If I recall hurricanes are actually a big contributing factor to the invasive species in Florida as when homes and buildings are abandoned or destroyed it leads to the exotic pets escaping out of desperation. Burmese Pythons in particular are theorized to come from a destroyed warehouse that housed a bunch of these reptiles for the pet trade.
It’s true. Some think a portion of the iguana population was contributed by iguanas coming in on rafts if debris and vegetation from the Caribbean and Mexico.
This makes it the fault of the keepers. If you can't or don't want to take your pets with you. You should not have said pet. It's disgusting how people blame acts of nature like we don't know Florida gets hit with a hurricane EVERY SINGLE YEAR. Rather than take responsibility and accountability for their actions.
@@rduke325 relax, I think he’s just trying to make the point that a large portion of these reptiles aren’t intentionally released And yea sometimes people don’t have the opportunity to take their animals with them in emergencies. The point he’s trying to make is that while pet owners are what’s blamed for the pythons in the Everglades, it was the destruction of a breeding facility that was most likely the biggest contributor to the python population in Florida. I’m assuming you don’t live in Florida nor do you own reptiles.
@@rduke325 The owners fault? For what? So it’s the owners fault that a building they owned, that was built to code, was hit by a natural disaster and animals escaped? Miss me with that nonsense.
@BlakeW5 try reading what I wrote. Yes, I am 100% blaming the keepers. The animal did not asked to be a pet or display piece. They keepers know there is an extremely high probability that their house will get hit with a hurricane, yet they have no plan to get the animal to safety with them. This is not only negligent but could pose a public safety risk depending on the animal. People like this are why Florida's echo system is completely f'ed up.
Little disclaimer here, Nile crocodiles have not been found in Florida in a while. The native crocodile in Florida , the American crocodile, is the only croc we have now. The spectacled caiman does have a small population in Miami though.
@@fishincheap1102 exactly the Nile crocs they find in Florida are one off escapees from zoos and breeders and there has never been an established breeding population in Florida ever
Given you make so many videos about Invasive Species: How about a video which were probably the worst human actions that caused large-scale invasive species problems? The first instances that come to my mind are the Suez Canal creating a permanent waterway between the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea and the infamous letter that asked for Rabbits to be introduced to Australia...
I had been catching and cooking gobies from Lake Michigan and when I clean them I often find a lot of shells. The gobies are good eating when fried and rubbed but do remember that they organ would contain the poison that the mussels get from algae so do remove them
As a fisherman in michigan I can tell you that the gobies are also the staple diet of almost every predator they encounter, I can't tell you the last time I gutted a walleye or smallmouth that wasn't full of gobies.
first I would like to thank you for the entertainment Your animal vedios have given me so much stress relief and just company and noise Over the last few months As my wife and I don't mind giving names since her story is online, Holly terry (I'm justin) had 2 liver transplants and over 7 surgerys since December 19th The videos and jokes Helped me get through long days of bad news and just waiting for progress Through her medical induced coma after her first transplant failed rapidly To waiting and preying for a cadaver liver to arive in time She is doing better still a slow process But I just want to say thank you Even if you do not see this Seriously kept me from losing it
@@justincraig398 they’re illegal to privately own in North America. I don’t even think it’s legal to remove them from their native habitat. I do think Komodo’s might be a candidate species for rewilding in Australia for controlling the larger non native species like feral goats, cats, foxes and rabbits. The native species in Australia have evolved alongside large monitors so should not be effected too heavily. Komodo’s might pose issues with competing with native Australian monitors.
Zebra Mussels are great for all round water quality. They filter out pollutants, sewage and any heavy metals that may be present in the water, leaving it cleaner, clearer, and more able to withstand destructive things like algae blooms.
Nice to see a wildlife channel that isnt super heavy clickbait like "5 deep sea monsters no longer extinct??" then videos filled with shadows and colossal squids
Did be just said that green fuckin' anacondas have made it to Florida too? AND frickin NILE crocs too? That's hilarious and terrifying at the same time!
It's crazy how some invasive species do so much better where they are invasive than in their native range. European rabbits have adapted extraordinarily well to Australia, as have European foxes but both are in trouble in their native ranges. A lot of Farmers in Aus have reduced or ceased culling of Dingos which are not strictly native but not invasive either. Dingos actually pose less of a threat to livestock than foxes and feral cats and will actively displace both and will at worst opportunistically target vulnerable livestock as opposed to actively hunt them. Dingos also go after rodents and even feral pigs to a small degree. I feel like Florida needs to take an approach more similar to how Australia now manages canetoads. By trying to rebalance the ecosystem with them as part of it and give up on just eradicating them. In Australia the canetoads on the frontline of their spread are massive and packed with a lethal dose of Poison for most animals so they never have a chance to learn to avoid them. They now deliberately introduce small toads Ahead of the main front so that native animals will eat them, get sick, survive and learn to avoid them which has drastically reduced the impact they have. The canetoad problem is now considered far less serious than other invasive species that have come along like fire ants. Canetoad expansion has stalled and even stopped in areas as they don't have the same extreme drought tollerance of many natives. They also have been unable to move much further south as they don't deal with the colder more southern climates very well. Plenty of natives have learnt how to eat them too, especially corvids which australia has plenty of. Saltwater Crocs and Keelback snakes have also slowed their growth up north as both actually have native resistance to their toxins and Keelback snake numbers have actually increased as they obviously have an advantage over other natives when they encounter canetoads. Canetoads also had a net positive impact on some other amphibians, as even though they compete and prey on these small native amphibians, they also almost completely wiped out their predators. Invasive ecology is incredibly fascinating especially when introduced species turn out far more benign than you might think. Some invasive pigeons are also not so bad here as they don't nest in the same places natives do and they often get predated on instead. I feel ecologists in Florida need to consider a wholistic approach to invasives and try and bring back some balance to ecosystems that allows as many natives as possible to maintain stable populations but at this point it's basically a whole new ecosystem that will probably never be restored. The only country with any chance is NZ and they have one of the largest imperatives with so many unique and endemic species there.
the wels catfish has never been reported in the Great Lakes or even in North America…. Tench are in the great lakes watershed but have not been found in any of the Great Lakes as of yet
would be interesting to see about "rumored" animals that turned out to be true or false. like right now in the UK there is all these big cat sightings surely over the years and world there has been more events like these. could also turn it into mythical species that turned out to be or are most likely to be
Maybe in northen UK like scotland but I can’t imagine an big cat in England and wales just like what would it even eat the place is so heavily populated.
Well escaped or released animals that don't belong are always a possibility for any Cryptid. In my area not too many years ago there was someone claiming to have a bigfoot because of some tracks too large to be a North American black bear, sets up some trail cameras and finds a Eurasian Brown bear on the pics. Game Wardens eventually capture the brown bear someone released
I got some ideas for videos For you Extinct invasive species As In invasive species that used to exist like the camel core camels As well as invasive species That shouldn't be called invasive species Such as parakeets in New York City And that spider in North America That's from Asia
I definitely think he should do that. the peacock bass eat invasive species, not just tilapia but also things like tiger guapote, midas cichlids, oscars, and to a degree even eating cuban tree frogs and their young. It also feeds animals like alligator, heron, and sometimes pelicans, as they also like hanging out in ponds. They also are basically incapable of spreading far, and also are popular fish that are prized sport fish
@@zcarp8642 but they also eat native fish as well… it’s just another big cichlid in Florida except this species has game value and can be targeted by fishermen. I personally think that’s what the peacock bass were originally put there for.
@@fishincheap1102 there’s a few species of tilapia in Florida not just one lol. The peacock bass were truly just added for sport fishing. Peacock bass can’t do anything that large mouth bass can’t do.
Well not really, only a handful of smaller related individuals have been caught in the Everglades. Florida does it have breeding population of spectacle caiman though
Nutria were such a problem in Louisiana, the state paid for tails and published cookbooks. The 60's, I think. Pretty sure they are still having cook-off competitions.
Hawaii also has a huge problem with invasive species -- maybe even worse than Florida. Many native/endemic species have gone extinct there because of it. Many things that Hawaii is famous for -- pineapples, macadamia nuts, mosquitoes, to name a few -- are invasive.
Request a New Video About: five animals that could possibly have the potential to become the kings of the internet and memes In the animal kingdom! 1.Sloth 2.Gorilla 3.Raccoon 4.Caracal 5.Capybara
There is actual camera footage of Bobcats finding and eating invasive python eggs from a nest. That scene made scientists very very happy. Life, found a way it seems.
@@mr.d00m37 It won't take that long for keystone 🔑🪨 🌉 species to adapt, especially with human help. They are so important, because of how resilient and reliable they are, so other species can have lifestyles that assume they exist.
If a burmese python, over the course of its life, eats like... two or three feral cats, then its basically a wash on its positive or negative impact on the environment.
"The major problem that is Florida" applies to so many thing in this state, tbh. Invasive species, climate change causing stronger hurricanes, the steady and alarmingly quickening creep of fascism in our State Gov't, toxic red algae blooms (caused by agricultural runoff) that kill fish and cause allergic reactions in some people, that one time a homeless dude high on pcp gnawed the face off of another homeless guy (yes this actually happened)... At the very least, you won't have to worry about FL for too long, because we're gonna be underwater fairly soon (again, thanks to climate change)! Hahaha! 🙃 On the bright side, I'm glad the Nile Crocodiles haven't attacked any humans. Who knows? Maybe they will do us a kindness and take down some of the feral pigs we have.
Nope. Otters and minks are both semiaquatic mustelids, but minks prefer more mammalian prey as opposed to otters, which are generalists and will eat anything from crayfish to fish to birds
Make belts from Burmese Phython leather a fad so many will look for it many will capture a Burmese Phython and make their leather belts and sell it at a good price
Florida is an invasive battle royale at this point
You know what joining this late but Australia too. It be a battle royal out for invader world of animals
Yep
It's Florida, what did you expect?
Florida on a Quest to be like Australia
I support the monkeys
Florida invasive species : wow its really nice here
Burmese Python : *LET THE DARK HARVEST BEGIN*
Honestly florida is like the Reptile Battleground and if Komodos where not so restricted i would not be surprised if somes found their way in Florida.
@@doragonzx I don't think Komodos would do well since they like more aired areas and like to pray on large animals.
don't worry, the nile crocs joined the party late, give them time
@@doragonzx we might not have Komodo Dragons but we do have Nile Monitors 😅
@@doragonzxyour right now hope Europe does not have Florida man special human 8:04
If I recall hurricanes are actually a big contributing factor to the invasive species in Florida as when homes and buildings are abandoned or destroyed it leads to the exotic pets escaping out of desperation. Burmese Pythons in particular are theorized to come from a destroyed warehouse that housed a bunch of these reptiles for the pet trade.
It’s true. Some think a portion of the iguana population was contributed by iguanas coming in on rafts if debris and vegetation from the Caribbean and Mexico.
This makes it the fault of the keepers. If you can't or don't want to take your pets with you. You should not have said pet. It's disgusting how people blame acts of nature like we don't know Florida gets hit with a hurricane EVERY SINGLE YEAR. Rather than take responsibility and accountability for their actions.
@@rduke325 relax, I think he’s just trying to make the point that a large portion of these reptiles aren’t intentionally released
And yea sometimes people don’t have the opportunity to take their animals with them in emergencies.
The point he’s trying to make is that while pet owners are what’s blamed for the pythons in the Everglades, it was the destruction of a breeding facility that was most likely the biggest contributor to the python population in Florida.
I’m assuming you don’t live in Florida nor do you own reptiles.
@@rduke325
The owners fault? For what?
So it’s the owners fault that a building they owned, that was built to code, was hit by a natural disaster and animals escaped? Miss me with that nonsense.
@BlakeW5 try reading what I wrote. Yes, I am 100% blaming the keepers. The animal did not asked to be a pet or display piece. They keepers know there is an extremely high probability that their house will get hit with a hurricane, yet they have no plan to get the animal to safety with them. This is not only negligent but could pose a public safety risk depending on the animal. People like this are why Florida's echo system is completely f'ed up.
Who thought it was a good idea to take nile crocodiles to Florida?
They must have been in de nile about the consequences.
@@bonecanoe86 What if Nile Crocodiles breed with American Crocodiles & they produce a Super Hybrid species?
😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁
@@davidwesley2525 they can't
Little disclaimer here, Nile crocodiles have not been found in Florida in a while. The native crocodile in Florida , the American crocodile, is the only croc we have now. The spectacled caiman does have a small population in Miami though.
@@fishincheap1102 exactly the Nile crocs they find in Florida are one off escapees from zoos and breeders and there has never been an established breeding population in Florida ever
Given you make so many videos about Invasive Species:
How about a video which were probably the worst human actions that caused large-scale invasive species problems?
The first instances that come to my mind are the Suez Canal creating a permanent waterway between the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea and the infamous letter that asked for Rabbits to be introduced to Australia...
Foxes released in Australia to satisfy the homesickness felt by an Englishman. Decimated native species to mass extinctions.
Sometimes im not sure if this is an AI voice or an actual human 😂
Love your Videos, keep going that Great work!
I had been catching and cooking gobies from Lake Michigan and when I clean them I often find a lot of shells. The gobies are good eating when fried and rubbed but do remember that they organ would contain the poison that the mussels get from algae so do remove them
I appreciate that you don't vilify the animals involved.
Pythons and gators be like : only the strongest shall rule
Nile crocs : Yes me
As a fisherman in michigan I can tell you that the gobies are also the staple diet of almost every predator they encounter, I can't tell you the last time I gutted a walleye or smallmouth that wasn't full of gobies.
So glad I subbed, really enjoy your content
I'm glad you like the vids i'll keep them coming :)
@@TsukiCove good to hear
Yet another great video!
Thanks i appreciate it :)
@@TsukiCove love your videos about invasive species
first I would like to thank you for the entertainment
Your animal vedios have given me so much stress relief and just company and noise
Over the last few months
As my wife and I don't mind giving names since her story is online,
Holly terry (I'm justin) had 2 liver transplants and over 7 surgerys since December 19th
The videos and jokes
Helped me get through long days of bad news and just waiting for progress
Through her medical induced coma after her first transplant failed rapidly
To waiting and preying for a cadaver liver to arive in time
She is doing better still a slow process
But I just want to say thank you
Even if you do not see this
Seriously kept me from losing it
Invasive species 1: who are you?
Invasive Species 2: You but better
All we need is Komodo Dragons in Florida to make it the reptile state.
Careful , someone will let aome free down here soon,
@@justincraig398 they’re illegal to privately own in North America. I don’t even think it’s legal to remove them from their native habitat.
I do think Komodo’s might be a candidate species for rewilding in Australia for controlling the larger non native species like feral goats, cats, foxes and rabbits. The native species in Australia have evolved alongside large monitors so should not be effected too heavily. Komodo’s might pose issues with competing with native Australian monitors.
@@Specogecko Zoos are allowed to breed & display Komodo Dragons.
@@davidwesley2525 “they’re illegal to privately own” 🙄
Maybe we could lower the invasive human population with some komodos?
Great video!👍
Another nice video bro 👌
You need to do a video about why some species do not become invasive.
Zebra Mussels are great for all round water quality. They filter out pollutants, sewage and any heavy metals that may be present in the water, leaving it cleaner, clearer, and more able to withstand destructive things like algae blooms.
As a Philly boy, we need something that eats the spotted lanternfly!
Waiting for "Florida man fights every invasive species and uploads it in RUclips" headlines
THANK YOU FOR DOING A VIDEO ON INVASIVE SPECIES INTERACTIONS WITH EACH OTHER 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Good video
Thanks i appreciate the support :)
@@TsukiCove my birthday is on April 7th
Nice to see a wildlife channel that isnt super heavy clickbait like "5 deep sea monsters no longer extinct??" then videos filled with shadows and colossal squids
Florida is so special that the invasive species just make their own food chain there
I think we should introduce some black Cayman into Florida, Siberian Tigers into Alaska, and polar bears in Antarctica or Patagonia
And lions to Australia.
@@albinokanickel4492 I think Australia deserves hyenas or cheetas
@@TheMichaelMonroeDoctrine or hyenas. What about Europe?
Here on georgian bay (lake huron) the gobys are so bad, that you don't even need bait for them. You just throw a bare hook and they swarm it.
Did be just said that green fuckin' anacondas have made it to Florida too? AND frickin NILE crocs too? That's hilarious and terrifying at the same time!
Come to Florida & see the Real Jurassic Park.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
It's crazy how some invasive species do so much better where they are invasive than in their native range. European rabbits have adapted extraordinarily well to Australia, as have European foxes but both are in trouble in their native ranges. A lot of Farmers in Aus have reduced or ceased culling of Dingos which are not strictly native but not invasive either. Dingos actually pose less of a threat to livestock than foxes and feral cats and will actively displace both and will at worst opportunistically target vulnerable livestock as opposed to actively hunt them. Dingos also go after rodents and even feral pigs to a small degree.
I feel like Florida needs to take an approach more similar to how Australia now manages canetoads. By trying to rebalance the ecosystem with them as part of it and give up on just eradicating them. In Australia the canetoads on the frontline of their spread are massive and packed with a lethal dose of Poison for most animals so they never have a chance to learn to avoid them. They now deliberately introduce small toads Ahead of the main front so that native animals will eat them, get sick, survive and learn to avoid them which has drastically reduced the impact they have. The canetoad problem is now considered far less serious than other invasive species that have come along like fire ants. Canetoad expansion has stalled and even stopped in areas as they don't have the same extreme drought tollerance of many natives. They also have been unable to move much further south as they don't deal with the colder more southern climates very well. Plenty of natives have learnt how to eat them too, especially corvids which australia has plenty of. Saltwater Crocs and Keelback snakes have also slowed their growth up north as both actually have native resistance to their toxins and Keelback snake numbers have actually increased as they obviously have an advantage over other natives when they encounter canetoads. Canetoads also had a net positive impact on some other amphibians, as even though they compete and prey on these small native amphibians, they also almost completely wiped out their predators.
Invasive ecology is incredibly fascinating especially when introduced species turn out far more benign than you might think. Some invasive pigeons are also not so bad here as they don't nest in the same places natives do and they often get predated on instead. I feel ecologists in Florida need to consider a wholistic approach to invasives and try and bring back some balance to ecosystems that allows as many natives as possible to maintain stable populations but at this point it's basically a whole new ecosystem that will probably never be restored. The only country with any chance is NZ and they have one of the largest imperatives with so many unique and endemic species there.
I've seen a lot on the carp in the Mississippi River too
the wels catfish has never been reported in the Great Lakes or even in North America….
Tench are in the great lakes watershed but have not been found in any of the Great Lakes as of yet
Florida: **shrinks and destroys the everglades habitat to about 50% of its original size**
Also Florida: IT WAS THE PYTHONS YOU GUYS THEY DID THIS
This phenomena has the same energy as "i used the stone to destroy the stone" type.
Florida at this point is basically just a giant zoo without fences with everything running wild
would be interesting to see about "rumored" animals that turned out to be true or false. like right now in the UK there is all these big cat sightings surely over the years and world there has been more events like these. could also turn it into mythical species that turned out to be or are most likely to be
You guys could have mountain lions, bobcats/lynx idk about large cats tho
Maybe in northen UK like scotland but I can’t imagine an big cat in England and wales just like what would it even eat the place is so heavily populated.
Well escaped or released animals that don't belong are always a possibility for any Cryptid.
In my area not too many years ago there was someone claiming to have a bigfoot because of some tracks too large to be a North American black bear, sets up some trail cameras and finds a Eurasian Brown bear on the pics. Game Wardens eventually capture the brown bear someone released
I got some ideas for videos For you Extinct invasive species As In invasive species that used to exist like the camel core camels As well as invasive species That shouldn't be called invasive species Such as parakeets in New York City And that spider in North America That's from Asia
I'm glad we still get to see Arnie at the end of each episode.
The reticulated pythons and green anacondas that are found in the Everglades are either released or escaped pets with no established populations
It's crazy knowing that we have Nile crocodiles in Florida.
Let's release Hippos into Florida , they are known to kill Nile Crocodiles.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I think a great example are peacock bass that were introduced to Florida to control also invasive Nile tilapia
I definitely think he should do that. the peacock bass eat invasive species, not just tilapia but also things like tiger guapote, midas cichlids, oscars, and to a degree even eating cuban tree frogs and their young.
It also feeds animals like alligator, heron, and sometimes pelicans, as they also like hanging out in ponds.
They also are basically incapable of spreading far, and also are popular fish that are prized sport fish
@@zcarp8642 but they also eat native fish as well… it’s just another big cichlid in Florida except this species has game value and can be targeted by fishermen.
I personally think that’s what the peacock bass were originally put there for.
No Nile tilapia, just blue tilapia. Lots of other chichlids though.
@@fishincheap1102 there’s a few species of tilapia in Florida not just one lol. The peacock bass were truly just added for sport fishing. Peacock bass can’t do anything that large mouth bass can’t do.
The snake head is another invasive species in florida as well
it would be cool if when you show an animal, next to its name say the area of origin
Wait! Florida has a population of Nile Crocodile?
that just florida to ya
Well not really, only a handful of smaller related individuals have been caught in the Everglades.
Florida does it have breeding population of spectacle caiman though
You FORGOT ABOUT the jumping carp from Asia. IN the northern States rivers.
Yay for the random doggo at the end.
Longer video’s please 😢
Nutria were such a problem in Louisiana, the state paid for tails and published cookbooks. The 60's, I think. Pretty sure they are still having cook-off competitions.
Hawaii also has a huge problem with invasive species -- maybe even worse than Florida. Many native/endemic species have gone extinct there because of it. Many things that Hawaii is famous for -- pineapples, macadamia nuts, mosquitoes, to name a few -- are invasive.
Furthermore, Hawaii, unlike Florida does not have major native predators
How about
Red fox vs European hare in Australia and warthog vs tiger in Texas
Request a New Video About: five animals that could possibly have the potential to become the kings of the internet and memes In the animal kingdom!
1.Sloth
2.Gorilla
3.Raccoon
4.Caracal
5.Capybara
I have a question. Has the Burmese pythons and the green Anaconda procreate a hybrid snake since they are now existing in the same area?
you know your ecosystem is messed up when this happen
People should be included on the list!
having a generalist habit or adaptation can often make an introduced species highly invasive
are there really green anacondas in the everglades? wth i never heard that
Can we talk about how there are no more North American Horses left. Only European horses brought over.
IIRC, north American horses all dies out during the last ice age.
The grey scale in the UK they have practically wiped out the native red squirrel in some area
The Great Lakes aren’t just in the US. These invasive species most likely came on ships that came down the St Lawrence River
There is actual camera footage of Bobcats finding and eating invasive python eggs from a nest.
That scene made scientists very very happy.
Life, found a way it seems.
A relatively small dent in a large population
You forgot the invasive plant, Kudzu, and the invasive beetle whose larvae eat the roots of Kudzu.
Florida really out here like a battle royal😂
"i use stone to destroyed stone"
Since madagascar is a biodiverse country there are invasive species like Asia common toad please tsuki can you do the video
I guess the ecosystem will stabilise if the invasive species evolve into new endemic species to the places they are introduced.
Eventually 🕰🕰🕰🕰🕰🕰. Though it will take multiple human generations to complete.
The process takes hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of years. I that time the ecosystem may completely collapse due to trophic balancing issues
@@mr.d00m37 It won't take that long for keystone 🔑🪨 🌉 species to adapt, especially with human help.
They are so important, because of how resilient and reliable they are, so other species can have lifestyles that assume they exist.
They ain't even talking about them spider there
The lake Erie water snake's diet is made up of 99% round gobies. Please showcase them in a video
Also with the round goby the Lake Erie water snakes help with the population
I thought the intro was never going to end...
If the script for Alien VS. Predator was being pitched by an ecologist
Once people find out how good pythons taste , they won't be around for long .
Not gonna lie, from far away at first glance, the one on the right in the thumbnail looked like a steak and cheese sub 😂
Just found out this year Florida has Nile cross and anacondas
And when winter comes the gorillas simply freeze
I've caught 4 gobys and we just kill them and don't release them.
My cat killed a British grey squirrel, does that count?
Hey why don't they bring some King cobras into everglades! Since it can prey on pythons. Wait I'm not sure they can hibernate during winter
One thing is for sure no berm is taking on let alone down a 14+ ft Godzilla of a gator
Surprised there’s no hippos yet ☠️😂
If a burmese python, over the course of its life, eats like... two or three feral cats, then its basically a wash on its positive or negative impact on the environment.
"The major problem that is Florida" applies to so many thing in this state, tbh. Invasive species, climate change causing stronger hurricanes, the steady and alarmingly quickening creep of fascism in our State Gov't, toxic red algae blooms (caused by agricultural runoff) that kill fish and cause allergic reactions in some people, that one time a homeless dude high on pcp gnawed the face off of another homeless guy (yes this actually happened)...
At the very least, you won't have to worry about FL for too long, because we're gonna be underwater fairly soon (again, thanks to climate change)! Hahaha! 🙃
On the bright side, I'm glad the Nile Crocodiles haven't attacked any humans. Who knows? Maybe they will do us a kindness and take down some of the feral pigs we have.
I guess the mink also fills the same role that the Japanese otter once did.
Nope. Otters and minks are both semiaquatic mustelids, but minks prefer more mammalian prey as opposed to otters, which are generalists and will eat anything from crayfish to fish to birds
Florida, and the Great Lakes are screwed.
The Pitbull mix dogs
Have overtaken rescue dog shelters. I have gotten dogs from shelters my entire life.
Now its pit after pit after pit filling them
I used to have a Bernese python she died from eggbinding :(
sad that they are considered a pest they are so lovely and docile 😢
with the Burmese pythons, please do not kill them, take them to a sanctuary and they will relocate them or keep them for research
Invasive species make chance to remake the new food chain in local area in wild condition.
Saw the title and thought it was to do with the Conservative party in the UK
@@Redcoat_ Like you just got burned?
@@Redcoat_ Well, I wasn't implying anything good about the Tories. Nothing against individual voters though was just tongue-in-cheek
Lmaooo
Indian peacock bird control the burmese python in florida😊
Hello
Modern humans would've been a good one to put on here
@@robmckenney666 yummy humans 😂
I used the invasive species to destroy the invasive species
Psittacula krameri, Macropus Rufogriseus, Rhea americana... in Europe
The got Nile crocodiles too? Jesus fucking Christ.
3 - 5 Invasive species that can be problem to the Indonesian Ecosystem
What about columbias cocaine hippos?
Can we introduce python back into Myanmar
The iguanas. That's the problem. Snakes stay away from people. Iguans just hang out no fear of people really. Greetings from pompano
Control humanely?
Make belts from Burmese Phython leather a fad so many will look for it many will capture a Burmese Phython and make their leather belts and sell it at a good price
Predator VS Predator