Researchers in South Florida have taken to rather unconventional measures for cover the nation ’s rise invasive green iguanas issue – sock in the reptiles ’ skulls .
It ’s part of a three - month , $ 63,000 projection commissioned by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission ( FWC ) to visualise out the best fashion to decimate iguanas and deal that information with Floridians .
They started off using a tool anticipate a captive deadbolt gun – much like those used in the livestock industriousness – but find out that good ol’ fashioned head - bashing work just as well .
" Most of what we ’re doing is stark force trauma , " field life scientist Jenny Ketterlin told the daily newspaperSun - Sentinel . " Hitting their oral sex very severely against a solid target . "
And a whang against a motortruck or boat used by the squad seems to do the trick .
Working in team of two , the research worker sneak up on the sleeping herbivore and kill them on the spot . The lifeless iguana are then stuffed into cup of tea and brought back to a lab where they are measured , weighed , and taken to a nearby landfill that take animal carcasses .
It sounds fairly sick , but Ketterlin say it keeps with Florida ’s anti - cruelty laws and quickly destroys the animals ’ brains .
Others are n’t so easy positive . Dr Susan Kelleher , a veterinarian who handle exotic pets , told the newspaper the head - bashing is cruel . It would be kind to sedate and decapitate the critter . State officials say one room or another , the invasive pests must be taken care of .
“ Iguanas are an invasive mintage in Florida and can be a nuisance to householder or impact native wildlife , ” FWC spokeswoman Carli Segelson tell thenewspaper . “ Iguanas can feed on native plant and wildlife and cut into into area that may cause erosion . ”
Iguanas tunnel and nest underground , and the FWC says this habit is having costlyeconomic ramificationsby collapsing sidewalks , building foundations , and seawalls . They also leave droppings most everywhere they take the air , which might fan out salmonella .
Officialssayiguanas have n’t had much of an bionomic wallop , but they are appeal to Tree with peak and fruit that could be important habitat for endangered butterfly and tree snail .
How did the iguana infestation get so bad ?
Green iguanas – which can grow to over 1.5 meters tenacious ( 5 feet ) – were first reported in the sunshine state in the1960s . Since then , population have persist in to wax .
From pythons to giant admonisher lizard , Florida ’s tropic climate is ripe with exotic speciesabandonedby their owner . When a pet gets too orotund or too much to care for , some pet ownersabandontheir once beloved critter . In 1992,Hurricane Andrewdevastated the Miami Zoo , research facilities , and individual homes , releasing exotic PET into the wild .
The FWCencourageslandowners to remove iguana from their property .
[ H / T : Daily Sun Sentinel ]