How Conservation Controls Invasive Species

Conservation controls invasive species by trying to stop new introductions first, then finding new populations early, responding quickly, and managing established populations with methods that fit the animal, habitat, law, and risk. The work can include inspections, public reporting, monitoring, barriers, targeted removal, habitat restoration, and long-term suppression. It is rarely as simple as “remove … Read more

Burmese Pythons in Florida

Burmese Pythons in Florida featured image

Burmese pythons in Florida are large, nonvenomous constrictor snakes that have become established in South Florida, especially in and around the Greater Everglades ecosystem. They are invasive there because they are not native to Florida, can reproduce in the wild, and prey on native animals in a fragile wetland system. The Florida Fish and Wildlife … Read more

Invasive Animals in the US

Invasive animals in the US are non-native animals that establish populations and cause, or are likely to cause, ecological, economic, agricultural, or health-related harm. Some are large and obvious, such as feral pigs tearing up wetlands and farms. Others are small or easy to overlook, such as zebra mussels covering native mussels and water infrastructure. … Read more

Invasive Animals: How Non-Native Species Change Ecosystems

Invasive animals are non-native animals that establish in a place where they did not naturally live and cause, or are likely to cause, harm. That harm can affect native wildlife, habitats, farms, waterways, pets, people, or local economies. The key point is not that the animal is strange, aggressive, or from another country. The key … Read more