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How do you actually catch a python?
How do you actually catch a python?
How do you actually catch a python?

The Misunderstood Python Hunters Saving the Everglades


Published:  Updated: 

Invasive pythons wreak havoc on Florida ecosystems, and each year the state Fish and Wildlife officials hold a competition for amateur and professional hunters to see who can round up the most reptiles


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Night had fallen over the Everglades, but Donna Kalil kept driving. She leaned out the window of her Ford Expedition听as it followed the rutted levee road听and peered across听the saw grass as far as the stark glare of her floodlights would reach. Kalil was determined to catch a Burmese python.

It was Saturday, January 11, the second听night of Florida鈥檚 , a ten-day state-sponsored hunting competition designed to raise awareness of the invasive species eating its way through the Everglades鈥 fragile ecosystem. The first Python Challenge, as the event used to be called, was held in 2013, and it brought in just 68 snakes. This year鈥檚 contest will ultimately net a total of 80. So far, Kalil, 57, a python elimination specialist for the South Florida Water Management District, had only caught one. Her pride as a professional python hunter was on the line.

Kalil scanned the grass more desperately, begging the darkness to give up the telltale shimmer of scales. She took her foot off the brake, and the truck sped up. She listened for the spotters who stood on the python perch, a platform atop Kalil鈥檚 SUV听equipped with floodlights and padded handrails that hunters can hold on to as they search for hints of their prey. All she heard from above was weary silence. The chirp and click of the glades鈥櫶齨ight chorus rose up to fill the void.

It was after 7听P.M. and time to head in. Kalil turned around and started for the main road. But a听minute away from their exit, her daughter, Deanna, 29, called out from the roof. She wasn鈥檛 sure鈥攜ou can never be sure in python hunting, until the snake is in your grasp鈥攂ut she thought she saw something move in the water. Kalil stopped the truck, and they shined high-powered flashlights over a听canal. The beams skimmed, murky and yellow, over the black water, before lighting on a familiar glimmer.

The sparkling tan and brown puzzle-piece pattern curved and dipped out of the light. Before any of the hunters could speak, Kevin Pavlidis, 23, a part-time alligator wrestler and python hunter who is a family friend of the Kalils, dove into the water with a splash. His cowboy hat floated on the surface in his wake. Kalil鈥檚 flashlight beam darted back and forth over the water to find him, and a moment later, Pavlidis emerged听from the depths with a gasp, raising the captured snake over his head like a trophy. He laughed. But the celebration was short-lived.

Transporting pythons live without a permit is illegal in Florida, but as a python elimination specialist, Kalil can bring snakes in live because she works for the state. Since both amateur hunters and professionals like herself compete in the Python Bowl, the event听rules state that captured pythons must be killed humanely before they鈥檙e brought into game checkpoints.听According to Kalil, the most humane way to kill a python is with a shot听to the brain or blunt-force trauma to the head.

With the triumph of the moment waning, Pavlidis handed the python over to Kalil. She grasped the snake behind its听head, and it squirmed, twitching back and forth. Fort Lauderdale鈥檚 lights glowed on the horizon. Frogs croaked in the grass, and tiny flecks of stars hovered in the vast dome of the Everglades sky.

Kalil removed her glove and stroked the snake鈥檚 head with her bare finger. Its scales were smooth and cool. Burmese pythons are beautiful creatures. Kalil has always loved them and snakes in general. She even has a pet ball python named Benny that she found abandoned in the glades.

Stopping the Burmese pythons and their takeover of the Everglades is an ecological trolley听problem: To save the Everglades and all of the animals in it, could Kalil kill the invasive snakes she loved? At the end of the day, she would take out her .22 pistol from its holster and do what she had to do.

Professional python hunter Donna Kalil drives along a levee while her daughter, Deanna, and Kevin Pavlidis, a family friend, look for snakes from the perch atop Kalil鈥檚 SUV.
Professional python hunter Donna Kalil drives along a levee while her daughter, Deanna, and Kevin Pavlidis, a family friend, look for snakes from the perch atop Kalil鈥檚 SUV. (Rebecca Renner)

It was Wednesday, January 15, and Daniel Moniz, 26, was sweating. He had been biking a levee near theTamiami Trail on the Miccosukee Indian Reservationwith his sister since 9 A.M. So far听they had ridden 18 miles, but they hadn鈥檛 seen a single gleam of scales in the grass. With 13 miles left to go and the sun blazing down, Moniz and his sister听slowed to a crawl. He had to remind himself what he was doing this for.

Moniz, with his curly, light-brown hair gathered into a ponytail and his red-tinged beard framing an affable smile, doesn鈥檛 look like a seasoned hunter, but he鈥檚 a former winner of the Python Challenge. He听won the event in 2016 by capturing 13 snakes and taking听the prize for the longest, a massive 13.7-foot catch. (听ever captured in the Everglades, however, was more than 18听feet long and weighed 98听pounds.)

This time听there was more at stake than just bragging rights. Back home in Lebanon, Ohio, he ran a cleaning service with his wife. Their baby was less than a year old. He risked the expensive trip for a chance at reprising his former glory, trying听to defray the costs with crowdfunding, but his GoFundMe fell short of its goal by more than $1,000. Not one to turn back from a challenge, Moniz flew to Florida anyway. Now he had to recoup his losses by catching pythons.

The sparkling tan and brown puzzle-piece pattern curved and dipped out of the light. Before any of the hunters could speak, Kevin Pavlidis, 23, dove into the water with a splash.

In the Python Challenge, the state鈥檚 professional python elimination specialists competed alongside other entrants for a chance at the purse. The Python Bowl now breaks participants into two categories: one for professional hunters from the South Florida Water Management District program and听Florida Fish and Wildlife, and a separate category for more than 500 鈥渞ookies鈥 like Moniz, explained Randy Smith, a spokesman for the water management district. There are prizes for both groups.

Both pro and rookie participants are competing for one of two ATVs up for grabs, as well as $2,000 cash for the longest and heaviest snakes. Regardless of who wins, the state pays bounties to pros for every captured snake: $50 for the first four feet of snake, and then $25 for every additional foot. Many hunters sell the python hides, while others eat their catch听after testing it for mercury. Moniz, who wasn鈥檛 eligible for the per-foot bounty, was banking on prize money.

With the heat wavering like a mirage over the levee, Moniz鈥檚 mind was becoming hazy. He didn鈥檛 see the python sunning in the grass. He might have missed it if his sister hadn鈥檛 shouted, grabbed him, and pointed. The snake stretched toward the shade where the grass met the tree line. It was four, maybe five feet long. The arrow-shaped head and the sparkling pattern of its hide identified it as a Burmese python.

Moniz jumped off his bicycle, and as he crept toward the snake, his sister pulled out her phone to record. Moniz snuck up on the snake from behind. Then, when he was within striking distance, he lunged, snatched听the python behind the head, and lifted it into the air. The snake writhed, but Moniz kept his grasp.

Beyond the confines of the Python Bowl, anyone can catch a Burmese python in South Florida, no hunting license, special permits, or training required. 鈥淚f it鈥檚 on public land, you would have to follow the regulations for that particular land,鈥 said听Carli Segelson, a spokesperson for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC). 鈥淪o听if it鈥檚 during a time when you know guns aren鈥檛 allowed, you wouldn鈥檛 be able to use a gun. And if it鈥檚 on private land, then you would need the landowner鈥檚 permission.鈥

But how do you actually catch a python? Moniz focuses on speed and finesse. Kalil has a similarly restrained style, but not every hunter is so subtle. Kalil has found more than one python shot and left with a bullet wound.

鈥淔or me, looking for snakes is a lifestyle,鈥 said听Moniz. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I do all the time, no matter where I am.听That鈥檚 just what I do. So听I know how to look for snakes. I know how to spot snakes. And I think that gives me an advantage, because I know what I鈥檓 looking for. Whereas most people who come out here have no idea.鈥

鈥淧ossibly the defining feature of a python is how secretive and cryptic they are,鈥 explained听Robert Reed, chief of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) invasive species science branch. 鈥淚f you have a python in eight inches of water, three feet in front of you, you may not detect that snake, and we鈥檝e done a lot of research suggesting that, even when there are pythons available for detection near someone, your chances of finding that individual may be less than 1听percent.鈥

Moniz鈥檚听tactics sometimes give him an advantage over the pros, he said. 鈥淭hey drive this road once,鈥 he said,听referring to the levee. 鈥淟ike, that鈥檚 about all they鈥檒l do a day, and a couple of them might drive it twice. But I鈥檓 out here, I鈥檓 biking 70-plus miles a day.鈥 Riding a bicycle brings Moniz closer to the ground. He said听he covers a greater听distance听and sees things in the grass that others might miss from a moving vehicle. 鈥淭he whole time, I鈥檓 going faster on my bike than they鈥檙e going in their trucks. So I鈥檓 passing them all day long as they鈥檙e just driving at three or four miles per hour.鈥

After four days, the event鈥檚 561 entrants had brought in fewer than 30 total snakes. Moniz had caught two, the same number as Kalil and her team. 鈥淔rom what I hear, the most that any pro has is four,鈥 Moniz added, his nonchalant tone nonetheless betraying a tinge of pride and a competitive nature.

With such narrow margins, Moniz still had hopes that he could win again.听鈥淚 could be right up there with the pros,鈥 he said.

Daniel Moniz cruises the levees on his bike, which he says gives him an advantage in spotting signs of pythons hiding in the grass that others in a moving car could easily miss.
Daniel Moniz cruises the levees on his bike, which he says gives him an advantage in spotting signs of pythons hiding in the grass that others in a moving car could easily miss. (Rebecca Renner)

If pythons are the snake that ate the Everglades, the apocryphal legend of their takeover begins with an appropriately cinematic opening scene. In 1992, Hurricane Andrew plowed into the state, killing 65听people and leveling thousands of homes, as well as鈥攕o the story goes鈥攁 Burmese python breeding facility.

The reality of their introduction to the area may be less exciting. 鈥淭he scientific thinking, I believe, is that they were probably animals that were discarded by pet owners deep down into the Everglades,鈥 said听Steve Johnson, an associate professor of wildlife ecology and conservation at the University of Florida.

The population of Burmese pythons in the Everglades is impossible to measure with much accuracy. Since the first reported sighting of one in the wild in Florida听in 1979, their numbers have exploded. 听indicate there could be tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of them in South Florida. Regardless of their actual population size, their impact is clear: pythons have decimated biodiversity in the area. The hungry snakes will consume almost any animal in their path. They seize their prey using sharp, rear-facing fangs that are long enough to pierce a hunter鈥檚 arm. Then the snake coils around its victim, constricting the animal until it鈥檚 dead. Some hunters, to protect their lower legs from bites, wear camouflage-patterned snake gaiters, light armor that鈥檚 similar to shin guards worn by soccer players. But most go without, preferring intuition and quick reflexes over adding another layer of clothing to sweat through in the muggy glades.

To stem the tide of invasive species from the exotic-pet trade, the FWC holds that allow pet owners to surrender animals to the agency without penalty. Although most pets that get released into the glades don鈥檛 survive, some outlier species like the Burmese python become established in their new ecosystems.

In this case, 鈥渆stablished鈥 sounds like an understatement. Pythons have taken over. Everything else has become prey. Since 2003, rabbit populations have disappeared from USGS study areas. Foxes, raccoons, possums, bobcats, and other species are all but gone. Pythons devoured the mammals and have moved on to birds, other reptiles, and听possibly听fish. The snakes听can bring down animals as large as deer鈥攚hich can either struggle and tear themselves away听or become dinner鈥攁nd even alligators.

Scientists have long suspected that pythons were consuming whole populations of small mammals in the Everglades and have made efforts at estimating the听impacts. But exact population counts are impossible in such a vast wilderness. In a led by Robert McCleery at the University of Florida, researchers translocated marsh rabbits into an area of the Everglades inhabited by a large number of pythons. At first听the rabbits survived. Then temperatures began to rise, and with the warming weather, pythons slithered out of hiding and began to feast. In one year, they had eaten 77 percent of the rabbits.

Pythons may have even usurped alligators as the Everglades鈥 primary apex predator, a shift that could cause a trophic cascade. 鈥淚 found alligators in them,鈥 said Kalil. 鈥淚f they eat up all the birds that are here during the year, they鈥檒l just wait for the migratory birds to come in.鈥

Before long听they spotted a dark place in the grass鈥攑ossibly a burrow. It was scooped out of the embankment, where the short, weedy grass met a听head-high wall of reeds. Was a python hiding inside?

One widely known example of a trophic cascade is the case of gray wolves in Yellowstone National Park. The animals had been eradicated from the area in the 1920s. Over the next 70 years, the elk population boomed, devouring brush and trees, which caused听erosion and many plant species in the area to die off, which in turn affected small herbivores. The ripple effects reached every part of the Yellowstone ecosystem. The precipitous decline in Everglades biodiversity mirrors the events in Yellowstone, but unlike its Wyoming counterpart, which began to flourish again after the reintroduction of gray wolves in 1995, the python takeover has no end in sight.

鈥淓ven now听we don鈥檛 know how these changes in the mammal communities will translate into changes in the Everglades ecosystems over the coming years,鈥 said Reed.

Without human intervention, these losses could be irreversible. Hunts are the best solution at the moment, although the numbers of snakes killed represent just a tiny fraction of the pythons in the Everglades.

But Smith of Florida Fish and Wildlife said kill numbers aren鈥檛 the point. 鈥淭he key is really to get the word out as to the devastation that the python has caused in the Everglades,鈥 he said. That鈥檚 why the state rebranded the event to coincide with the Super Bowl, which was played in Miami this year. The FWC and the Super Bowl Host Committee made python-skin footballs for VIP Super Bowl guests and upped the competitive ante because they knew the Python Bowl would get people to talk: Look at those wacky Floridians at it again.

鈥淚t has a lot to do with public engagement, public awareness,鈥 Smith explained. For locals, that means encouraging public participation in Everglades wildlife conservation, not just spectatorship. For visitors, it听means treating the Everglades with respect. They鈥檙e not a swamp. They鈥檙e thriving ecosystems that need to be saved. With all the public attention, the FWC figured,听maybe onlookers would听see past the purposeful antics to the real problem at hand: whole species of animals are vanishing, and the Everglades may never be the same.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), on the other hand, , and it called on the Miami Super Bowl Host Committee and the FWC to cancel the 2020 Python Bowl, saying the competition glorified slaughter听and that the souvenir python-skin footballs 鈥渢rivialize the animals鈥 deaths.鈥

Rodney Barreto, chair of the host committee, found PETA鈥檚 protests strange, considering the animal-rights organization agrees that invasive species should be removed from the Everglades.

鈥淲e have great respect for these animals,鈥 Barreto said in a , 鈥渂ut they must be removed to give native animals a chance at survival.鈥

A Burmese Python, the snake that ate the Everglades
A Burmese Python, the snake that ate the Everglades (/)

Kalil, her daughter, and Pavlidis passed the next four days without finding another python, but they kept trying. On Wednesday afternoon, they set out into the glades about 35 miles northwestof Miami Beach.

The temperature hovered around 80 degrees, which can feel unforgiving in this听northeastern corner of the Everglades, where there鈥檚 little tree cover. Sunny conditions听would typically be prime for pythons, coaxing them out of hiding and听sending cold-blooded snakes to bask on the levee roads, where they would be easy prey.

Past the canal pump station by听Everglades Holiday Park, Kalil took a turn, driving by junglelike stands of palms and ferns, deep foliage hiding myriad secrets. With her spotters in place, she drove听onto the levee鈥檚 dirt road, an elevated path of rutted sand surrounded by saw grass plains as seemingly infinite as the ocean. It was easier to breathe out here. The air, pure and sweet as if filtered, felt soft in her lungs. Of course, Kalil was there to save the glades from the pythons鈥 insatiable hunger. But the search, immersion amid听nature鈥檚 wonders for hours on end, was a prize in itself.

Before long听they spotted a dark place in the grass鈥攑ossibly a burrow. It was scooped out of the embankment, where the short, weedy grass met a听head-high wall of reeds. Was a python hiding inside? Kalil parked and climbed down to find out.

Kalil could feel her luck rising with the afternoon heat. In her python-hide-embellished hat, she ducked through saw grass that rose up to her chin, parting thick tufts of stalks as Pavlidis followed. They reached the mouth of the burrow and hunched to look inside. Past the mouth of the hole, the sandy dirt gave way to shadows.

鈥淚鈥檓 not reaching in there,鈥 Kalil said. As if that was his cue, Pavlidis shrugged, got down on his knees, and shimmied into the hole. He groaned in disgust.

鈥淒id you find something?鈥 Deanna called.

鈥淵eah, ticks!鈥 Pavlidis raised his arm to display the blood-sucking dots, and she cringed.

After poking around in the grass, searching fruitlessly, Deanna and Pavlidis climbed back onto the python perch, and Kalil got into the driver鈥檚 seat and started the vehicle again. Pavlidis scanned听the landscape. Blond stubble speckled his cheeks under the shadow of his cowboy hat. 鈥淚 was always playing with reptiles,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s I got older, the reptiles got larger and more dangerous.鈥

From his vantage, Pavlidis scanned for breaks in the vegetation pattern. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e very rarely going to see the whole snake,鈥 he said. 鈥淢ost the time, you just see a piece of it sticking out of the bushes, and that鈥檚 enough to key you in to go down and grab it.鈥

Day after day, Moniz went out to听the glades to hunt, only to return without a catch. By Sunday, January 19, the last day of the competition, his expectations had dimmed. Consistently hot temperatures had caused the pythons to remain in the shade. In 2016, the nights had been colder, the days warmer. The difference in temperature had brought the snakes out to bask on the levees. Moniz was now sure he wouldn鈥檛 catch enough pythons to win the numbers game.

That morning听he parked at the end of the levee closest to the road. A cool听mist had settled. Ghostly cypress trees hovered beyond the earthbound clouds. The humidity was palpable against Moniz鈥檚 skin. He could catch another python. He knew he could. To claim victory for the longest or the heaviest python, he only needed to catch one鈥攁 big one.

Miles away, in an area where she hadn鈥檛 hunted before, Kalil and her brother, Dave Mucci, who was competing as an amateur, sped along the levee. Her crew had caught four听pythons so far. Rumor had it that the most any other crew had caught was six. With her luck the way it was鈥攎ore than half of her competition hunts had been unsuccessful鈥攕he assumed the听day would be just as unproductive. But no day on the glades felt like a waste, especially when she was with family.

The siblings听made a rushed course over the levee, wanting to move on to more tried hunting grounds. Kalil wasn鈥檛 expecting their haphazard scanning to bear fruit, but suddenly, Mucci pointed to a snake as they drove past it. Kalil put the truck in reverse. She saw it, too, out in the open, glistening against the sand.

Kalil and Mucci parked and scrambled to get out. Mucci lunged, but his shadow fell over the roadside, alerting the snake to danger before he could make the catch. The python bolted into the saw grass. Mucci and Kalil both gave chase. Mud squelched under their feet, and the saw grass blades flicked and cut at their faces. Mucci grabbed听the snake around the belly. Kalil gripped its head. The muscular python contorted in their grasp as they wrestled it up to the road.

Before bagging the snake, they measured her: 11 feet, long enough to win a prize, especially for a rookie.

鈥淵ou should take her,鈥 Kalil said to her brother. They had both touched the snake at the same time. They had brought her in together. Another catch on her tally might have put Kalil in the running to win the Python Bowl, but winning wouldn鈥檛 save the Everglades. So why not share?

鈥淭here鈥檚 only going to be one winner,鈥 Kalil said. 鈥淏ut if you鈥檙e in it to have fun, then you鈥檙e a winner. And I feel like I鈥檓 already winning. I鈥檓 having a great time.鈥

The precipitous decline in Everglades biodiversity mirrors the events in Yellowstone, but unlike its Wyoming counterpart, which began to flourish again after the reintroduction of gray wolves in 1995, the python takeover has no end in sight.

The next day at the weigh-in, back at the FWC headquarters, that for the heaviest snake caught by a rookie, netting Mucci $2,000, plus $750 for bringing听in the second-longest snake of the amateur catches. The longest, heaviest snake caught by a pro was 12 feet in length听and weighed 62 pounds.

The winning pro caught eight pythons during the contest, and the champion rookie bagged six. Neither of Moniz鈥檚 pythons landed him a place in the winners鈥 circle.

Most python hunters in the Everglades are misunderstood, said听Pavlidis, who is acutely aware of the fact that outsiders only see the clich茅s spread by reality TV shows like Python Hunters and Guardians of the Glades. On these programs, hunters become stock characters, and听some are听depicted as听wild rednecks on glory-seeking adventures rather than the conflicted conservationists many of them really are.

鈥淎 lot of people in the reptile community think that [python hunters] are people that hate snakes, and they鈥檙e just out there trying to kill them,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 like, no, that鈥檚 not all we are. I鈥檝e always loved them鈥攖hey鈥檙e beautiful. Nobody鈥檚 happy that we have to euthanize them.鈥

鈥淓very single snake we remove is one less snake eating our native wildlife,鈥 he continued. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all environmentalists. We鈥檙e all conservationists.听And we all like snakes. But we understand the bigger issue at hand. Conservation is not all rainbows and butterflies. There鈥檚 a lot of tough decisions that have to be made. You have to keep your eyes on the bigger picture.鈥