Meet Florida's Python Bounty Hunters
Eradication of the apex predator is “likely impossible.”

Python Cowboy Mike Kimmel and Python Huntress Amy Siewe are just two of the legendary characters trying to keep the rising population of Burmese pythons in check in Florida's Everglades. Both were once snake killers for hire for the South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) but now work as professional snake hunting guides.
"I was a state contractor for four years," says Siewe. "I couldn't make enough money to pay my bills. So I decided to become a full-time python hunting guide in January." She averages three hunts per week.
Siewe's biggest catch so far was a 17-foot-3-inch monster that she killed in July 2021. Two years later, Kimmel slew a 16-foot-long female and was surprised to find over 60 eggs inside her. Of the 7,330 pythons killed by SFWMD contractors since March 2017, only 651 (9 percent) have been 10 feet or longer. (In July, 22-year-old amateur python hunter Jake Waleri captured a world record 19-foot Burmese python at Big Cypress National Preserve.)
The cadre of around 100 contracted snake hunters earn between $13 and $18 hourly for up to 10 hours a day, plus an incentive payment of $50 for each python measuring up to 4 feet and another $25 for each foot measured above 4 feet. Hunters also get paid $200 for each verified active python nest they remove.
Both Kimmel and Siewe not only earn cash as python hunt guides but also from selling items—Apple Watch bands, bi-fold wallets—made of python leather. "The thing I like as a guide is that I get to take people out and teach them about the problems that the pythons are causing," says Siewe. "They get a chance to help save Florida's ecosystems. It's a really cool thing that I get to do." Private guides like Siewe are clearly an important supplement to state-contracted hunting.
At the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), the Python Action Team Removing Invasive Constrictors (PATRIC) program pays the same fees to its own contracted snake hunters. Since both programs were established in 2017, over 18,000 pythons have been caught and killed; contracted snake hunters have been responsible for the majority of the catches.
But this has barely made a dent in Florida's python population.
Besides contracting with professional snake hunters, the FWC launched its now annual Florida Python Challenge in 2013. During that first four-week challenge, the snake hunters competed to capture and kill as many pythons as possible. Then as now, contestants paid a $25 fee and took an online training course on how to safely capture and humanely kill the serpents.
In that first contest, the grand prize was $1,500 for the most number of snakes killed and $1,000 for the longest one. That year, the roughly 1,600 contestants managed to bag just 68 pythons. In the 2022 challenge, by contrast, 19-year-old Matthew Concepcion beat nearly 1,000 competitors and won a $10,000 grand prize by capturing 28 pythons; the contest as a whole killed 231 of the snakes. The prize money is now supplied by private foundations and companies.
The 2023 challenge, which ran August 4–13 this year, had 1,050 participants. This batch of contestants didn't do quite as well as 2022's—they nabbed 209 of the reptiles, with champion Paul Hobbs netting 20 of them—but they landed in the same general vicinity.
Anyone may kill a Burmese python at any time on private land and on certain listed FWC-managed lands. There is no need for a license, nor is there a bag limit. But the FWC does not offer any compensation for pythons except to contracted hunters or during the Florida Python Challenge.
Could bounties produce a "cobra effect"? The British colonial government in India once offered sufficiently high bounties for dead cobras that it perversely incentivized enterprising residents to breed cobras at home. Any such tales about illicit python ranching in Florida are unlikely to be true. For one thing, it costs $100–$200 to feed a hatchling python enough to grow it to four or five feet in a year. The python hunters would get only $50 to $75 for such a snake.
Why kill these beautiful reptiles? "Burmese pythons in southern Florida represent one of the most intractable invasive-species management issues across the globe," according to a January 2023 analysis by U.S. Geological Survey population ecologist Jacquelyn Guzy and her team of researchers. The number of Burmese pythons now living in the Greater Everglades Ecosystem could be anywhere from 150,000 to a million very hungry snakes. (Ironically, the Burmese python is assessed as "vulnerable" on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species—populations in its Asian home ranges had declined during the prior 10 years by 30 percent when it was last evaluated in 2011.)
Burmese pythons were likely established in southern Florida through accidental and intentional releases by pet owners who became overwhelmed with taking care of their 8- to 12-foot-long reptiles. (The animal's owners are generally advised to "always have a second person present when handling or feeding pythons longer than 8 feet. It doesn't take long for a full-grown Burmese python to overpower a person.") While the first Burmese python identified in the Everglades was roadkill way back in 1979, wildlife officials became aware they were breeding in the swamps of South Florida in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
As apex predators, Burmese pythons are ambush hunters; they have ravaged mid-sized mammal populations in the Everglades. A 2012 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study found that populations of raccoons had dropped 99.3 percent, opossums 98.9 percent, and bobcats 87.5 percent since 1997. Marsh rabbits, cottontail rabbits, and foxes had effectively disappeared.
In a 2022 article for the journal Biological Conservation, biologists Alexander Pyron and Arne Mooers pointed out that the snakes' prey are "among the most widespread and abundant and so secure species in North America." So why, they ask, should we worry so much about their declines in the relatively small Everglades region? Pyron and Mooers acknowledge that pythons may also be having an impact on rare Everglades denizens that are difficult to observe. The constrictors also eat amphibians, alligators, white-tailed deer, wild pigs, birds, and other snakes.
The news for native species from the Everglades is not all dire. In a 2023 report for the U.S. Geological Survey, biologist Andrea Currylow and her colleagues cite evidence that some "natives bite back." Specifically, alligators, cottonmouth and indigo snakes, bobcats, and bears have been detected preying on juvenile Burmese pythons. "Although much more work is needed," they write, "our observations contribute to limited but growing indications of native species' resilience in southern Florida's Greater Everglades Ecosystem."
Guzy's team notes that the "unique combination of inaccessible habitat with the cryptic and resilient nature of pythons that do very well in the subtropical environment of southern Florida" renders them "extremely difficult to detect." In other words, it's hard to find well-camouflaged snakes in a roadless swamp. "The detection capacity for pythons is very low. I've seen estimates of 100 to 1,000 other pythons for every one python we see—1,000 being the extreme high end," Everglades Foundation Chief Science Officer Steve Davis told Newsweek in 2022.
Besides contracting with snake killers and holding the annual python roundup, researchers have tried using dogs to sniff them out, using "scout" snakes carrying radio transmitters to betray their fellows during breeding season, and testing various traps. All these methods are expensive and labor-intensive, and they have resulted in few, if any, captures. Guzy and company conclude that eradicating the snake from the area "is not possible with any existing tools, whether applied singly or in combination."
So what might work to eradicate Burmese pythons from Florida? Guzy's team suggests that genetic biocontrol using gene drives could be deployed in the future. Genes normally have a 50–50 chance of being inherited, but using gene drive systems increases the chances of inheriting targeted bioengineered genes to nearly 100 percent. Specifically, the researchers suggest targeting and destroying the female-determining X chromosome during spermatogenesis. As bioengineered male snakes interbreed with wild females, only male pythons would be born, leading ultimately to population collapse. In 2019, a team of biologists at the University of Georgia validated this process for reptiles by installing gene drives into brown anole lizards.
Until then, the Python Cowboy and Python Huntress and their clients will have plenty of snakes to pursue.
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In addition to the "Cobra Effect" is the fact that bounties tend to bring in the easiest animals to find, leaving the smarter and more elusive to breed. Still with the situation the way it is it all methods are necessary. Battles against invasives usually are never won but hopefully taken to a stalemate that holds the invasive in check.
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Snake hunters have skin in the game.
How often do you think they get “Is that like a gay porn thing?” or “Aren’t we all.” when someone asks them what they do and they reply “Python Cowboy/Huntress”.
You speak with forked tongue.
That’s cold blooded.
They would kill more, but the rules are too constrictive.
Yet another "crushing" blow to the Everglades ecosystem
The problem is that humans are lazy. Many attempts have been made to ensure certain invasive species do not spread are met with failure after failure.
The spread of the Zebra Mussel in the Great lakes and further into Michigan's inland waterways has change the entire ecosystem. Now the threat of the Silver Carp that has invaded the Mississippi and other rivers is now threatening the Great Lakes, all because of the stupidity of humans.
The Dutch elm disease is one of the worst invasive events ever.
In what way has the "change" in "the entire ecosystem" harmed you or even affected you in any way? Until you can explain that to us, I couldn't care less whether invasive species change entire ecosystems.
At what point does an invasive species become a native species? Every living thing has ancestors somewhere else. Not trying to belittle the current problem. Just saying that on a long enough timeline...
Case in point: horses
They originated in the Western Hemisphere, populated the globe, and then died out here.
Much more recently they were reintroduced by colonialists with names like Ponce de Leon and Cortez and de Soto.
Now they are emblematic of the West, and no one wants to eradicate them, because they are magnificent animals.
Can we insert a metaphor about invasive human (sub)species?
Homo sapiens californiensis?
Like Encino Man?
No mention of the benefits of the python food trucks?
Not enough immigrants (yet).
-or-
Hard to get fresh python in New York and San Francisco.
Tastes like chicken.
They are too small scale.
Big enough to get your thumb on.
Left out of the discussion – as usual – is that ecology is not a static process. Although pythons may be an “invasive” species, almost all species, including humans, are invasive. What they usually mean by this is that the species was RECENTLY introduced into a new habitat and caused sudden, dramatic changes in the ecological balance. When the new species has dramatically reduced populations of raccoons and other prey, there won’t be enough food to sustain the large population of pythons and they will, in their turn, decline. Since it’s impossible to eradicate them, and since there is no particular reason to favor raccoons and ‘possums over pythons, why not leave it well enough alone? But I suspect that self-important officials and environmental drama queens will not do that … sigh …
Something also not mentioned in the article is that pythons are native to places that don’t get cold. So unlike snakes native to the US, they don’t go into burrows and/or congregate when it gets chilly. Because of this it only takes a few good frosts to ravage the python population. That’s why their range in this country is limited to southern Florida.
I lived in Jacksonville Florida in the 80's. In 88 there were dogs and cats missing from the trailer park where I lived. It was found that a 16 foot Burmese Python was eating them like popcorn. I watched as four Fish and Game people tried to pull it out from underneath a trailer. Cold weather didn't deter that snake. Now I live North of Pittsburgh and they are finding alligators in the rivers.
So the Southern reptiles are accomplishing what the esteemed General Lee could not.
The problem with simply accepting an invasive species is that a lot of damage can be done before natural processes begin to take effects. It is hard to be sympathetic to racoons and possums, but they have a natural place and what happens when they are gone. The natural predators to these animals may move to pets or livestock. Government naturalist aren't just self important official, they have a hard job maintain environments that people want.
Plus these snakes may prey on people's pets or even young children.
People want cute animals, like deer and horses and squirrels.
Rats and pythons need not apply.
Tell that to the Brits who are pissy about an invasion of gray squirrels from North America pushing out their native red squirrels.
Nobody likes tree rats. They squawk about Section 230, conducting genocide, minor touching, and Stormy Daniels.
I don't know about leaving them alone but I generally agree with you. As the dominant species humans can protect themselves from "invasive" species that are a threat. Or try to. But with or without us the world keeps on turning. It's like the fantasy of controlling the climate. The climate doesn't give a shit about us. And neither do the pythons.
When I was a kid I thought the “balance of nature” was some mystical force making sure we had the right number of each kind of animal.
Now that I’m older I realize that if there are too many of one kind of animal, they die off from disease and starvation. A healthy number of predators keep populations “balanced” by killing and eating the excess. If humans kill off the predators to protect domesticated live stock, wild ungulates multiply so quickly you start running into them on highways and airport runways.
“Wild Ungulates” sounds like a cool band name though.
Meet Florida's Python Bounty Hunters
Last time a country tried a bounty hunting program for snakes, people ended up breeding the snakes...
You should try reading the articles.
Looks like someone already thought of that, and in a lot more depth than you.
Thanks for confirming that reading the article would have been pointless. I'll leave it to you to figure out why the reasoning in the article is nonsense.
What's wrong with the reasoning? If it costs more to raise a python than you'd get from the python bounty, then how does the bounty encourage breading pythons? The article points out that the cobra bounty was "sufficiently high" enough to encourage breading cobras in India.
If it costs more to raise a python than you’d get from the python bounty, then how does the bounty encourage breading pythons?
If pythons required hundreds of dollars to grow up, Florida wouldn't have a python problem. Obviously, they do just fine on their own. Their numbers are mainly kept in check through predation on their young.
If you want lots of pythons, all you really need to do is give baby pythons a space that has access to food and is relatively safe from predators; a pond and netting are probably enough.
But Fiona has assured us that immigrants are an unmitigated blessing.
I guess the pythons have not worked out at the Koch factories.
More immigrant hatred.
Then I better stay out of Florida with my pythons.
*flexes noodly biceps*
That's right. There was a pair of devastating pythons that came out of Florida back in the 80s.
Ah, yes. The days of Sergeant Slaughter and the Iron Sheikh.
Sgt. Slaughter’s finisher was the cobra clutch.
My python boot is too tight...
Fuck Nikki Haley.
Wrong snake.
My bad. Wrong thread. But still relevant.
Not even with YOUR python.
How legal is it in Florida to hunt with thermal scopes? Sounds like an ideal way to go about culling them.
Cold blooded animals are not the easiest thing for thermal imaging.
I see a business opportunity here. Why not a python flying circus?
You know who else is an invasive species in the Western Hemisphere?
Pokemon?
And just like the wily python there's no way to catch em all.
People are so stupid I can't stand it.
Well if no one else is going to say it, ahem, I have had it with these motherfucking snakes in this motherfucking swamp!
Python princess in the photo has zombie eyes.
The problem with python food trucks is finding space for 20 feet of glowing charcoal and 19 foot satay skewers.
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