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Florida’s new weapon in war on pythons: snake-catching tribesmen from India

A Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission non-native Wildlife Technician, holds a Burmese Python in Miami, Florida in this Jan. 29, 2015 file photo. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

MIAMI – Florida has gone halfway around the world to get help with its python problem.

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Wildlife officials recruited tribesmen from India to hunt the Burmese pythons believed to be decimating native mammals in the Everglades.

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The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission hopes the Irula tribesmen reveal a reliable way to track and spot the snakes that all but disappear in the wetlands unless they’re basking in the sun alongside a road or canal.

The tribesmen are well-known for their snake-catching skills. They removed 13 pythons in just over a week, including four from the Crocodile Lake National Wildlife Refuge in Key Largo. One of the snakes was a female measuring 16 feet long.

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