Author Topic: USGS Corecast (AUDIO) The Big Squeeze: Pythons and Mammals in Everglades National Park  (Read 444 times)

Offline T.j.

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(AUDIO) The Big Squeeze: Pythons and Mammals in Everglades National Park

The wet, subtropical wilderness of Everglades National Park is home to a diversity of Floridian wildlife, but one invader is causing severe changes in these native animal populations. Many of the park’s mammals are declining dramatically as a result of invasive Burmese pythons, according to a recent study by U.S. Geological Survey scientists and partners. Mid-sized mammals such as foxes, rabbits, and raccoons that were previously populous in the Everglades are the most severely affected. USGS scientist and co-author Robert Reed to discusses the Burmese python situation and what these mammal declines mean for the Everglades ecosystem.




Source: (AUDIO) The Big Squeeze: Pythons and Mammals in Everglades National Park


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