5 Invasive Reptiles That Are Causing Problems In Florida

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июл 2024
  • There are millions of animals on this planet that are in the wrong place. We have been transporting animals around the world for thousands of years ans this can have major negative effects for native wildlife. Florida is one of the worst affected areas in the world when it comes to invasive species and because of it's warm climate it is now home to many invasive reptiles.
    In this video i will be focusing on these invasive reptiles in Florida as i will be going through 5 invasive reptiles that are causing problems in Florida.
    Chapters
    0:00 Introduction
    0:50 Spectacled Caiman
    2:23 Tokay Gecko
    4:13 Black Spiny-Tailed Iguana
    5:52 Red-Headed Rock Agama
    7:13 Oriental Garden Lizard
    Attributions
    Spectacled caiman images:
    Brian Gratwicke
    www.flickr.com/photos/briangr...
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Spencer Wright
    www.flickr.com/photos/spencer77/
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Fernando Flores
    www.flickr.com/photos/ferjflo...
    (CC BY-SA 2.0)
    Jean Boris HAMON
    www.flickr.com/photos/jeanbor...
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    Bernard DUPONT
    www.flickr.com/photos/berniedup/
    (CC BY-SA 2.0)
    Victor
    www.flickr.com/photos/vic_206/
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    Julian Tysoe
    www.flickr.com/photos/kradlum/
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Tokay gecko images:
    Rob Osborne
    www.flickr.com/photos/rophoto...
    (CC BY 2.0)
    tontantravel
    www.flickr.com/photos/tontant...
    (CC BY-SA 2.0)
    Reptiles Plus
    www.flickr.com/photos/reptile...
    (CC BY-NC 2.0)
    FWC Fish and Wildlife Research Institute
    www.flickr.com/photos/myfwc/
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    LensOfTheNorth
    commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    (CC BY-SA 4.0)
    Judy Gallagher
    www.flickr.com/photos/5245005...
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Reptiles Plus
    www.flickr.com/photos/reptile...
    (CC BY-NC 2.0)
    Domzjuniorwildlife
    commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    (CC BY-SA 4.0)
    Black spiny-tailed iguana images:
    Christian Mehlführer
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Us...
    Bernard DUPONT
    www.flickr.com/photos/berniedup/
    (CC BY-SA 2.0)
    Red-headed rock agama images:
    navyblue89
    www.flickr.com/photos/1189447...
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    Richard Toller
    www.flickr.com/photos/richard...
    (CC BY-ND 2.0)
    Sergio Boscaino
    www.flickr.com/photos/serbosca/
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Judy Gallagher
    www.flickr.com/photos/5245005...
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Nathan Rupert
    www.flickr.com/photos/nathani...
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    Bernard DUPONT
    www.flickr.com/photos/berniedup/
    (CC BY-SA 2.0)
    Jason Pratt
    www.flickr.com/photos/8410887...
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Oriental garden lizard images:
    budak
    www.flickr.com/photos/budak/
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    Phuket@photographer.net
    www.flickr.com/photos/linvoyage/
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Oriental garden lizard footage:
    ThaiEsan6
    / thaiesan6
    Aris riyanto
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Us...
    (CC BY-SA 4.0)
    Tokay gecko footage:
    DIY Water Filter System for Home
    / sokraja2013
    Kopczynski na Fali
    / blackstudioagency
    Samnang Chea
    / @samnangchea1635
    BỤI 37 VLOGS
    / @bui37vlogs
    Spectacled caiman footage:
    Thore Noernberg
    / @thorenoernberg7681
    Florida Bonneted Bat image:
    Florida Fish and Wildlife
    www.flickr.com/photos/myfwcme...
    (CC BY-ND 2.0)
    Alligator images:
    Pandiyan V
    www.flickr.com/photos/pandiyan/
    (CC BY-NC 2.0)
    Black caiman image:
    Whaldener Endo
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    (CC BY-SA 3.0)
    Other gecko images:
    Frank Vassen
    www.flickr.com/photos/4224496...
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Josh More
    www.flickr.com/photos/guppiecat/
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    FWC Fish and Wildlife Research Institute
    www.flickr.com/photos/myfwc/
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    John William Bailly
    www.inaturalist.org/users/277...
    (CC BY 4.0)
    Allan Hopkins
    www.flickr.com/photos/hoppy1951/
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    budak
    www.flickr.com/photos/budak/
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    Butterfly images:
    Matthew Beziat
    www.flickr.com/photos/1096900...
    (CC BY-NC 2.0)
    Judy Gallagher
    www.flickr.com/photos/5245005...
    (CC BY 2.0)
    Tegu image:
    Florida Fish and Wildlife
    www.flickr.com/photos/myfwcme...
    (CC BY-ND 2.0)
    Green crested lizard image:
    budak
    www.flickr.com/photos/budak/
    (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
    I have edited and adapted some of these clips and images.
    Creative commons licences: creativecommons.org/licenses/
    Thanks for watching i hope you enjoyed :)

Комментарии • 333

  • @Mimiheart9
    @Mimiheart9 Год назад +77

    Plecostomus have become a huge problem in Florida waterways. They're not only outcompeting manatees - a very endangered species - but they sometimes feed on the algae growing on manatee skin, which is protective. One thing to note is that not all of the animals from the pet trade came from owners releasing them. Florida has a hurricane problem, and breeding populations often get out during storms. This is the case with many invasive fish and at least some of the reptiles.

    • @necro3609
      @necro3609 Год назад +3

      Survival of the fittest.

    • @Mimiheart9
      @Mimiheart9 Год назад +13

      @@necro3609 Here's the thing, it's not just about this one species in this one area. Plecos were never meant to inhabit Florida's waterways. They have natural predators in their home territory of northern South America. With no or few natural predators, they'll of course take over a new waterway. The problem is that not only the ecosystem Florida ends up being changed by this. Plecos are better at eating algae than manatees, even though they have the same niche. The amount of algae affects the number of other fish from small to large that can be in an area. Algae also affects things down to the global temperature. Less algae = higher temperatures. These micro-ecosystems play a huge part in global warming. And just saying "oh well, this animal does better here, sucks for the others" ignores the impact that this has from everything from food prices to global warming.

    • @necro3609
      @necro3609 Год назад +2

      @@Mimiheart9 Shit.. WE'RE ALL GONNA DIE!!!

    • @blank1778
      @blank1778 Год назад +1

      There’s accounts in books dating back to when the Spanish conquered Florida of them bringing iguanas for meat and them just hitching rides if their boats

    • @mjk934
      @mjk934 Год назад +1

      True , I spent May around Clewiston, I saw lots of big plecos in pretty much every canal I fished , those and chiclids , which were great eating btw...

  • @toddb7154
    @toddb7154 Год назад +112

    I've been living on Florida's gulf coast for over 42 years and I can tell you with undeniable certainty that no animal has been more destructive to FL's ecology than cats. For some reason they also get special "free roaming" privileges. There was a study done back in 2003 by Michigan State University on the feral cat population that's pretty eye opening and 19 years later it has only got worse. Australia has it right when it comes to cats and we should too

    • @ratchetphilosopher
      @ratchetphilosopher Год назад +4

      What's Australia doing to the cats?

    • @historiasfamilyfriendly6618
      @historiasfamilyfriendly6618 Год назад

      @@ratchetphilosopher ruclips.net/video/b93IBwJ_Yow/видео.html

    • @brandonl1064
      @brandonl1064 Год назад +2

      For some reason? It’s because cats are awesome, if you care about the cat population how about you put your money where your mouth is and start spaying and neutering strays to help reduce the impact of cats in your area

    • @killerfoxes2909
      @killerfoxes2909 Год назад

      Not to be contrarian but…isn’t it himans. Aren’t humans the invasive species causing the most damate, literally everywhere?

    • @sheetmetalbill
      @sheetmetalbill Год назад +9

      It not about just spaying and neutering thier hunting habits and diets can be devistating to birds and small animal species

  • @ThereBeGoldInThemTharHills
    @ThereBeGoldInThemTharHills Год назад +19

    We had a tokay gecko that lived in our shed for years. We fed it roaches and crickets. And the roof was aluminum both flat and angled, made it act like a megaphone. All night it sang the song of its people to the whole neighborhood.

  • @Shittake500
    @Shittake500 Год назад +13

    Dunno if anyone has pointed it out yet, but that picture for the Giant Gecko (Rhacodactylus Leachianus) is actually a picture of a Gargoyle Gecko (Rhacodactylus Auriculatus). They share the same genus, but vastly differ in size and structure.

  • @ahmetkerem4769
    @ahmetkerem4769 Год назад +37

    The 2:38 is not a _Rhagodactylus leachianus_ specimen, it looks more like a gargoyle gecko. 👍🏻

  • @eatadickutubenazis
    @eatadickutubenazis Год назад +9

    Our newest pest seems to be the Tegu lizard. A very nasty little thing with a bad disposition.

  • @The_Savage_Wombat
    @The_Savage_Wombat Год назад +16

    Lizards are basically the least harmful of all introduced species. I have yet to see any videos of iguanas doing serious harm to anything other than a hibiscus bush (an invasive species itself). It's the invasive mammals and insects that have caused the majority of damage and extinctions worldwide. There's a bounty on iguanas in Florida but not on feral cats which are the worst of all invasive species causing untold extinctions of native animals around the world.

    • @MrWarren1991
      @MrWarren1991 Год назад +2

      Right? Cats the one animal that has cause more extinctions than humans...

  • @MizzouRah78
    @MizzouRah78 Год назад +8

    I visited Miami a few months ago. First and foremost, green iguanas were EVERYWHERE. As a tourist, it was really neat seeing them on docks and in bushes while eating lunch, but their numbers present an obvious concern. They're considered a delicacy in Mexico and Central America. Just sayin...lol. The Miami zoo is also home to not only a crazy number of iguanas, but those beautiful red headed agamas. Again, neat to see but I didn't realize they weren't native at the time.

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix Год назад

      When I visited Miami I saw lots of little lizards all over the AirBNB house We stayed at, no iguanas.

  • @greensun1334
    @greensun1334 Год назад +28

    I'm pretty sure you covered it in an other episode - but the green iguana is also an invasive lizard in Florida.

    • @JSalonsky
      @JSalonsky Год назад

      They are EVERYWHERE now.. when I was growing up when I was 13 they were nowhere to be founs

    • @MizzouRah78
      @MizzouRah78 Год назад

      I was on vacation in Miami a few months ago. I was in complete disbelief how common they were.

  • @RUBPROMAL
    @RUBPROMAL Год назад +19

    I would love to see another video about rewilding countries. Like Japan for example.

    • @ToucanPlayIt
      @ToucanPlayIt Год назад +2

      Japan already has it's own ecosystem, and there are many unique creatures there you can't find anywhere else, though I must agree that it isn't always the most exciting wildlife, if you want to watch things like extreme fishing or hunting or something along those lines.

    • @jordansefton
      @jordansefton Год назад +1

      @@ToucanPlayIt I think what they meant was a video about animals that no longer exist/are extinct in Japan that we have archaeological or prehistoric evidence of them, that are still extant in manny. A lot of prehistoric Japanese fauna are very interesting and rare, which is why I like to stray away from drinking. Being isolated for as much at 10k+ years makes you realise nothing else matters

    • @RUBPROMAL
      @RUBPROMAL Год назад +2

      @@jordansefton Well, I also meant animals that once lived in Japan but went extinct there. Some of these species might be brought back. Like wolves and otters

    • @ToucanPlayIt
      @ToucanPlayIt Год назад

      @@jordansefton thanks for the clarification

    • @ahsanvirk130
      @ahsanvirk130 Год назад +1

      @@RUBPROMAL Chinese Alligators lived in Japan in the distant past but disappeared, given that the japanese don't eat alligators, the Chinese Alligator could be reintroduced there and help limit invasive fish species, since there aren't any crocodilians native to Japan, the Chinese Alligator could thrive and gradually establish a breeding population, while becoming the top aquatic predator in freshwater habitats

  • @jenniferofholliston5426
    @jenniferofholliston5426 Год назад +2

    I remember driving down a road in Yucatan. Ahead, the road would be dotted with basking iguanas. We never came close to hitting one, or saw one that had been hit. They would just vanish before a car got close.

  • @ossipozzi1238
    @ossipozzi1238 Год назад +1

    Congratulations on 70k subs! I hope u get to 100k before 2023 because you really deserve it!

  • @sweetdrahthaar7951
    @sweetdrahthaar7951 11 месяцев назад

    Great channel. Subbed 👍🏻

  • @shawnohagan5503
    @shawnohagan5503 Год назад

    Great video

  • @FromAmericaToJapan
    @FromAmericaToJapan Год назад +5

    As a Floridian who worked in the Everglades did enjoy this video. But it’s said that the green Iguana came to Florida by debris carried over by hurricanes.

    • @malusignatius
      @malusignatius Год назад +2

      Maybe one or two, but I'd bet bottom dollar the majority are descended from escaped pets.

    • @FromAmericaToJapan
      @FromAmericaToJapan Год назад +1

      @@malusignatius many many are pets especially nowadays

  • @jerrywalker6043
    @jerrywalker6043 Год назад +14

    The most invasive species in Florida is the Snow Bird.

  • @willpgarrett2940
    @willpgarrett2940 Год назад +3

    The Brown Anole lizard is possibly the most wide spread statewide lizard. The compete with and prey on native green anole lizards.

  • @macnelson298
    @macnelson298 Год назад +3

    I actually have a pet tokay gecko that was a wild invasive one and came in mean but I've worked with him a lot and he's like a leopard or crested gecko now!

  • @calebsmith2362
    @calebsmith2362 Год назад +3

    We have Nile monitors and veiled chameleons here in the Cape Coral/Fort Myers region. Pretty crazy...

  • @averytheaxolotl5689
    @averytheaxolotl5689 Год назад +3

    Funny thing about Tokays, i have a scar on my pinkie from when i caught one out in the everglades

  • @richardcraig8780
    @richardcraig8780 Год назад

    I already knew before I watched it this video was going to be good.

  • @Supertitan351
    @Supertitan351 Год назад +1

    I really don’t mind these reptiles, I love them and they are so cool!

  • @ScumsaveChris
    @ScumsaveChris Год назад +3

    Have you heard about the green Mamba taking hold in Southern Florida. I remember a article I read in like 2000ish about the venomous snakes released.
    Maybe was Nat Geo or Playboy. Back then everyone had 12 magazine subscriptions.

  • @snakelizard2343
    @snakelizard2343 Год назад +10

    I have a summer home in Miami and go invasive hunting every year but instead of killing them I keep them as pets, the animals I’ve caught/my friend has caught and are now my pets are:
    1) Tokay gecko-caught by me in 2018
    2)Green iguana-caught by my friend in 2019
    3)Gold tegu-caught by me in 2018
    4)Burmese python-bought from someone who caught her in his pool
    5)Cuban knight anole-caught by me in 2020 (my covid boi)
    6) Brown anole- caught by me in 2017
    7)Brown basilisk-caught by me in 2018
    8)Nile monitor-Rescued from Craigslist in 2018, caught by the person selling it
    9) Cane toad-caught by me in 2018
    10) Cuban tree frog-Caught by me in 2018
    11) A certain species of snail (I won’t name because it’s illegal in the United States) that grows massive-caught by person selling it in 2022

    • @MegaHerpthederp
      @MegaHerpthederp Год назад

      Serious question, but can't they still potentially escape? Keeping them as pets seems to be part of the problem.

    • @snakelizard2343
      @snakelizard2343 Год назад +8

      @@MegaHerpthederp sure they could, accidents happen but I take them back to my main home in Illinois where the winters are too harsh for them to survive. Also I’m not about to kill an animal even if it is invasive

    • @dinoflagella4185
      @dinoflagella4185 Год назад +2

      Me and my daughter caught a juvenile knight anole the other day. It looked like it was dying. I let her keep it in a plastic container. She gave it water and some food. A few days later that guy became feisty. I guess he got his energy back because he was barely moving when we found him.

  • @badartgallery9322
    @badartgallery9322 Год назад

    Best animal channel.

  • @WW-ti3pk
    @WW-ti3pk Год назад +2

    The lizards with the red head are just everywhere. Iguanas are all over as well in urban areas. Pythons are in the Everglades, although they stay out of populated areas unlike iguanas

    • @haseo8244
      @haseo8244 Год назад +1

      Red headed aguma are spreading very rapidly. With green iguanas they are localized nowadays because of hunting. Whiptails are also spreading very rapidly up the coast too.

    • @eurodiaz3712
      @eurodiaz3712 Год назад +1

      Brown basilisk too

  • @richtygart6855
    @richtygart6855 Год назад +1

    Ive seen tokeys up on the Mekong river that were bigger than a gila monster. Huge heads

  • @itsmeblank4028
    @itsmeblank4028 Год назад +5

    I heard that many of the local Caribbean anole lizard species have become problematic in Florida

    • @rush1er
      @rush1er Год назад

      What? No way! Those are my buddies. I love anoles and don't find them destructive at all.

    • @itsmeblank4028
      @itsmeblank4028 Год назад +2

      @@rush1er not because they're friendly to you mean as a species they aren't harmful. Anoles are extremely adapatable and has show to quickly and observably evolve to better suit a habitat. They can out competite native Florida species and should definitely be kept responsiblly

    • @rush1er
      @rush1er Год назад +1

      @@itsmeblank4028 I'll tell you what was crazy, I had moved from South FL back in 2000. I moved back there 10 years later and... the iguanas were EVERYWHERE! I'm talking down in Deerfield Bch, you couldn't ride a bike in the sidewalk bcuz the mofos were sunbathing like it was a resort.

  • @rayslack4120
    @rayslack4120 Год назад +4

    The Burmese python was not mentioned and I have heard there are Andcondas are there too in Fla.

    • @mitchellskene8176
      @mitchellskene8176 Год назад +1

      There are several large Invasive snake species in Florida

    • @dinoflagella4185
      @dinoflagella4185 Год назад +1

      There’s also the African rock python. I didn’t know Anacondas were in the Everglades. I looked into it and there’s a small number of them in the southern part of the everglades. The problematic one is the Burmese python. Small mammals and wading bird populations have decreased significantly.

  • @bradfarrahgerwing154
    @bradfarrahgerwing154 Год назад +1

    We used to live trap mice and feed them to our 3 Tokeys........it was like watching jurassic Park.....2 used to play tug of war all the time and would rip them in half

  • @robrice7246
    @robrice7246 Год назад +1

    0:25 Especially around the southern tip, it's North America's version of the Amazon.

  • @thruknobulaxii2020
    @thruknobulaxii2020 Год назад

    I watched your clip the other day and found it fascinating.
    Then today, I finally got around to watching a movie again, something I’d been planning since I heard it mentioned in a podcast.
    The film was *Frogs* with Ray Milland and Sam Elliot.
    It’s an odd coincidence ( _or is it?_ 🤣 ) but a few of the species from your video also appear, _and in fairly large numbers,_ in this movie. Specifically the Tokai Gekko.
    Now, this movie was made, in Eden Park, Florida, during 1971/72.
    It’s got me wondering? What do you think? We’re there some escapees? It’s worth watching anyway for the spooky atmosphere.

  • @prisonmike1798
    @prisonmike1798 Год назад +2

    Florida is like an evolutionary battle royale

  • @eutha6
    @eutha6 Год назад +1

    For years Floroda was the place to go to get reptiles and exotics that were not allowed in any other states- their laws caused a lot of these problems-there is a reason some animals are not allowed as pets in other states

  • @hkschubert9938
    @hkschubert9938 Год назад +1

    Such beautiful lizards !!
    And since they eat bugs they are fantastic !!

  • @mrsuarez430
    @mrsuarez430 Год назад

    Cheers from Miami guys ! I fluent the keys from bycayne to key west I live by the everglades (about 5 mikes or so ) there's alot of invasives now I'm noticing more foreign lizards than ever curly tails and these purple orange ones all over the place iguana's of course are everywhere but Id like to think there's a bit of a downward trend as i see less

  • @trenthink
    @trenthink Год назад +1

    The iguana you show in this video is absolutely not the one invasive to Gasparillia Island!
    I know the one, and have seen them as far north as Sarasota. The adults have an orange coloration around the shoulders.

  • @justinheads5751
    @justinheads5751 Год назад +1

    As a florida native for 43 years I can say you missed the most ubiquitous. The cuban anole. Its so ubiquitous, most people don't even know that its an invasive species, and that it has all but killed off the native florida anole, which are semi-chameleonic.

    • @mantbird
      @mantbird Год назад +1

      I lived in the Atlanta area for over 20 years our native green anoles are thriving up there. Once I moved back to South Georgia, I noticed the absence of the greens and I saw numerous brown anoles . I seen only one green anole here at my house. The browns are cute but annoying . I miss the greenies.😞

    • @justinheads5751
      @justinheads5751 Год назад

      @@mantbird sounds like the cubans are spreading north and eradicating the greens, just like they did here

  • @kevinquinonez838
    @kevinquinonez838 Год назад +3

    Florida is the only place on Earth where you can naturally find crocodiles and alligators together, and now there's caimans
    Also is the gharial going to move to Florida since everyone in the family is over there

    • @kingjiggle4th789
      @kingjiggle4th789 Год назад +2

      probably
      just put all the crocodilians in there and call it a day

    • @dinoflagella4185
      @dinoflagella4185 Год назад

      I believe the caimans are localized to a certain area. Outside of that area the environment isn’t able to sustain their reproductive cycle. They need a certain type of loose soil to bury their eggs.

  • @pootnannies
    @pootnannies Год назад +2

    just a heads up: at 2:28 you show a Rhacodactylus auriculatus when it should be a leachianus.

  • @michaelsand2791
    @michaelsand2791 Год назад

    I have basilisks around my house in Lee County, FL.

  • @dimitripopovgurlukivich4166
    @dimitripopovgurlukivich4166 Год назад +3

    Please do a video on invasive feral cats

    • @ohianaw
      @ohianaw Год назад +2

      They cause MUCH MUCH more damage then any reptiles on here

  • @Vjamesx13
    @Vjamesx13 Год назад +2

    Also forgot about the invasive wild pigs here, the Burmese python, African rock python, Lion Fish, cane toads, the tegus, and the freaky snakehead or snake fish or whatever its called

    • @raulisrael7342
      @raulisrael7342 Год назад +1

      didn't knew a pig is a reptile

    • @Vjamesx13
      @Vjamesx13 Год назад +1

      @@raulisrael7342 i realize the pig and lion fish and toad and snakehead arent fish but invasive species as a whole in florida but he did forget some of the other massive ones such as the 2 snakes i spoke of above even i living midway up the state have seen those snakes in the wild and killed a few myself its just a wonder why he didnt put them in the video

    • @dannzalbjorklund
      @dannzalbjorklund Год назад

      There are dozens more to list, and Tsuki knows. This is just a list of 5.

  • @chrisoldnall2364
    @chrisoldnall2364 Год назад

    The day geckos phelsuma species you mentioned the Oriental garden lizard's eating are also invasive

  • @amyrichard3203
    @amyrichard3203 Год назад

    A Tokay gecko escaped from a neighbors house and took up residence in our backyard where it kept us awake many nights.

  • @jokeysmurf3696
    @jokeysmurf3696 Год назад +1

    Wild boar stumbles upon a camper I guess it’s a snak

  • @dwaynebelocura8826
    @dwaynebelocura8826 Год назад +1

    In the Philippines we call the tokay gecko as "Tuko"

  • @argonianaccount1876
    @argonianaccount1876 Год назад +1

    Glades herp(yea those guys that got nailed for illegally collecting endangered indigo snakes) let a massive amount of tokays go in Ft. myers. I went to their facility in the 90s(was a kid back then) caught a neat looking lizard outside, they screamed at me to let it go.
    Yea thank those guys for the tokays…

  • @ccn5065
    @ccn5065 Год назад

    I keep tokays and they’re…unpredictable. I keep 7 specimens and three of them are never bite, two of em has a big attitude and the rest have attitude but rarely bite

  • @keginwhyte523
    @keginwhyte523 Год назад

    Do one on the type of fish swimming around

  • @dariusbrock2351
    @dariusbrock2351 Год назад +2

    I wonder how many parrot/parakeet species have been introduced into Florida?

  • @johnfattig6937
    @johnfattig6937 Год назад +9

    I'm just curious because I haven't heard anything on what I'm going to ask. With the huge exotic pet import business in Florida, is it out of the question that we could have invasive venomous snakes in South Florida? I think it could be quite possible but haven't heated that discussed anywhere.

    • @jurgenludwig8292
      @jurgenludwig8292 Год назад +1

      I could be wrong, but I’m not aware of any venomous snakes which have clutches the size of invasive snakes like a Burmese Python. could be a reason why it hasn’t happened?

    • @unstoppableExodia
      @unstoppableExodia Год назад +7

      I think the reason Florida doesn’t have any invasive venomous snakes (yet) is because of the highly secure enclosures venomous snakes are kept in, combined with a much greater reluctance of people to casually release unwanted such dangerous pets in the wild. The level of expertise and dedication required to look after venomous snakes is far higher than with constrictors and lizard species so you’re much less likely to have more casual pet owners who find themselves over their heads and in need of an expedient way of being rid of it.
      As much as Floridian pet owners have generated a stereotype of extremely lax pet owners I doubt any venomous snake keepers would think nothing of releasing highly dangerous species such as mambas into the wild where there exists the risk of those snakes biting them or their family should an encounter go bad

    • @6evil6dead64
      @6evil6dead64 Год назад +1

      There out there. But not large breeding populations. While you could find venomous snakes for sale relatively easily a few years ago the market tightened up a lot and luckily most people realized the danger. You had a few assholes die from the venomous stuff but for the most part they were serious handlers who knew what and how to do it. Those kinds of snakes don’t go awol like a punk kid that bought a python at the mall.

    • @johnfattig6937
      @johnfattig6937 Год назад

      @@jurgenludwig8292 puff adders I know are one species but other than that I don't know.

    • @sludgeskin
      @sludgeskin Год назад +6

      @@unstoppableExodia and venomous snakes are insanely expensive, coming from a reptile hobbyist. not only do you need a liscence, but the snake itself is hundreds to thousands of dollars, and is extremely hard to care for. :')

  • @xdragonxmasterx6790
    @xdragonxmasterx6790 Год назад +1

    2:38 that is a picture of a gargoyle gecko not a leachianus gecko they come from similar island and are related but they are drastically different looking.

  • @jamiloplacibe5215
    @jamiloplacibe5215 Год назад

    Any update on your channa snakeheads?

  • @michaelpriestley1304
    @michaelpriestley1304 10 месяцев назад

    Fun fact majority of the small invasive reptile species are due to plant imports for landscaping yet this almost always gets overlooked

  • @gatorb8610
    @gatorb8610 Год назад

    Never knew we had caimans and black iguanas here but I’ve seen agamas, and day geckos. I’ve also seen basilisks here but Mayb u did those in a different vid.

    • @blank1778
      @blank1778 Год назад

      Caimans are a newer spieces introduced. I blame fish and wildlife for making a good amount of regulations UN-doable for some people that rather instead of getting a felony and or surrender their pet they rather release it. There’s a bunch of black Caimen in parts of Miami and the Everglades.

  • @nofuchsgiven
    @nofuchsgiven Год назад

    i have plans to move to florida in the future but i hate that tegus are banned

  • @dustinrobinson5086
    @dustinrobinson5086 Год назад +1

    Nile Crocs have been removed from lake tarpon and everglades.

    • @dinoflagella4185
      @dinoflagella4185 Год назад

      They were believed to have escaped from a wildlife sanctuary. They have all been accounted for I believe.

  • @markcjakims
    @markcjakims Год назад

    What is difference between a Tokay and Florida salamander ? Caught one some years ago and released shortly after. Learned it was a Florida salamander, now seeing this video not sure.

  • @nickerskine6326
    @nickerskine6326 Год назад +3

    i think i heard that there are monitor lizards in Florida as well.

    • @willfriar8054
      @willfriar8054 Год назад +2

      Circuses and carnivals have lost monitor lizards in the past in the Tampa area. One was 6 ft long it tore out the side of a truck and escaped.

    • @nickerskine6326
      @nickerskine6326 Год назад +1

      @@willfriar8054 that's explains a bit.

  • @nofuchsgiven
    @nofuchsgiven Год назад

    surprised that the nile monitor was not mentioned

  • @austinchristy6475
    @austinchristy6475 Год назад +1

    Fire ants are a pretty big problem here too

  • @ShotensGaming
    @ShotensGaming Год назад +1

    6:59 Family, Family, Family!

  • @robrice7246
    @robrice7246 Год назад +1

    2:18 Didn't caimans originated in North America, and if so, what is the youngest known member?

  • @krisragu4685
    @krisragu4685 Год назад

    Did anyone mention the Indian peacock? Beautiful but a pain... They're noisy and poop everywhere... And no predators here in FL

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix Год назад

      Catch 'em, gut 'em, season 'em /fry/bake/roast & eat 'em.

  • @janethagen3385
    @janethagen3385 Год назад

    As a Floridian, I always know that when the economy implodes, we will have plenty of gators & iguanas to eat if need be. I owned 2 Tokay geckos that scared many a babysitter away with their weird nocturnal call. They lived in my house and kept bugs down.

  • @stephenstaedtler6902
    @stephenstaedtler6902 3 месяца назад +1

    Is the Red-headed Agama is really that big of a danger to the ecosystem? They get rid of a lot of nuisance insects. Yes, they could get butterflies now and then, but I haven't seen evidence this is a massive problem.

  • @rushhourfishing2946
    @rushhourfishing2946 11 месяцев назад

    Veiled chameleons, giant day geckos, south american giant amieva are a few you missed.

  • @williamparker1085
    @williamparker1085 Год назад

    what about the reptile at mar a lago

  • @roykissoon7306
    @roykissoon7306 Год назад

    You guys need to get some of the people from Trinidad & Tobago over there where those big Iguanas live. Cause here many people prized the Iguanas as a delicacy. Selling from $300. up.

  • @FL-Man78
    @FL-Man78 Год назад

    He’s specifically talkin about reptiles people..and The most destructive invasive reptiles we have in FL are by far Yankees specifically New Yorkers. Followed by Burmese pythons, the tegu, and water monitor…the Cuban anole has also replaced most of our native green anoles in all but marshy areas. The ones listed in video are of less concern

  • @Timetoplaynation
    @Timetoplaynation Год назад

    What about there being Dwarf caimans in Kentucky

  • @suesally2103
    @suesally2103 Год назад

    I know in Louisiana’s, there’s just way too many alligators, and no one can legally deal with them, if you caught shooting them, to remove them, because they are imposing danger on others, then you can be arrested, and it not like there are endangered. Species ?

  • @k0olmini11
    @k0olmini11 Год назад

    Comment for the RUclips algorithm!

  • @jameschristophercirujano6650
    @jameschristophercirujano6650 Год назад

    We call Tokay Geckos as Tuko in the Philippines.

  • @animehuntress9018
    @animehuntress9018 Год назад

    I don't count animals that make their own way to a location as invasive. Regardless of humans they'd find there way there and the same situation would exist. So did the Spectacle caiman make its own way or was it introduced?

  • @Chudchanning
    @Chudchanning Год назад

    I have a tokay, love that mean little bastard

  • @traildoggy
    @traildoggy Год назад

    The New Jersey Polyester Lounge Lizards are a real problem.

  • @omenhasaheadache
    @omenhasaheadache Год назад

    Im aware many people have pointed out that the image used for "leacheanus" is actually a gargoyle, but i would also like to say that gargoyles are much more suitable as pets than tokays due to captive bred availability and temperament. Captive bred tokays can be tame but id 100% recommend looking into a garg instead if you arent confident you can handle a larger more bitey gecko. And for the love of everything do NOT release your pets, rehome them instead

  • @huntermock96
    @huntermock96 Год назад

    I'll be a iguana hunter if i got to lmao i heard they taste great

  • @ohianaw
    @ohianaw Год назад

    Tokay geckos are no joke. Those things bite HARD

    • @jase123111
      @jase123111 Год назад +2

      I have a family of them living in my house ...I live in Thailand. I like them as they sound exotic and wild. ..and they eat the small house geckos and snakes.

  • @amazingaquaticsandexotics3030
    @amazingaquaticsandexotics3030 Год назад +3

    would love a fish edition

    • @donaldseigel4101
      @donaldseigel4101 Год назад +2

      Yes especially on more hybrids found in the wild.

    • @haseo8244
      @haseo8244 Год назад +2

      Untold aquarium fishes in Florida. Several species of Pleisco alone. African chilids, mollies, Cory’s, tetras, etc.

    • @beastmaster0934
      @beastmaster0934 3 месяца назад

      @@haseo8244
      Don’t forget the snakeheads.

  • @ask4seacoast
    @ask4seacoast Год назад

    Coral Gables (&other parts of U.S.) has major problems with Monitor lizards...help!🦎

  • @OmarBhoo
    @OmarBhoo Год назад

    I live in FL. Lizards lizards everywhere.

  • @SunSheepOfLight
    @SunSheepOfLight Год назад

    3:05 Nice Face!

  • @o_o8203
    @o_o8203 Год назад

    I have an albino hognose snake and I wanna get a leopard gecko, they're so cute and derpy 😭

  • @jonathonfrazier6622
    @jonathonfrazier6622 Год назад +1

    Invasive is really a meaningless term that humans created to fit our preconceived notions of what the world should look like. Everything was Invasive at some point.

  • @henryhorner3182
    @henryhorner3182 Год назад

    Invasive species giving Floridians problems often also happen to be warm-blooded bipeds!

  • @Grubaru
    @Grubaru Год назад

    You missed the cuban tree frog thats taking over the native tree frog species

  • @Fudaddy336
    @Fudaddy336 Год назад

    I have two hand tamed tokays they are not that bad

  • @kavishahirushan5007
    @kavishahirushan5007 Год назад

    Is green anole native ir invader?

  • @goss1961
    @goss1961 Год назад +4

    You didn't include Ron Desantis...

  • @anonymousmonkey9491
    @anonymousmonkey9491 Год назад

    0:31 Such as the elusive florida man.

  • @mitchellbaker4312
    @mitchellbaker4312 Год назад

    Basilisk lizard monitor lizards need mentioned

  • @Atius
    @Atius Год назад

    It's weird how many foreigner thinks that Tokay Gecko are beautiful but in Thailand we generally dislike them (not me tho I love them)

  • @Kokonuz_
    @Kokonuz_ Год назад

    the picture at 2:39 is not a leachianus gecko, it’s a gargoyle gecko

  • @Mukis_Aquatic
    @Mukis_Aquatic Год назад +2

    70k😁😁😁✌

  • @kvellis05
    @kvellis05 Год назад

    They have invasive Nile crocodiles In Florida bc a dude had some and they escaped and he never reported it

  • @Venezolano410
    @Venezolano410 Год назад

    Is the Geico gecko an invasive species? 🦎

  • @MattGodzilla2000
    @MattGodzilla2000 Год назад

    Welcome to the new age of reptiles