4.1 Article

Natives bite back: depredation and mortality of invasive juvenile Burmese pythons (Python bivittatus) in the Greater Everglades Ecosystem

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MANAGEMENT OF BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
卷 14, 期 1, 页码 107-122

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REGIONAL EURO-ASIAN BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS CENTRE-REABIC
DOI: 10.3391/mbi.2023.14.1.06

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survival; predation; invasive species; native predators; Florida Everglades; radiotelemetry

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Burmese pythons are invasive predators in the Greater Everglades Ecosystem, Florida, USA. The impact of native species on juvenile pythons is of interest, as it can affect population growth and trophic dynamics. Native ophiophagous predators have been found to prey on juvenile pythons, suggesting a potential phenotypic variation in behavior. This study provides evidence of non-anthropogenic mortality in juvenile Burmese pythons and their incorporation into the diets of native species.
Burmese pythons (Python bivittatus Kuhl, 1820) are one of the world's largest snake species, making them a highly successful and biologically damaging invasive predator in the Greater Everglades Ecosystem, Florida, USA. Though we have knowledge of python diet within this system, we understand very little of other interactions with native species. Effects native species have on invasive pythons, especially in the juvenile size class, are of particular interest as the prevalence of mortalities would inform potential population growth and trophic dynamics with native prey species. Native ophiophagous predators in Florida feed on smaller native snake species and it is unknown if they consistently recognize similarly sized juvenile invasive pythons as prey items. Using radiotelemetry, we found at least four native species within Big Cypress National Preserve that were implicated in juvenile python deaths, including three Florida cottonmouths (Agkistrodon conanti Gloyd, 1969), five American alligators (Alligator mississippiensis Daudin, 1802), one hispid cotton rat (Sigmodon hispidus Say and Ord, 1825), and three mesomammals. One mortality was the result of an attempt to subdue a prey item 106% the size of the python, constituting the largest predator:prey size ratio ever reported in this size class. This finding may indicate that phenotypic variation in individual juvenile pythons includes behavior that could be maladaptive within the novel Florida environment. Here we describe some of the first confirmed cases of non-anthropogenic mortality in juvenile Burmese pythons in Florida and present evidence that invasive pythons in this size class are now being incorporated into the diets of native species in its invasive range.

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