Redtailboa.net  

Welcome to the Redtailboa.net forums.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, free photo gallery (10 meg upload limit), free classifieds, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.

Go Back   Redtailboa.net

» Quick Moderation
» Recent Threads
Go to first new post So this is where I...
Yesterday 09:01 AM
Last post by morti
Today 09:36 AM
19 Replies, 121 Views
Go to first new post Sick ball python!
02-16-2007 09:43 AM
by Allysen
Last post by IrishPrincess
Today 09:20 AM
21 Replies, 17,014 Views
Go to first new post Firearms / Hunting Thread
05-23-2009 11:31 AM
Last post by herpaholic
Today 09:19 AM
397 Replies, 22,415 Views
Go to first new post Topic Of The Week 08,...
Today 01:10 AM
Last post by IrishPrincess
Today 09:01 AM
1 Replies, 19 Views
Go to first new post My mammals
Today 04:49 AM
Last post by myk
Today 08:39 AM
11 Replies, 67 Views
Go to first new post Logic
02-07-2012 12:54 AM
Last post by robbertburge
Today 08:19 AM
12 Replies, 126 Views
Go to first new post Redtail attempting to...
Today 06:21 AM
Last post by konikitty
Today 08:15 AM
3 Replies, 35 Views
» Ads

View Single Post
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2005, 06:12 PM
wreckwriter's Avatar
wreckwriter wreckwriter is offline
The Old Man and the Sea

 

Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: South Florida
Posts: 1,293
Points: 5,540, Level: 21
Points: 5,540, Level: 21 Points: 5,540, Level: 21 Points: 5,540, Level: 21
Level up: 98%, 10 Points needed
Level up: 98% Level up: 98% Level up: 98%
Activity: 0%
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
Thanks: 0
Thanked 4 Times in 2 Posts
This has been covered in much greater detail in South Florida papers, in fact its the number 1 story in the Miami Herald. The media is all over this and the end result is unlikely to be good for the herp community.

I tried to post this earlier in the news form but it didn't go up:

Posted on Mon, Oct. 10, 2005

MIAMI GARDENS
Python devours family's house cat
A missing Siamese cat apparently was the snake's last meal
BY CARLI TEPROFF AND LUISA YANEZ
cteproff@herald.com

Like any cat, Frances, a 1-year-old Siamese named after the hurricane, had a simple daily routine.

He slept, ate and enjoyed hunting lizards in the woods behind his owner's home.

Two days ago, Frances vanished.

His whereabouts possibly were revealed Sunday. A snake expert says Frances is the bulge inside a 12-foot-long Burmese python that trapped and swallowed the 15-pound cat whole, just feet from its backyard in Miami Gardens.

''We've been looking for him,'' a distraught Elidia Rodriguez, 66, said of her cat.

The snake was captured and taken to a nature preserve.

This marks the second time this month that a python in Miami-Dade has tangled with another animal with deadly results. Earlier, a 13-foot python had a run-in with an American alligator in Everglades National Park, and neither animal survived.

Why all the aggressive and free-moving pythons all of a sudden?

Capt. Al Cruz of the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue antivenin unit said Sunday's case can likely be blamed on the recent rains.

''They are looking for dry land,'' said Cruz, who explained that climate changes affect pythons' life patterns.

Many pythons end up in the wild after being abandoned by their owners once they grow too big to handle; others are escapees.

How Frances, a gift to Rodriguez after last year's Hurricane Frances, apparently ended up in the python's grip no one saw.

But a missing animal and a bulge in the gut of a nearby snake makes for an easy equation.

A cat would have been no match for the python, much like last month's alligator.

Cruz said most pythons are made of pure muscle and are fierce predators. He said the strength of the nonvenomous python can kill a human.

Pythons strangle their prey before they eat it, Cruz said. They then dislocate their jaw to swallow it.

''A python's jaw is like a rubber band,'' he said. In this case, he estimated the python's girth at about 15 inches.

The cat might have walked right into the snake's striking zone, Cruz said.

''Unfortunately, it had no chance of surviving,'' he said.

Rodriguez, who lives in the 20900 block of Northwest 39th Avenue with her husband, Andres, two sons, three dogs and four remaining cats, said Frances failed to show up for breakfast Saturday.

''My husband thought he was in love. Poor baby. He was my favorite cat. I know Siamese [cats] are supposed to be distant, but he slept in my bed and everything,'' Elidia Rodriguez said.

The Rodriguezes learned of France's possible fate, and the monster snake lurking just five feet from the backyard, by chance on Sunday.

A man whose stolen car was abandoned in the woods behind Rodriguez's home came by Sunday to scour the grounds, hoping to find the wallet taken with the car.

''He came running over and said there was a really big snake over there,'' Elidia Rodriguez said. She called 911 and was referred to Miami-Dade animal control. Cruz, who usually answers calls for snake bites, arrived at about noon and found the snake coiled in the thick brush. Cruz said in order to get close, the brush had to be cut, which angered the python.

''He was very aggressive,'' said Cruz, who noted that it was obvious from the bulge in its stomach that the snake had eaten an animal. Snakes become sluggish when full. ``He didn't want to be bothered.''

Cruz explained that it takes about a month for a snake to digest its prey.

It took about 10 minutes for two Miami-Dade Fire Rescue workers and Cruz to trap the brown-and-black snake in a king-size pillowcase.

''That thing was huge,'' Cruz said, estimating it weighed about 80 pounds.

The snake was placed in the back of a police car and driven to the Sense of Wonder Nature Center at A.D. Barnes National Park at 3401 SW 72nd Ave. It will not be destroyed.

When the snake arrived at its new home, Cruz and Lt. Charles Seifert let it slither around on the ground in front of the center in a last taste of freedom. The python now will spend its days in a glass cage in the nature center.

''It is a matter of public safety,'' Cruz said.

Back in Miami Gardens, Rodriguez still clings to hope that Frances will walk through the door and that the mysterious bulge was another animal.

``I still would like to know for sure that it's him in the snake's stomach.''
 
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.2.2

All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:37 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright 2000-2010 Redtailboa.net. The comments are property of their posters,
Redtailboa.net Top Herp Sites
[Output: 44.64 Kb. compressed to 43.08 Kb. by saving 1.56 Kb. (3.50%)]