Hawaii will not be tolerant in the case of snakes being dropped at the islands, and the recent discovery (and immediate killing) of a gopher snake is a living proof.
The state Department of Agriculture introduced Monday that the 20-inch nonvenomous snake was present in a transport container that arrived in Molokai from California.
All snakes are thought-about invasive in Hawaii. The gopher snake was found because the container was being unloaded at a Kaunankakai ironmongery shop.
Police have been notified and an officer arrived and killed the reptile with a pellet gun. A search of the encompassing space didn’t uncover different snakes.
A Hawaii News Now story in regards to the discovery generated anger amongst social media followers who imagine the snake might have been spared.
“They killed a nonvenomous snake [that] could’ve went to the zoo or back to California?” one commenter requested through Instagram.
“Don’t hurt it! Just get it back to where it belongs,” one other person wrote. “Little guy probably scared.”
If giant snakes have been to achieve a foothold on islands in Hawaii, with out pure predators, they’d jeopardize native wildlife.
The state defines invasive species as any animal that’s “1) harmful to the environment, economy, and/or human health, and 2) not native to Hawaii (i.e., species that were introduced by human assistance rather than by their own means of introduction).”
The Hawaii Invasive Species Council, on its web site, factors to the brown tree snake decimating native hen populations in Guam after establishing themselves there.
The Hawaii Department of Agriculture acknowledged in a information launch that gopher snakes can measure to about 7 ft. The prey on small rodents, rabbits, lizards, and different small critters.
It’s unlawful to own any sort of snake in Hawaii.
Story initially appeared on For The Win