这个玩意儿,还是不要放生的好吧,即使有GPS跟踪着它。
真不知这帮人都咋想滴。
A monster size snake is no longer slithering its way through a Southwest Miami-Dade nursery after being captured by members of Miami-Dade Fire Rescue's anti-venom unit.
The giant Burmese python was discovered in a field at a nursery at 16400 SW 202nd Avenue on Saturday. When Lt. Lisa Wood, of the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Venom Response Team, responded to the scene, she thought she was looking for an 8-foot Burmese Python but then quickly realized the snake was hiding and it was in fact, a 16-foot Burmese Python.
Lt. Wood, along with several other firefighters, captured the snake and handed it over to Skip Snow.
Snow is a federal wildlife biologist approved to do research on these types of snakes. He plans on implanting the snake with a GPS tracking device in order to track is travel and lifestyle patterns, according to MDFR.
A monster size snake is no longer slithering its way through a Southwest Miami-Dade nursery after being captured by members of Miami-Dade Fire Rescue's anti-venom unit.
The giant Burmese python was discovered in a field at a nursery at 16400 SW 202nd Avenue on Saturday. When Lt. Lisa Wood, of the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Venom Response Team, responded to the scene, she thought she was looking for an 8-foot Burmese Python but then quickly realized the snake was hiding and it was in fact, a 16-foot Burmese Python.
Lt. Wood, along with several other firefighters, captured the snake and handed it over to Skip Snow.
Snow is a federal wildlife biologist approved to do research on these types of snakes. He plans on implanting the snake with a GPS tracking device in order to track is travel and lifestyle patterns, according to MDFR.