U.S. government bombs Guam with frozen mice to kill snakes

Valvalis

THE BROODWICH CANNOT BE DISASSEMBLED!!
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I wasn't sure where to put this, so here it is :ffs: :

U.S. government bombs Guam with frozen mice to kill snakes
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com
September 28, 2010

In a spectacularly creative effort to rid Guam of an invasive species, the US Department of Agriculture is planning to 'bomb' the island's rainforests with dead frozen mice laced with acetaminophen. The mice-bombs are meant to target the brown tree snake, an invasive species which has ravaged local wildlife, and angered local residents, since arriving in the 1940s.

While it might not seem difficult to purge an island of snakes, the snake's habit of dwelling high in the rainforest canopy has so far thwarted efforts to rid the island of the pest. The difficulty of reaching the snakes' habitat has led to the idea of mice-bombs as a possible solution.

Initially mice were tested with a variety of 'delivery systems' until researchers with the National Wildlife Researcher Center in Fort Collins, Colorado settled on a streamer attached to cardboard on which the mouse is affixed via glue. This contraption is meant to catch in the tree tops: perfectly positioning itself for hungry brown tree snakes. Researchers want to make certain the mice don't make it all the way to the ground where they could threaten local wildlife such as crabs and lizards.

The mice-bomb program is currently underway with Dan Vice, assistant state director of the US Department of Agriculture's Wildlife Services in the Pacific, telling Radio Australia that 250 poisoned mice have so far been dropped in a trial run. Researchers are now working to see if the preliminary mice-bombs worked.

An effective snake eradication result would deliver relief for the island's beleaguered native bird species—six of which have gone extinct since the brown tree snakes appeared. It might also cut bills for taxpayers: the brown tree snake costs $1-4 million dollars in direct damages and lost productivity per yer due mostly to snaked-caused power outages, which occur at a rate of roughly one every three days.

http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0928-hance_micebombs.html
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What could possibly go wrong here? :ffs: Thoughts anyone?
 
This should really NOT be in spam, it's too good!

I did an entire presentation on this for my uni biology course last year, I was all hyped up when I read "Guam" and "snake" haha.

This seems extreme but I kind of support it. There's not a lot more that can be done. Between propaganda to "safely 'dispose' of the snakes" for the public, massively tight regulations on import and export, specified poisons, hunters and a dying food source, their numbers SHOULD be decreasing but they're not.

They get in all of the power supplies and cause something like 8 blackouts a year. They bite humans - though not toxic to humans (largely) they have caused a few cot deaths and a few neurological issues for newborns (as well as those who are highly allergic). The medicine doesn't come cheap either.

Wiping them out would save a helluva lot of money, manpower etc, as well as preserve the other species (both prey and competition).
 

Initially mice were tested with a variety of 'delivery systems' until researchers with the National Wildlife Researcher Center in Fort Collins, Colorado settled on a streamer attached to cardboard on which the mouse is affixed via glue.

This contraption is meant to catch in the tree tops: perfectly positioning itself for hungry brown tree snakes.

Researchers want to make certain the mice don't make it all the way to the ground where they could threaten local wildlife such as crabs and lizards.
WTF yeah right...thats not a certainty..they could end up killing other types of animals as well..snakes are a part of nature too imo...they cant do this..money talks again so it seems.

Those snakes wont get extinct, a percentage will always survive.
 
They're not trying to eradicate the entire species; just the ones that are not native to Guam and threaten the entire ecosystem there. They're a destructive invasive species.
 
It might sound like a ridiculous topic, but it does prompt legit discussion, as opposed to spam. :lew:

*Thread Moved to The Sleeping Forest*

I haven't read the topic fully yet, but I may add something to the topic at hand later on today when I have time. :hmmm:
 
That's stupid. I don't think we should interfere with the flow of nature. (Does that make me sound odd?) If birds are gonna get killed, they're gonna get killed. I think we can raise these endangered species in captivity. It's not ideal, but it's worse to kill a whole species. Sorry, but I just don't consider it right for humans to intervene with nature.
 
That's stupid. I don't think we should interfere with the flow of nature. (Does that make me sound odd?) If birds are gonna get killed, they're gonna get killed. I think we can raise these endangered species in captivity. It's not ideal, but it's worse to kill a whole species. Sorry, but I just don't consider it right for humans to intervene with nature.
The error in your argument here is you assume these snakes got here naturally. They didn't - they are an invasive species, meaning they are not native to the area and were likely brought over on a man-made vessel. If they were native, they would fit into the local ecosystem instead of eradicating it.

The same is true of fire ants in North America. they have reduced the numbers of more native ants and have had adverse affects on wildlife in the southern states, not to mention they're frigging everywhere, cause painful bites and their poison burns like hell. They got out of the South American rainforests on dirt piles stuck to tractors and other equipment that wasn't properly cleaned, shipped overseas in man-made ships. That isn't nature yo.
 
I see your point there. But shouldn't some sort of attempt be made to extract them. I'm aware how quickly animals can multiply, but surely some should be returned to their natural habitat. I know they can't all be returned, but it sort of seems like the easy way out. :wacky:
 
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