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Thread: 13 foot burmese python eats a 6 foot aligator.

  1. 13 foot burmese python eats a 6 foot aligator.



    http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9600151/

    MIAMI - The alligator has some foreign competition at the top of the Everglades food chain, and the results of the struggle are horror-movie messy.

    A 13-foot Burmese python recently burst after it apparently tried to swallow a live, six-foot alligator whole, authorities said.

    The incident has heightened biologists’ fears that the nonnative snakes could threaten a host of other animal species in the Everglades.


    “It means nothing in the Everglades is safe from pythons, a top-down predator,” said Frank Mazzotti, a University of Florida wildlife professor.

    Over the years, many pythons have been abandoned in the Everglades by pet owners.

    The gory evidence of the latest gator-python encounter — the fourth documented in the past three years — was discovered and photographed last week by a helicopter pilot and wildlife researcher.

    The snake was found with the gator’s hindquarters protruding from its midsection. Mazzotti said the alligator may have clawed at the python’s stomach as the snake tried to digest it.

    In previous incidents, the alligator won or the battle was an apparent draw.

    “There had been some hope that alligators can control Burmese pythons,” Mazzotti said. “This indicates to me it’s going to be an even draw. Sometimes alligators are going to win and sometimes the python will win.”

    It is unknown how many pythons are competing with the thousands of alligators in the Everglades, but at least 150 have been captured in the past two years, said Joe Wasilewski, a wildlife biologist and crocodile tracker.

    Pythons could threaten many smaller species that conservationists are trying to protect, including other reptiles, otters, squirrels, woodstorks and sparrows, Mazzotti said.

    Wasilewski said a 10- or 20-foot python also could pose a risk to an unwary human, especially a child. He added, however, “I don’t think this is an imminent threat. This is not a ‘Be afraid, be very afraid’ situation.”

  2. Quote Originally Posted by Dragonmaster Dyne
    “There had been some hope that alligators can control Burmese pythons,” Mazzotti said. “This indicates to me it’s going to be an even draw. Sometimes alligators are going to win and sometimes the python will win.”
    Two animals enter. One animal leaves.
    Time for a change

  3. Beautiful.
    OMG <3 4EVA
    Scourge:Azumanga Daioh is exactly the same thing as Ninja Scroll.
    buttcheeks: High school so weird

  4. Quote Originally Posted by g0zen
    Two animals enter. One animal leaves.
    Or they both leave if it's a draw.
    Quote Originally Posted by rezo
    Once, a gang of fat girls threatened to beat me up for not cottoning to their advances. As they explained it to me: "guys can usually beat up girls, but we are all fat, and there are a lot of us."

  5. Quote Originally Posted by Andrew
    Or they both leave if it's a draw.
    They can't leave if they're dead.

  6. Really? I thought they were zombie snakes and alligators. My bad.
    Quote Originally Posted by rezo
    Once, a gang of fat girls threatened to beat me up for not cottoning to their advances. As they explained it to me: "guys can usually beat up girls, but we are all fat, and there are a lot of us."

  7. So... did the gator make it?

  8. Let 'em have at it, I say.
    If the pythons can prove their mettle, they can stay.

  9. Imagine how awesome it would be if the python won.
    Currently playing: Binary Domain (PC), EVE Online: Retribution (PC), Guild Wars 2 (PC)

  10. All kinds of shit lives in the sewers of South Florida anyway. Burmese Pythons? Whatever. They've got 14 foot opossums. Opossums are the goddamn Devil.

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