Salazar Announces Ban on Importation and Interstate
Transportation of Four Giant Snakes
that Threaten Everglades
The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service has finalized a rule that would ban the importation
and interstate transportation of four nonnative constrictor snakes that
threaten the Everglades and other sensitive ecosystems across the United
States, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced today.
The final
rule – which incorporates public comments, economic analysis, and environmental
assessment – lists the Burmese python, the yellow anaconda, and the northern
and southern African pythons as injurious wildlife under the Lacey Act in order
to restrict their spread in the wild in the United States. It is expected to
publish in the Federal Register in the coming days.
"Thanks
to the work of our scientists, Senator Bill Nelson, and others, there is a
large and growing understanding of the real and immediate threat that the
Burmese python and other invasive snakes pose to the Everglades and other
ecosystems in the United States,” Salazar said. "The Burmese python has already
gained a foothold in the Florida Everglades, and we must do all we can to
battle its spread and to prevent further human contributions of invasive snakes
that cause economic and environmental damage.”
The four
species were assessed by the U.S. Geological Survey as having a high risk of
establishing populations and spreading to other geographic areas in that
agency’s 2009 report, Giant Constrictors: Biological and Management Profiles
and an Establishment Risk Assessment for Large Species of Pythons, Anacondas,
and the Boa Constrictor.
Sixty
days after publication of the final rule in the Federal Register, interstate
transport and importation of live individuals, gametes, viable eggs, or hybrids
of the Burmese python, northern and southern African pythons and yellow
anaconda into the United States will be prohibited. None of these species is
native to the United States.
"Burmese
pythons have already caused substantial harm in Florida,” said U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe. "By taking this action today, we will help
prevent further harm from these large constrictor snakes to native wildlife,
especially in habitats that can support constrictor snake populations across
the southern United States and in U.S. territories.”
Ashe said
the Service will continue to consider listing as injurious the five other
species of nonnative snakes that the agency also proposed in 2010 – the
reticulated python, boa constrictor, DeSchauensee’s anaconda, green anaconda
and Beni anaconda.
Most
people who own any of these four species will not be affected. Those who own
any of these four species of snakes will be allowed to keep them if allowed by
state law. However, they cannot take, send, or sell them across state lines.
Those who wish to export these species may do so from a designated port within
their state after acquiring appropriate permits from the Service.
The
Burmese python has established breeding populations in South Florida, including
the Everglades, that have caused significant damage to wildlife and that
continue to pose a great risk to many native species, including threatened and
endangered species. Burmese pythons on North Key Largo have killed and eaten
highly endangered Key Largo wood rats, and other pythons preyed on endangered
wood storks.
In the
Everglades alone, state and federal agencies have spent millions of dollars
addressing threats posed by pythons – an amount far less than is needed to
combat their spread. If these species spread to other areas, state and
federal agencies in these areas could be forced to spend more money for control
and containment purposes.
Interior
and its partners, including the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission (FWC), South Florida Water Management District, and others are committed to
controlling the spread of Burmese pythons and other large nonnative
constrictors. For example, FWC recently implemented the use of a "snake sniffing” dog to help in its
efforts to find and eradicate large constrictor snakes. This dog was present at
the Secretary’s announcement today, along with a 13-foot-long Burmese python.
Under the
injurious wildlife provisions of the Lacey Act, the Department of the Interior
is authorized to regulate the importation and interstate transport of wildlife
species determined to be injurious to humans, the interests of agriculture,
horticulture, forestry, or to wildlife or the wildlife resources of the United
States.
For
more information on injurious wildlife and efforts to list the four species of
snakes as injurious under the Lacey Act, please visit:
http://www.fws.gov/invasives/news.html