Author Topic: Feral Kingdoms: A Transcontinental Fever Dream of Rabbits, Pythons, and Human Folly  (Read 131 times)

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Offline Luis Gonzalez

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Feral Kingdoms: A Transcontinental Fever Dream of Rabbits, Pythons, and Human Folly

Two countries. Two invasions. One shared moral: never underestimate an imported animal with time on its hands.

By Luis Gonzalez
Boiling Frogs


Rabbits: Australia’s Fluffy Biological Apocalypse

Australia didn’t plan to be overrun by rabbits—it just happened the way all bad decisions happen: one aristocrat with a gun habit, too much land, and the hubris of believing nature would behave. Thomas Austin released 24 rabbits in 1859, thinking they’d make for pleasant hunting. Instead, they made for continental catastrophe. Within decades, those soft little hay-vacuums multiplied into biblical hordes, chewing through farmland like a divine punishment for British colonial optimism.

Attempts to stop them ranged from earnest to deranged. Fences—gigantic ones—meant to hold back the tide. Poison campaigns. Viral warfare in the form of myxomatosis and later rabbit hemorrhagic disease. Australia basically turned into a mad scientist’s lab with the goal of outwitting a creature whose superpower is algebraic reproduction. Some attempts worked temporarily, others failed spectacularly, and the rabbits—eternal, multiplying, fluffy insurgents—remain a permanent feature of the landscape.

Pythons: The Everglades’ Cold-Blooded Coup

Across the world, the Everglades is running its own biological noir. Burmese pythons—escapees, releasees, and descendants from the exotic pet boom—slithered into South Florida and found paradise. No predators. Plenty of prey. Endless swamp highways to stretch out on. So they multiplied, growing fat on raccoons, rabbits, deer, birds, whatever wandered past the wrong piece of sawgrass at the wrong time.

The population exploded. The ecosystem buckled. And amid the biological carnage, Florida did the most Florida thing possible: it made a reality-TV contest out of killing them. Hunters with GoPros, environmental scientists with grim statistics, old-timers with shotguns—they all joined the python war effort. It’s part sport, part science, part desperate ecological triage.

Two Continents, One Human Lesson in Biological Regret

Both invasions sprang from a familiar root: people believing they can import nature without consequence. Australia thought a few rabbits were harmless fun. Florida thought keeping fifteen-foot snakes as household decor was charming. Now both places are locked in generational warfare with animals that never asked to be there but adapted with ruthless efficiency.

What’s Left to Do?

Australia continues using viruses, targeted control programs, and high-tech monitoring to keep rabbit numbers manageable. The Everglades relies on organized hunts, research-driven removal, and a steady drumbeat of public education that can be summarized as: “Stop buying giant snakes, you absolute maniacs.”

Both crises show the same ironic truth: ecosystems are delicate until the wrong species enters—then they become gladiator arenas.

The Final Word

The rabbits hopped their way into legend. The pythons slithered into infamy. And both stories end with the same moral: nature bats last, and it bats hard, especially when we’re the ones who pitch the first bad idea.

LG
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Offline Smokin Joe

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James River Catfish:
(This summary was produced by Google's AI, but it's fairly accurate:)

Quote
Initial Stocking: Beginning in 1974, over 300,000 juvenile blue catfish (Ictalurus furcatus) were introduced into the James and Rappahannock rivers.
Motivation: The primary goal was to provide a new, large sportfish for anglers during a period when native fish populations, such as coastal striped bass, were in decline.
Flathead Catfish: Flathead catfish (Pylodictis olivaris) were also introduced around the same time.
Unintended Consequences: Managers at the time believed that, as a freshwater species, the catfish would be confined to the rivers where they were stocked and unable to tolerate the higher salinities of the main Chesapeake Bay. This proved incorrect, as the fish demonstrated a surprising tolerance for brackish water and have since spread throughout nearly all major tidal tributaries of the Chesapeake Bay watershed.

Well, that didn't work. The estuary fisheries I grew up around have been wrecked. The White Perch and Striped Bass that were the mainstays of those fisheries, and which commanded higher prices at the wharf were virtually wiped out. Catfish are worth less than half what the other fish were, so livelihoods went, too, and, needless to say, the price of desirable fish went up.

To continue with the AI summary:
Quote
Today, blue catfish are considered an invasive species in the James Estuary and the broader Chesapeake Bay region. Their population has grown rapidly, and as efficient apex predators with few natural threats in the new environment, they are a significant concern for the balance of the native ecosystem.
The Virginia DWR and the Virginia Marine Resources Commission (VMRC) are now focused on managing the population and mitigating its negative effects on native species such as Atlantic sturgeon, American shad, river herring, and blue crabs. Efforts include encouraging angler harvest and exploring commercial fishing opportunities to help control their numbers

Note the species I mentioned aren't even mentioned in the 'negative effects' statement, mainly because they have been nearly wiped out. **nononono*

Even the Osprey which inhabited the shores and duck blinds of the river I grew up on (and usually return to the same nest every year) have thinned out, because the menhaden (small generally noncommercial feed fish which used to be common in large schools and formed an essential part of the food chain) have been severely affected. Those were easy prey, as were the other fish that fed on them.

I'll take the wisdom of one old waterman over any ten wildlife biology PhDs.
« Last Edit: Today at 02:43:40 pm by Smokin Joe »
How God must weep at humans' folly! Stand fast! God knows what he is doing!
Seventeen Techniques for Truth Suppression

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.

C S Lewis

Offline Cyber Liberty

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A good cautionary story, @Luis Gonzalez!  Many such stories across the US.  Here in my neck of the woods we have donkeys/burros and pigeons.  Miners brought the donkeys and a Casino owner imported pigeons to shoot.  Now they're everywhere.

And then there are the Cypress trees....
« Last Edit: Today at 02:59:18 pm by Cyber Liberty »
For unvaccinated, we are looking at a winter of severe illness and death — if you’re unvaccinated — for themselves, their families, and the hospitals they’ll soon overwhelm. Sloe Joe Biteme 12/16
I will NOT comply.
 
Castillo del Cyber Autonomous Zone ~~~~~>                          :dontfeed:

Offline Luis Gonzalez

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A good cautionary story, @Luis Gonzalez!  Many such stories across the US.  Here in my neck of the woods we have donkeys/burros and pigeons.  Miners brought the donkeys and a Casino owner imported pigeons to shoot.  Now they're everywhere.

And then there are the Cypress trees....

Donkeys and burros are cute!

These things I worry about.

"The growth of knowledge depends entirely upon disagreement." - Karl Popper

Offline Cyber Liberty

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Donkeys and burros are cute!

These things I worry about.



I like the donkeys!  They keep the coyotes away from the rabbits that visit us!
For unvaccinated, we are looking at a winter of severe illness and death — if you’re unvaccinated — for themselves, their families, and the hospitals they’ll soon overwhelm. Sloe Joe Biteme 12/16
I will NOT comply.
 
Castillo del Cyber Autonomous Zone ~~~~~>                          :dontfeed:

Online berdie

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Wild hogs around here. As in everything...somebody thought they would be fun to hunt and the rest is destructive history. And they get really big!

Offline ChemEngrMBA

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All mere child's play.
The United States has been ravaged by Leftists whose destructiveness dwarfs that of bunny rabbits and pythons.  There is no end in sight.
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