Anonymous wrote:Question: with all the alligators/crocodiles, why aren't they eating all the pythons?
Anonymous wrote:It baffles my mind how people can graduate school with zero understanding of ecology.
When you wipe out a species, there are huge effects throughout the entire ecosystem. Alligators are apex predators, and without them, mammal populations would skyrocket. These mammals prey on birds, so bird populations would crash. Fewer birds means WAY more bugs.
Do you want to live in a world of just bugs and rats? I don’t.
And don’t say we’d only remove alligators from where humans are; humans are literally everywhere. And alligators have been hunted to near extinction before; they were listened as endangered in the 1960s.
Learn to live with wildlife, people. It’s not nearly as dangerous as you think. I live in the Southwest, and I promise you I pass a rattlesnake every time I go on a walk. There are scorpions in my home. I feel lucky AF when I find a tarantula. There’s zero doubt in my mind I’ve passed mountain lions before, I just didn’t see them.
It’s so sad to me that people are so afraid of nature and so ignorant of how to interact with nature safely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely terrified of alligators 🐊 which is why I could NEVER call Florida home.
I went there only once to visit Disneyworld and two weeks later a little boy was killed by one at a resort we stayed next to.
Being a non-native, I could see myself allowing my child to be in the water there since I wouldn’t think an alligator would reside in such a resort atmosphere.
Plus during that time the humidity was so unbearable - I would have put my feet into the water to cool off.
I live in Florida and you can’t tell me there weren’t MULTIPLE signs around that pond warning people of alligators. The parents probably ignored them because they were dumb and figured if there was one in the water they would see it. Not factoring that they are fast and move under water. There are signs around the ponds at my local Publix warning of alligators.
Anonymous wrote:It baffles my mind how people can graduate school with zero understanding of ecology.
When you wipe out a species, there are huge effects throughout the entire ecosystem. Alligators are apex predators, and without them, mammal populations would skyrocket. These mammals prey on birds, so bird populations would crash. Fewer birds means WAY more bugs.
Do you want to live in a world of just bugs and rats? I don’t.
And don’t say we’d only remove alligators from where humans are; humans are literally everywhere. And alligators have been hunted to near extinction before; they were listened as endangered in the 1960s.
Learn to live with wildlife, people. It’s not nearly as dangerous as you think. I live in the Southwest, and I promise you I pass a rattlesnake every time I go on a walk. There are scorpions in my home. I feel lucky AF when I find a tarantula. There’s zero doubt in my mind I’ve passed mountain lions before, I just didn’t see them.
It’s so sad to me that people are so afraid of nature and so ignorant of how to interact with nature safely.
Anonymous wrote:It baffles my mind how people can graduate school with zero understanding of ecology.
When you wipe out a species, there are huge effects throughout the entire ecosystem. Alligators are apex predators, and without them, mammal populations would skyrocket. These mammals prey on birds, so bird populations would crash. Fewer birds means WAY more bugs.
Do you want to live in a world of just bugs and rats? I don’t.
And don’t say we’d only remove alligators from where humans are; humans are literally everywhere. And alligators have been hunted to near extinction before; they were listened as endangered in the 1960s.
Learn to live with wildlife, people. It’s not nearly as dangerous as you think. I live in the Southwest, and I promise you I pass a rattlesnake every time I go on a walk. There are scorpions in my home. I feel lucky AF when I find a tarantula. There’s zero doubt in my mind I’ve passed mountain lions before, I just didn’t see them.
It’s so sad to me that people are so afraid of nature and so ignorant of how to interact with nature safely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of gators in the SE US and there are a lot of people. Given the numbers of both, not that many folks are harmed by alligators every year.
My parents live in a golf community in the south so there are gators quite often. At least once a year they send me a photo of an alligator wandering down their street, or multiple gators on the golf course. What I do find mystifying are the HOAs or community regulations that limit yard-fencing. As a result, houses back up to these ponds and you can't just send your kids outside to play because you can't be certain a gator hasn't wandered into your yard.
I would love that. It would prevent people with kids from moving into the neighborhood. I'd much rather open my door and see an alligator than hear some child screaming from next door.
Typical southern attitude of somehow wanting to live apart from society while also trying to control society.
I live in NY. No alligators here, but plenty of children. Alligators would have a lot of options.