Giant Pregnant Python Caught in Florida
The largest Burmese python ever found in Florida has been caught in the Everglades, scientists said Tuesday, and it contained 87 eggs — also thought to be a record.
“This thing is monstrous, it’s about a foot wide,” Kenneth Krysko, the herpetology collection manager at the Florida Museum of Natural History, said of the 17-foot-7-inch (5.35-meter) creature.
Scientists at the University of Florida-based museum examined the 164.5-pound (74.5-kilogram) snake on Friday as part of a government research project into managing the pervasive effect of Burmese pythons in Florida.
The giant snakes — native to southeast Asia and first found in the Everglades in 1979 — prey on native birds, deer, bobcats, alligators and other large animals.
With no known natural predator, population estimates for the Burmese python in Florida range from the thousands to hundreds of thousands.

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