Since 2012, it has been illegal to bring pythons into the U.S. Florida has also banned people from keeping them as pets.
Still, experts say hundreds of thousands of pythons could be in the Everglades today. Despite their size, pythons are difficult to find. Their scaly, spotted skin is perfect camouflage.
“They may be hiding in some thick grass at your feet, and you’d never know they were there,” says Bartoszek.
From 2017 to 2020, wildlife officials in Florida caught more than 5,000 pythons. The Conservancy of Southwest Florida focuses on capturing female snakes before they get a chance to lay eggs.
One of the most successful methods is putting trackers in male pythons, like Dion. The trackers send out signals that help scientists follow the snakes—and often lead them to large females.
Bartoszek says the chances of eliminating all Burmese pythons from the Everglades are slim. But he’s not giving up.
“It’s not over till it’s over,” Bartoszek says.