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While examining the invasive python population in Florida, researchers stumbled across the unexpected: a kind of hybrid super snake.
Pythons are not supposed to be in the Everglades. The snakes likely got there because some Florida creep with way too many pet reptiles let them loose in the Glades in the 1980s. Now the dang ...
Newly Discovered Hybrid Pythons Are Threatening Florida’s Wildlife A new study has found that some invasive Burmese pythons carry DNA from another snake, which could make them more adaptable ...
Interestingly, the vast majority of the samples appeared to be closely related Burmese pythons (Python bivittatus), meaning there were quite a number of 2nd and 3rd cousins.
New hybrid pythons discovered in southern Florida could be stronger and more adaptable to their environment than their nonhybrid relatives. The curious pythons are, genetically speaking, mostly ...
Pythons as long as SUV’s are tightening their grip on the Florida Everglades and with no natural predators in the state, the snakes native to Southeast Asia have quickly risen to the top of the ...
The U.S. Geological Survey, USGS, is collecting DNA to track a new snake hybrid in the Everglades.A genetic research study, published this month, examined… ...
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – With no natural predators in the Sunshine State, pythons native to Southeast Asia have taken over the Florida Everglades. The slithering creatures killed off a large ...
Hybrid man-eating pythons? Florida is on alert. Scientists worry that two species of nonnative pythons now near the Everglades could breed, yielding more aggressive offspring.
Researchers have warned that two non-native species of python currently slithering free in south Florida could morph into a giant man-eating swamp coil. Researchers have warned that two non-native ...
Hybrid snakes with the ability to live in various environments discovered in Florida: Study The snakes were discovered among the invasive python population in Florida.
New hybrid pythons discovered in southern Florida could be stronger and even more dangerous to native wildlife than their invasive parents.