How People Profit Off Invasive Species | World Wide Waste Marathon | Insider Business
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- Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
- Every year, invasive species cause up to $1.4 trillion worth of damage in places they weren't meant to live. Now, people are hunting harmful crabs, snakes, fish, and plants to make whiskey, wallets, and dinner.
Intro 00:00
Pythons 00:51
Sargassum 11:22
Water Hyacinth 12:23
Green Crabs: 16:58
Lionfish 26:47
Typha 29:25
Credits 32:48
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How People Profit Off Invasive Species | World Wide Waste | Insider Business
Snakes are an absolute gem on Earth, and constrictors can be amazing pets ; but python leather growing in popularity might be the best solution to encourage Burmese python hunters in Florida to help save this ecosystem.
Gets annoying when they just don't put the snakes out of their misery in the video. No, no, they gotta be alive for the bounty? And for what, just to cause more stress and pain on those animals. Also I doubt the water hyacinth is the main reason the rivers are losing life, pretty sure it's the floating trash heaps those ppl call villages
Been looking at this another perspective, If only invasive species could be returned to their homeland as easily as they were brought over? I mean they're just doing what they need in order to survive in a habitat they're not used to and were brought to against their own will.
do a little google seach and it will tell you that Burmese pythons are classified as vulnerable species. do you think the hunters will simply stop when Florida's pythons are all hunted out?
just be sure to clarify from Burmese pythons, rather than other snakes who aren't invasive
"but the peta says" I think we can all by now agree that whatever peta says or approves or dissaproves is wildly horrendous. It honestly shocks me that peta has survived this long considering how extremist and yet contradictory they are, like the amount of times they themselves mass euthanized a bunch of cats and dogs some of which were lost pets.
Peta are also invasive species and must be eradicated
I actually met Amy a while ago and she freaking loves snakes so I truly believe that she hates having to harm them. This was before she even moved to Florida.
I'm as shocked as you are that peta is still around!
I can't was fine with the video..till l realized they was a couple carpet munchers😂
Boycott Peta
Touring the Everglades several years ago in an airboat, we came upon an area that was brimming with raccoons. The captain stopped and the raccoons came aboard to check us out. Last year, we went out again and I asked where the raccoons were. I got the answer, “The pythons have eaten them.” They are decimating the bird population in the Everglades.
I mean there are more than just pythons introduced the monitors and other large lizards love to snack on raccoon young and raccoons are also being competing with these invasive species. The python just gets the most blame cause they are the most easily vilified. Alligators do hunt pythons though albeit until a certain size.
Like the lizards are more of a problem cause they love hunting eggs and newborns
Yep definitely are. Going to college down here Everglades 15 minutes down the road. Memorial weekend there was a 11 foot python strangulating a very large raccoon on the side of the road. We watched and recorded for like 20 minutes before fwc came and took out dispatch the python. 😵💫
Nooooo
@victory8928 So you’re saying the lizards are eating the raccoon eggs? 🤔
It's a little mind blowing that they hunt 5000 pythons a year and it doesn't even make a dent on the snake population. Also, the suggested solution of "sending them back to their native country" is about the dumbest thing I've heard in a while.
They are rare in some of their native lands due to overhunting.
They actually might have some value in sending some shipping containers back.
@@Steven_EdwardsI highly doubt the Burmese people would want any snakes sent to them.
@@taraji_b There was a comment somewhere on here about the high price that a bone paste extract from them commands.
Anything that has a high price like that means some industrious person would be interested.
@@Steven_Edwards didn't humans shipping animals across the world get us into this mess in a the first place? Sure there won't be some unintended consequence and disaster like even a few snakes carrying a new disease that wreaks havoc on native animals populations let alone humans?
@@taraji_b they would if the thing the snake eats is overpopulated. Everything has a niche in the ecosystem even animals people don't like. It's dumb to go "lol I hate (insert animal here) therefore I'd rather deal with the ecosystem collapsing then have any more brought in.
It ate an alligator, an entire alligator… that is insane…
berms actually cant eat humans despite being able to swallow gators. humans aren't streamlined in shape, our heads are blunt and out shoulders are more blunt. snakes start eating from the head, so it doesn't occur to them to go from the feet. Clint's reptiles made a video on how snakes eat and its pretty cool. reticulated pythons have been the only snake that has eaten humans and its the largest snake in the world
Well snakes are known to eat crocodilians like anaconda with caiman and rock pythons with crocodiles sometimes.
I was gonna write exactly that. What a beast.
Haha
He said... "Cya later, alligator"
It is tricky to find both a way to get rid of/control an invasive species without creating a market for it but this is so interesting to see and it is lovely how a pest can help a community and create value in the economy, perhaps also take demand away a bit from native species or threatened populations elsewhere
Here is the thing, unless there is an incentive for people to get rid of them then they are going to stay.
I think if businesses think flexibly, then it’s okay to create a market for something with the purpose of denuding it. They can switch to something else similar, but also problematic.
The first snake I ever held was a 12ft Burmese Python. It was gorgeous and became a firm favorite of mine. However the everglades are MASSIVELY important wetlands and I applaud the efforts to clean up these invasive animals. I'll look out for some of the products.
Weak
Well pythons and a whole lot of other invasive species that are more destructive like feral cats and monitor lizards
@@Zsignal743omaiwa mo shinderu
Let's go scaly purses! Really gorgeous, I wonder how much they cost.
@@Zsignal743Adjective
I went to Fiji last year and every time I go to a tropical destination, I expect to hear some birds. There were none, absolutely none that it was a bit eerie. Apparently the Indian Mongoose was brought over to rid of Fiji's snakes harming sugarcane crops. But in effect, the mongoose also ate all native bird eggs.
I know what you mean I went to Australia years ago and I know about foxes that were brought in to take care of the rabbits. Unfortunately they now have a taste for the local wildlife
HOW EXACTLY DOES A SNAKE HARM SUGARCANE ?
I have huge respect for social entrepreneurs who help to solve worlds less talked problems! The government should actively subsides these entrepreneurs to keep solving problems of these nature.
All invasive species has one in thing in common; introduced by the humans!😢
Not all. Some invasive marine wildlife for example like barnacles and crustaceans can hitch a ride on drifting wood or trash.
If humans are adept at anything it's hunting animals to extinction, it's time to do our part!
Are you saying that this is bad? Because if so, you didn't listen to the video.
If there are only 100 people licensed to deal with the Burmese pythons, it doesn't seem that they really want to get rid of them.
Or maybe capturing dangerous animals isn't a very popular job? Wonder why that may be...
It's really dangerous, especially considering the other dangerous animals in Florida, and the market probably can't sustain them. That one lady they featured had a lot of leather just hanging around, probably because she hasn't sold any of the other items she's made with the rest.
Here in Vietnam (and China too) we have something called Python's "cao", which basically the python's backbone stewed for days with other herbs to create a condense peanut butter-like substance. When we get backache or knee ache, we rub this on the part and its work almost instantly. That thing sells for 1-200$ per jar and catching 1 single python is enough for a village family to live for half a year. Thats why python became so rare in asian countries and are redundant in the west.
And also, python skin could easily become belt or purse, which easily get people 3-500$ per python
literally snake oil
ten tieng viet la gi vay ban?
@@phatle2737 Cao trăn đấy ông
@@tomaspalma5168 oh and Python's fat are used to cure skin burn, really effective. However, it is not as expensive since on 10ml jar can be used for a whole year and one python can product hundreds of them
You should go Florida and make your business to sell oil snake
As a reptile enthusiast here, i would like to friendly point out that one of the pictues ( 3:42 ) of said "burmeese python" was actually a ball python (aka royal python) and the narator said that "they are not poisonous" but I think what was ment was Venemous. Although, they are neither of those things 😂 (they can bite you or be eated by you, none of witch will result in your death!)
Keep learning about reptiles! 🐊🐢🦎🐍
❤ herp nerds!
Thanks. I was going to say this too. My rule of thumb is - if it bites you and you die, that's venom. If you bite it and YOU die, that's poison.
🙏🏻 thought same thing
I wonder why green crabs have a daily limit when they were never supposed to be introduced to the states to begin with. I think trying to continually eradicate it from certain places would bring that control down much better.
There was a limit? Sounded like the limit was created merely by the capacity of the people to catch them.
I do think a good reason might have to do with other destructive tendencies we did. Like purple marsh crabs in a certain area had their native predators wiped out so the only thing that can keep them in check is the green crab
The limit for the green crabs is pretty much just the best times to catch them. Males are evidently best at their molting times, and I'd bet the best time for females would be when they're full of eggs.
Exactly! Why are there only 100 people licensed for python removal ?
I love to see people tackling problems like these. We may have caused the situation but we can solve it also if allowed to. Brilliant and interesting video. Thanks
Kind of dark actually haha. "Oops, we made a mistake by taking pythons as a pet" "Yeah lets murder them all, one by one, the stinky pests". We really are dumb, ignorant and evil.
No, the messed up thing would be leaving them to wipe out species.
@@bas_eeyour so cool and quirky
One thing wrong about this statement is that none of the ‘we’ includes any of us.
Yeah um... It's impossible to eradicate them completely..... So no, we can't solve the problem. We can just make it less bad.... 😅
Do you ever think, if they did this to the point where the invasive species are no longer in the habitat they don’t belong to, how do the people now profit from it? I wonder that a lot because usually if you get profit from it, you’d want it to be there still.
When they did it with rats years ago and cobras in India people started breeding them. I would hope we have more awareness now and could just switch to something else because I'm sure there will always be another invasive species or something else that needs management.
If that starts to happen, the government can pass laws saying that the invasive species must be wild caught and not farm raised.
The sad thing is... I don't think we'll be able eradicate them... They have just been added to the eco system and we have now become their natural predator...
They profit from selling elephant tusks but that doesn't stop them from hunting them to extinction.
Many people are ready to use one thing until it is totally consumed, we see it daily
The thing I love about nature is that it's fair for every species. The moment a specie goes to a place where it doesn't have any natural predators and climbs up the food chain, nature introduces its new predator. And in this reference the humans become its new predator.
We're more like regulators than predators. If this were truly a natural process, then the invasive species would simply occupy it's respective place on the food web, and the ecosystem around it would adapt to this new influence in the area. We as humans attempt to regulate nature, because we have advanced to a point where we are no longer a part of the natural order.
I believe there should be many more economic incentives for locals and people searching for work to go out and control the population of invasive species, this is will help prevent more mass extinction and keep our environments intact.
They would get bred for money
Someone could just be catching, bredding3them and realeasing them when they multiply in the wild he catches them for money
It’d be cool to see the sargassum seaweed and the water hyacinth turned into fertilizer or even better “liquid gold” via compost tea.
Could also make 'crab fertilizer' out of those green crabs :D
This documentary is so refreshing..no politics,informative and an opportunity opener...good way to go
Lol buddy, if you think "environmental preservation" has nothing to do with politics I have a bridge to sell ya
Just because one side doesn’t agree, doesn’t make it political. This was just stating facts
You do know, environmental preservation is a left-wing political idea?
Or you know, what you would call the "Woke agenda" because they deep states wants to control you using environmentalism or something stupid.
@@longschlongjohnson6470get back to slapping and clapping, Bolbi
There's this Vietnamese noodle dish made from crab: Bún riêu or bún riêu cua đồng (field crab noodle)... Basically small fresh water crabs are caught on the rice fields, since these crabs are small and don't have much meat, they get smashed into a paste, then filtered through a thin cloth to separate the hard shells, what left is this muddy flesh mixture residue from the crabs.
Vietnamese would use this crab residue to put in boiled soup and it form a sponge like substance call riêu in bún riêu ... Nowadays it's hard to find crab on the fields, and for economic reason, people would mix this crab residue with eggs to form crab cakes for Bún riêu .....If Vietnam has this much crabs they wouldn't have to mix it with eggs at all .
Vietnam cua đồng or field crabs are like 1/3 or 1/4 the size of these invasive crabs, imagine how much meat residue you get with these big crabs being smashed up and ground to a paste.
we've been crashing native fisheries for decades because we love seafood so much, why not apply the same vigor we have for salmon and cod to equally tasty invasives??
Why does one need a license to remove invasive species from public land????
That's not the part of which you need a license for, it's the dangerous animal that without training and caution can lead to serious damages.
It's to grant them access to protected lands. They need to prove they know how to catch and remove these animals without disturbing the environment further and without hurting themselves unnecessarily. If anyone was allowed out you'd have people driving their atvs over protected wetlands looking for snakes or using excess amounts of light that can disturb the indigenous species.
To supply the GOV. with money, why else. Same reason they have fishing licenses and driving licenses.
I believe anyone can hunt them but not wrangle them
@@johnmarks227 I bet everywhere you go people tell you that you're not the sharpest tool in the box, right buddy?
The irony of humans talking about the problem of invasive species
At least we are trying to fix a mistake we made
@Benjamin Lehman but everytime we try to fix, we create a new problem
The irony of complaining about humanity's actions and its consequences, and people who feel guilty or responsible about it not ending themselves to prevent further harm from being done
@@billionsmustfight yes makes total sense. If someone points out that humans are the greatest invasive species the only appropriate action for them to then do is kill themselves. I didn't say we shouldn't do anything, I'm just saying if you were viewing this from a top down perspective it's ironic. Get a grip.
Humans had caused extinction of animals than other species combined, destroy ecosystems...What an excuse to kill creatures, "Invasive species"!!
It's poetic how we're so good at destroying life but we can't destroy these things.
That's not really a fair assessment. The reason we drive some species into extinction is that the natural environments they live in keep them in check, but we just tip the scales by adding additional pressure to the pressures they already face. Invasive species have no other pressures but us, so our added pressure can only keep them in check. We're not very good at destroying things, we're just really good at wrecking balance in nature, which then destroys itself as a consequence.
informative as always! love your content! it really helped me out with my studies!❤️
it's absurd to me that people are just finding out that crab roe is good. but then i grew up in Taiwan, which is surrounded by the ocean, so fresh, live seafood is always readily available
I liked the section on sargassum. When we heard it was heading towards Florida, I made a comment somewhere about "There should be some way to recycle it". Many people told me that was a stupid ideas. I see it isn't so far fetched.
we've had a tourist's from florida once here in the Philippines he hired my uncle as a guide and i just tagged along their hike to Mt. Banahaw we encountered a few animals but when we encountered a python the group of tourist chased it to kill it luckily my uncle stopped them saying they aren't a pest in our country unlike in florida here in the Philippines they arent treated as an invasive species but is a local wild life
In the Philippines especially in my hometown Zamboanga the is a restaurant that developed a sauce from roe of smaller crabs to put on bigger crabs, lobsters or whatever seafood you like. If they made it from green crab, they would have a market instead of finding a niche market of selling the crab whole.
There's a paper about the Kudzu plant. Apparently, it was actually a staple crop of sorts in East Asia before it spread out across the world. It's tenacity and growth have become a problem now that the industry harvesting them is disappearing.
Kudzu
Plant that ate the South
What were humans harvesting from kudzu
@@divinearcher32kudzu root can be used as food
props to the journalists for researching and mentioning about the burmese python breeding facility that got destroyed by the typhoon, exotic pet keepers appreciate that you take in the time as to not to put more shade on the misunderstood community
It makes no sense to only issue 100 permits for an invasive species.
you have to vet the person doing this as well as why I am guessing it is low. They have to know what they are doing and also, not be tempted to leave some to keep up supply (yes, that has happened before).
It didn't say that, they said that only 100 people are licensed, it doesn't state that licenses are limited to 100.
Restaurants in the UK are using signal crayfish, an invasive species, in their menus. They taste pretty good!
This is an entertaining piece but I think you have the responsibility to your viewers to inform them that even despite all the python hunters in FL, no significant population level impacts are being made on the invasive pythons from these harvests.
Because there's not enough hunters.
@@FellsApprentice A+ for those math skills
@@michaels7312don’t have to be rude about it
@@FellsApprenticeManual removal is also one of the most ineffective, labour intensive and highly costly methods of managing invasive species. Reality is that it's extremely difficult to eradicate an invasive species once it's settled and spread. Throwing more people at the problem won't solve it.
Good, let the snakes live.
Turning native species into clothing is never okay, but invasive ones, definitely.
Agreed
I'd pay good money just for that
Invasive species breed quickly anyway.
No animal deserves to be turned into clothing! No matter if wild or invasive!
@@FrostySparks Disagree.
Keep up the good work! 💯
"Rehome them." Yeah. Ok. It's hard enough for places to rehome cats and dogs, people just act like it's gonna be a breeze to rehome a whole ass python.
An advice for those ladies hunting snakes or any other animals at night: use yellow light flashlight instead of white light flashlight. It will be much easier spotting them at night, because their eyes will give them away. The eyes of all sort of animals gives a better reflection with yellow light.
Helping the economy and ecosystem, sounds fun!
We help the ecosystem by murdering them all, one by one, while being the reason they are there in the first place. So, if you hate cats for example, let a few loose in a place where they will wrack havoc, wait a few years, and then you can legally murder them all lol. We humans are messed up
Yup, just a bit sad that we caused the problems in the first place and didn't do any early prevention 😅
What happens with the snakes really is just fixing the problem you created!
small correction, at 1:30, except for less than a handful of snakes, snakes generally aren't poisonous, they're venomous
omg this is so informational. thank you for posting this.
Can you please make a documentary about the invasive cats in Cyprus? People from all over the world come to Cyprus to feed them and now their numbers are more than the actual human population in the island! The problem is massive!!! The cats kill everything that moves! I remember that we had a lot of different insects. lizards, birds! Now is only cats! The people only feed them, they leave plastic bags and containers everywhere from the food they feed them on the streets, also the cats leave their feces everywhere! especially lets say by the beach that small children play in the sand. Its a mess! And nobody does anything!
So no ones gonna talk about the crab Whiskey?
You don't have to convince me to eat crabs, We eat crawdads down here.
21:57 Where I'm from in the US seafood is a staple so seeing new seafood introduced into the market is pretty neat
I love the creative ideas people come up with to solve these problems. Please continue your good work. ✨✨😊😊👍👍👍👍👍👍✨✨
The green crabs and the carp would make very good crab or carp curries Asian style. We have been happily currying and eating aquatic creatures like them for centuries.
Don't buy an exotic pet if you can't be sure you'll be able to keep it 😢 and for the love of god don't set them "free" in a field if you can't take care of them..... Why are humans SO selfish and SO unintelligent. Can't we even consider the consequences of our actions in nature???
Just don’t buy an exotic pet at all
Tell that to cat owners
know that snakes never lived in florida until a few hundred years ago makes me anxious
I love eating crab roe! They’re so delicious and barely need any seasonings. Wish more restaurants are serving the green crabs
Python developers after watching this 😂😂
I love how we shoot hogs from helicopters but we have to run around with flashlights, like it’s a snipe hunt, to catch and kill a python.
Very very well made and interesting video, great to learn something instead of just scrolling through the usual stuff.
"Never appeal to a man's better nature, he may not have one. Invoking his self-interest gives you more leverage."
- Robert Heinlein.
Chinese people love seafood (including crab). I haven't heard of any Chinese restaurant use green crabs. There's a particular dish where we would use the tomalley (crab roe and guts) in fried rice. Definitely a missed opportunity
I have a Burmese python as a pet. She’s an absolutely incredible pet and I love her a lot, I caught her in my summer home in Florida when she was a hatchling and now she’s 8ft long. While I’m glad I was able to save her I completely understand the need to cull these invasive pythons and think that using the leather is a great idea, waste not want not!
Snake meat is eaten as a delicacy in most places in Asia. We should be using it as well. Same for the nutria, carp, and feral hogs.
Using sargassum for paper, etc., is also good, and one man figured how to make bricks with it. I'm betting that water hyacinth can be used to make paper as well as material for weaving.
Crab? yeah, I'll eat some. Same for lion fish. Mmm-mmm good!
As for making biofuels - absolutely. Using all of the plants for diverse products is just a bonus.
Green crabs are considered a delicacy in China and it's delicious. Eat them, give it a try.
For the crab can they dry them and crush it to make some type of fertilizer? Calcium
Isn’t chicken egg shells more effective
I also beard crabs, lobster and shrimps have heavy metal in their shells
this fighting for getting invasive species out is a good thing to help ... minimize human mistakes as good as humans can...
Great video! This is teh kindd of environmentalism I can get behind. It is practical, solves problems, is borne from human innovation, is capitalist, provides jobs and actually benefits people.
Ironic that the typha briquets produce less smoke... but they have to burn them for 6 hours beforehand, thereby releasing all the pollutants that wood would have anyway.
If you told the Chinese that Python meat would increase their wangs, I guarantee you they'd go extinct within 6 months 🤣
I believe Florida already has a bounty program for snakes. I remember checking out a registration website for it.
Excellence documentary. I shared it with friends to spread the word.
Seems like a drop in a bucket the way they're hunting the snake.
I can't get enough of World Wide Waste
"Then, in 1992, dozens of Burmese Pythons escape a breeding facility, when Hurricane Andrew hit."
Don't know where you're getting your facts from but, Pythons were already on the loose and out of control in the Everglades long before Andrew. When I was in elementary school, back in the early to mid 80's, we took a couple field trips to the Everglades and the Rangers talked a lot about invasive species and their impact. Pythons were the primary subject.
Just about every little Cuban boy thought it was cool to have a pet Python, until they grew to large to manage. Then, they'd just release them into the wild because they were a pet and they couldn't be bothered to take them to a zoo.
Awesome! Great job 🤗😊🤗
It's horrible to see aguapé (water hyacinth) causing problems in other parts of the world, I never knew that, because they are native where I live. I guess it's a case of you reap what you sowed
This a historic video frl
The people in the boat with fishing nets and hockey helmets got me laughing real good
This was cool and i look forward to future content.
I don't know what license these people hold. A license is not required to remove invasive species.
The license is to access government protected government lands.
@@kb7661 And now I know. Thanks KB!
I always wished that good tasting animals (lobster and salmon) were an invasive species.
You Guys should prpbably check out the possum fur trade in NZ, where the possums are not only an invasive species, but is dangerous to our native wildlife
I went to Florida in 2019 and was super disappointed when I couldn’t find a place that served lionfish.
More world wide waste!!!! Love this series
The way they are going, they'll never be able to solve the Burmese python issue😂😂
@1:10 had me laughing my coffee out of my nose drills :
"Only 100 people are licensed to capture these snakes" : said licensed professional proceed to boot the python neck. Yeaaaah riiiight mate ! Dis how we do it...
This was an interesting video, thank you. I live in New England and had no clue about the green crabs. Ive known about the pythons in the everglades for a while now and they too struggle with water hyacinth. I went to a aquarium in LA and they had an educational section all about them. I'm highly impressed with the ingenuity of the people dealing with the Typia (spelling?) The clay bricks made with the plant materials are a great approach to handling the plant. I do understand the concern of creating a demand with these approaches but, i also dont think any of these issues will completely go away, so methods and means of controlling them are necessary.
Homer Simpson would love the crab whiskey. I remember from one episode he drank something like 20 cans of crab juice.
I always had an idea to have an all you can eat wild boar buffet in Texas.
You couldn't because the pos ranchers out here want to charge people to come on their property and shoot them
I wonder whats wrong not eating phyton and green crab . It is edible .
“ they keep the snake on the ground, lifting it in the air, would scare it “
Really? I didn’t think snakes were afraid of heights. How do they know ? Do they ask the snake to rate its fear level.
Compared to having someone step on your neck, would you rate heights as the scariest thing ?
I really enjoy these videos, and the camera work is very well done. The narration often is questionable.
Thank you for sharing this.
I don't live in any of those places. Could you do a video on invasive plants/animals from lots of different places? Something that I could identify and use. Show how to identify it and how to use it. I want to do my part but the internet is big and not all together trustworthy also there is a lot of conflicting information.
Idk how we can drive other things extinct but not invasive species
Things are being driven to extinction already in their natural habitats by their natural predators. Our removing enough to keep them from being able to repopulate quickly enough to sustain themselves agains natural threats is what causes their populations to collapse. It's not like we're going out and killing every single one of them. We're just tipping the scales until the problem cascades irreversibly.
Crab roe is delicious in pasta 😋😋
Just keep up the good work!
That high five was horrendous😂
Animal activists would get a heart attack watching this 😂
If the state is killing the snakes after capture, what is the most efficient way that they're doing it? Machete, baton or bullet?
Great information
Those species would be in check in the Philippines in no time. Those yellow crab egg are fermented here, made in some sort of paste as spice to cooking. Mass produced them and try to sell in asian market.
I wish I lived where you do. I would be SOOOOOO into this. I have a 5ft ball python and a baby cornsnake as pets and the python is a Reptile Rescue animal. I love snakes and grew up along the Ottawa River so I have encountered many different wild animals. As much as I love my animals, I would not have a problem hunting these snakes just for the thrill of it. Also they would probably be meeting up with my BBQ as well.
I'm in Australia and i grew up with my parents being wild life carers. Taught me how to love an animal but also be fine with being let go or euthanised. Like foxes and rabbits are a massive invasive species here. We did not hesitate to play with the fox cub for an afternoon, but was completely fine and understood why it couldn't be alive in Australia.
Not gonna lie, I aint eating that green crab
It’s about time!! Lion fish sushi! I’ve been saying it for years now!
Nice license plate at 5:21 :D