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US-BIOLOGISTS-TRACK-NORTHERN-AFRICAN-PYTHONS-IN-FLORIDA'S-EVERGL


MIAMI, FL - JANUARY 29: Emily Kluga (L) and Molly Conway, both of whom are volunteers with the National Park Service, hunt for Northern African rock pythons and other non-native snakes in the Florida Everglades on January 29, 2015 in Miami, Florida. The National Park Service along with The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, the Everglades Cooperative Invasive Species Management Area (ECISMA), Miami-Dade County, South Florida Water Management District, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the United States Geological Survey, University of Florida were surveying an area for the Northern African pythons (also called African rock pythons) and the Burmese Python in western Miami-Dade County. The teams of snake hunters were checking the levees, canals and marsh on foot for the invasive species of reptile. Many of the non-native snakes have been introduced in to the wild when people release pet snakes after they grow to large to keep. Joe Raedle/Getty Images/AFP

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Detalii fotografie
Loc:     Miami, Florida, UNITED STATES
Sursa:   AFP / Mediafax Foto
Fotograf:   JOE RAEDLE
Data:   29 Ianuarie 2015
Dimensiuni:   4968 x 3300 (1.32 MB)
Cuvinte cheie:
GETTYIMAGERANK3 NATURE RESEARCH SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY EMILY KLUGA MOLLY CONWAY BIOLOGISTS TRACK NORTHERN AFRICAN PYTHONS FLORIDA'S EVERGL