from much further out"

Sgt Miguel Angel Moreno
Guardia Civil

Sgt Miguel Angel Moreno

On another bank of screens, long-range cameras can offer live images of vessels within five miles (8km) of the coast.

"Legitimately registered craft generally send out a satellite signal identifying themselves," says Sgt Miguel Angel Moreno. "If a boat doesn’t, that puts us on alert."

"So far this year we’ve had only five migrant boats arrive in Tenerife, and all were detected and intercepted using this technology."

At this range, within Spain’s territorial waters, the cayucos will receive assistance to come ashore, rather than be diverted back.

But Sgt Moreno stresses that the new technology has given the police unprecedented levels of information about incoming boats.

"In the past, the first we knew of them was often when they landed on a beach, but now we can control them from much further out," he says.

Part of that control includes attempting to identify and detain the traffickers, who often travel with their paying customers, piloting the boats.

Guardia civil control room

Using cameras equipped with night-vision and infrared technology, the police study the body language of those on board, looking for anyone who appears to be at the helm or otherwise giving orders.

Once on dry land, the passengers are processed and where possible repatriated. But increasingly, the traffickers face jail terms.

"Previously, everyone arriving on a cayuco was treated the same, but now we are actively looking out for the traffickers," explains Jose Antonio Batista, the Spanish government’s representative in Tenerife.

"This is an important deterrent, because instead of coming here and knowing they’ll be sent home, they now know they’ll be sent to prison."

Mr Batista points out that 22 people are currently serving sentences for people-trafficking, while a further 169 suspects are in prison awaiting trial.

Unemployment

But besides heightened surveillance and tougher penalties for traffickers, there is another deterrent at work – the recession.

For just as the tide of migrants rose when Spain’s economy was booming, so it has fallen in line with the slowdown, which has left the country with an 18.7% unemployment rate – the EU’s highest.

"When the crisis started, things got difficult for immigrants. Now, I’m lucky if I get one day’s work a week"

Nigerian immigrant

Earlier, in the capital, Madrid, I found a group of around two-dozen African migrants killing time in a plaza by playing cards.

When the Spanish authorities failed to repatriate them within 40 days of their arrival, they were allowed to stay here.

But without work permits, they live in administrative limbo; and even if they could work, they would be competing with Spain’s 3.5 million official unemployed.

"I don’t recommend Spain at this moment," sighs a 28-year-old migrant, who came here from Cameroon in 2004.

African immigrants in Spain try to find work (20 November 2008)

"To me, it’s like Africa, only civilised. And in some ways, it’s worse than in Africa – because here, you have to pay for everything you eat."

Another migrant, aged 27 from Nigeria, describes the growing difficulties in finding work on the black market.

"When I came here three years ago there was lots of construction work," he says, "but when the crisis started, things got difficult for immigrants. Now, I’m lucky if I get one day’s work a week."

So what would he say to someone back home in Nigeria who was thinking of coming to Spain now

"My advice is that they’re better not to even think of coming to Europe," is the terse reply. "For now, it’s really hard here."

Continued attraction

In an age of mobile phones and instant messaging, that downbeat assessment seems to have filtered back to would-be migrants back home, and it may be a factor in the sharp drop in cayuco numbers.

"It doesn’t matter how bad the economic crisis is here, it’s always going to be worse in Africa – and people will continue to risk their lives"

Austin Taylor Wainwright
Spanish Red Cross

But many others will continue to risk their lives.

On Monday this week, a boat carrying 68 migrants made landfall on the tiny Canarian island of El Hierro.

A further passenger had perished during the crossing – a grim reminder of the dangers involved.

"It’s a relief to see that fewer people are coming, but it doesn’t mean the need to make the journey has disappeared," explains Austin Taylor Wainwright, an emergency relief co-ordinator with the Spanish Red Cross.

"If you look at the unemployment rate in Senegal, it’s around 50%," he adds.

"It doesn’t matter how bad the economic crisis is here, it’s always going to be worse in Africa – and people will continue to risk their lives."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Marketwire Review – Press Release Distribution

PR agencies, large companies and small businesses all have the need to announce news through a press release, still a great way to gain media exposure and PR. Once those releases have been written, it’s often a wise idea to distribute the press release over a newswire (which makes your news available to thousands of [...]