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A elephantine python — about as long as a shipping container — that was captured in Everglades National Park in Florida earlier this calendar month has now been euthanized , authorities say . The inadvertent finding of this Snake River shows how easily even huge python can persist hidden in Florida ’s sloughy Dixieland , experts say .

The huge python was hanging out on the side of a walking trail when a scientist scoop the fauna up . The creature weigh a whopping 133 lbs . ( 60 kilograms ) , and at 18 - feet , 3 - inches ( 5.6 meters ) , was almost as long as thelargest python ever capturedin the state of Florida , which was 18 - feet , 8 - inch long ( 5.7 beat ) . Just last year , another Brobdingnagian python , measure 18 - understructure , 2 - inches long ( 5.5 meters ) wasshot and killed in the Everglades .

The giant python.

Interns practiced handling the giant python before it was euthanized and dissected by researchers.

" The universe is established and invasive in Florida , and probably all the Burmese python we find today were born in the natural state in Florida , " said Bryan Falk , a biologist who studies encroaching species with the United States Geological Survey(USGS ) at Everglades National Park . But despite endeavor to fight the rise universe of encroaching snakes , the reptiles are still thrive .

Part of the trouble is that even the largest Burmese pythons are " inscrutable in nature " and " amazingly difficult to find , " Falk said .

Burmese python are native to Southeast Asia , and only established a bridgehead in the Florida ecosystem after they were released into the wild by ( or head for the hills from ) pet possessor and breeders , Falk tell Live Science in an email . [ Photos : Giant Pythons Invade Everglades ]

A Burmese python in Florida hangs from a tree branch at dusk.

Some of the pythons now slithering through the Everglades may also have arrived there after Hurricane Andrew , which whip through Florida in 1992 and destroyed facilities that once housed these alien animals , according to Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission . The immense snake in the grass thrive in swamp where they survive using their keen hunt acquirement — grabbing pocket-sized animals with their teeth and then constricting ( lento embrace ) the prey with their vast bodies . In Florida , the pythons prey on about 40 species of mammal and bird , and late declines in local beast population have been attributed to the thirsty snakes , said Falk .

Some scientists believe the snakes pose a terror to certain endangered or vulnerable species , including the Key Largo woodrat and the round - go after musquash , according to a report by the USGS . But not even the Everglades ' most fearsome aboriginal predator , the American alligator , is safe from the python ’s grip — pythons have been eff to eat these vast reptiles , Falk said .

Since python have no know predators in the swamps , many scientist believe it should be up to humans to keep the serpent ’s turn in check .

a royal python curled around a branch in the jungle

" We sometimes use the metaphor of an crude oil spill to delineate the management of invading species .   The first footprint is to stop the spill , and there are now both Union and state laws that regularise ownership of Burmese python and other big constricting snake mintage , " Falk said . " The second step is to clean house up the spill , and — along with a large number of cooperators — we are undertaking inquiry to learn how to easily do that . "

Part of the " cleaning " effort involves capturing and killing these snake . The jumbo specimen get this calendar month was " humanely euthanized " in accordance with USGS protocol , Katie Corrigan , Everglades public entropy military officer , tell Live Science in an e-mail .

Before the snake was euthanized , interns work with the USGS on invasive mintage control apply handling the reptile , which was significantly enceinte than most pythons that parkland staff commonly encounter , Corrigan said .

A photograph of a newly discovered mosasaur fossil in a human hand.

Although their size is intimidating , these snakes posevery fiddling threat to human race , Falk said .

As with all pythons captured in Everglades National Park , scientists perform a necropsy ( animal autopsy ) after the Hydra ’s death . The necropsy confirm that the python was a female , and showed that the animal had not reproduce so far this season . Studying the interior of these animals helps scientists well understand the creatures and how they interact with their surroundings , Falk said .

For example , in 2012 , researcher cut opened a 17 - foot , 7 - inch ( 5.3 m ) long Burmese python and found an staggering 87 eggs within . By studying egg - transmit females , scientist desire to sympathise how mass might control the develop python universe , Kenneth Krysko , a herpetologist with the Florida Museum of Natural History , tell Live Science in 2012 .

Man stands holding a massive rat.

The snake found this month was n’t carrying any eggs , however , so scientist were n’t able-bodied to harvest any new information about the species ' generative habits . The fauna ’s stomach was also empty , according to the USGS .

Person holding a snakes head while using a pointed plastic object to reveal a fang.

a closeup of a fossil

This photo does NOT show the rattlesnakes under the California home. Here, four gravid timber rattlesnakes basking at rookery area near their den.

A golden tree snake (Chrysopelea ornata) is eating a butterfly lizard (Leiolepis belliana).

Florida snake

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Big Burmese python

Coiled Timber Rattlesnake, Crotalus horridus

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