Wednesday, September 23, 2009

What Were They Thinking?

Child safety is a priority for most parents. We are meticulous about putting our children in their car seats, making them wear helmets when they are biking or skateboarding, and we make sure they don't play unsupervised or in the street. Why then, would anyone who has a two-year-old child own a pet Burmese python? Recently, in Oxford, Florida, a python which was over 8 feet in length, broke out of it's terrarium. You can see the writing on the wall. Toddler Shaiunna Hare was already dead when paramedics arrived. The owner of the python, Shaiunna's mother's boyfriend, Charles Darnell, discovered the snake missing and went to search for it. It shouldn't be hard to find an 8+ foot python. It had made it's way to Shaiunna's room and Charles found it wrapped around Shaiunna, who had already been strangled. There were bite marks all over her head. It wouldn't have been long before the snake would have swallowed her. The snake was so tightly wrapped around the little girl that he had to stab it numerous times before he was able to pry it away from the child.

I'm sure Mr. Darnell was frantically trying to save Shaiunna, but what was he (and especially her mother) thinking? An 8 foot snake doesn't belong in any home, much less the home of a toddler. A child should be safe in her own home. Where are the restrictions for owning such pets? Why would anyone want to own a "pet" that has to be fed another pet (bunnies, mice, rats, etc.)?

People who have bought and kept Burmese pythons find that they get too big to keep at home. In Florida, an alarming number of them have been released into the everglades. There, they are thriving and breeding. Last week alone, 18 large pythons were removed from the everglades, where they are wreaking havoc with the native species. They eat all of the natural wildlife, including alligators. There are a number of endangered and protected species in the everglades who are losing the battle to the pythons. This year to date, 245 Burmese pythons have been caught in the everglades. You can watch a video made by National Geographic, which states that hunters are now being issued permits to hunt down and kill the pythons.

http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/news/culture-places-news/florida-pythons-apvin.html

Hurricane Andrew contributed to the problem. People fleeing the hurricane left their pet pythons behind. In the aftermath of the hurricane, many of these snakes escaped their habitats when homes were destroyed or flooded.

In defense of the pythons, this is not their native habitat and it's not their fault. They were brought here and turned loose by people. They don't belong in cages in people's homes. It's not fair to them to be released into an unfamiliar habitat and then to be hunted and killed. They are simply following the course of nature. People have caused this problem. In the past five years, the United States has imported 144,563 Burmese pythons. People should have to have a license to own a dangerous pet, if these snakes should be owned by private parties at all. Pythons are breeding and can grow large enough to eat a child or domestic pet. Some are large enough to kill an adult. We have the capability to microchip them and hold their owners responsible for their whereabouts and damage done by them.

Pythons are capable of killing every type of bird and mammal in the everglades. Biologists have found the remains of squirrels, rats, bobcats, opossums, wrens and other birds in the stomachs of captured pythons. Endangered wood storks live in the Everglades National Park. Pythons, aside from killing the native animals, compete for prey and space. They are taking food from hawks, bobcats, and even native endangered indigo snakes. A giant snake can eat a large deer.

In 2002, an 8-year-old girl died in Pittsburgh after a python escaped from its cage and strangled her to death. In Colorado, that same year, it took seven firefighters to pry a 10-foot python of the neck and chest of a man who subsequently died. It seems to me that once these incidents happened, new laws should have been enacted. Apparently, no one payed much attention and now the problem is much larger and it will likely cost billions over the next few years to restore the balance of nature in the everglades. Meanwhile, the pythons have to die because they are a threat to people and native animal species.

I'm wondering why it takes something of this magnitude to get the attention of our lawmakers, who could easily ban the import of these animals except for zoos, schools, veterinarians, and reptile experts. Maybe we should ask them.

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