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Page 19 - தெற்கு புளோரிடா தண்ணீர் மேலாண்மை News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Snake and eggs for breakfast? Florida may soon encourage eating invasive pythons

Snake and eggs for breakfast? Florida may soon encourage eating invasive pythons Sun Sentinel 12/18/2020 Chris Perkins, South Florida Sun Sentinel © Jim Rassol / Sun Sentinel/South Florida Sun Sentinel/Jim Rassol/Sun Sentinel/TNS Donna Kalil and Renee Yousefi bag an 8- foot Burmese python along the C-304 levee in Miami-Dade County in July 2018. FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – Donna Kalil estimates she’s eaten a dozen pythons in the last three years or so. That’s not including the python jerky, says Kalil, a python hunter for the South Florida Water Management District. “I eat that several times a week because I take it out with me on python hunts and I eat it out there.”

Flooded Everglades: Boon for Birds But High Waters a Threat

By By Adriana Brasileiro and The Miami Herald • Published December 13, 2020 • Updated on December 13, 2020 at 9:00 am Getty Images A record-breaking rainy season has left the River of Grass looking like a real river. Shark Valley, a popular Everglades National Park tourist stop off Tamiami Trail, is temporarily closed and mostly underwater. The looping road leading to its signature observation tower looks like a canal in an aerial image taken by a staffer. Farther south, on the road to Flamingo on the southern mainland coast of Florida Bay, marshes normally draining down in South Florida’s dry season shimmer like lakes in the sun. At least one water gauge in the park reached its highest level since 1962.

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