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Everglades Hunter and Family Subdue 202-Pound Python, Florida’s Second Heaviest

The removal marks a high-impact strike in Florida’s effort to rein in a destructive invasive predator.

Overview

  • On Jan. 13 in Big Cypress National Preserve east of Naples, python hunter Carl Jackson was dragged about 15 feet after grabbing a 16-foot-10-inch female before his family intervened.
  • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission identified the 202-pound snake as the second-heaviest Burmese python recorded in the state, with a reported 26-inch girth.
  • Jackson’s wife, Tasha, son Ryker Young, and stepdaughter Jazzlyn Bateman, newly certified as assistants the day before, helped restrain the snake and tape its mouth.
  • At the site, the family located and destroyed roughly 200 egg follicles and later returned to capture an additional male python about 10 feet long.
  • Burmese pythons are an invasive species tied by the FWC to steep declines in Everglades small mammals, and the state relies on trained hunters to remove large breeding females.