Florida deploys robotic rabbits to remove invasive pythons from Everglades


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Summary

The effort

Florida officials have deployed robotic rabbits to lure invasive pythons out of hiding and remove them from the Everglades.

The problem

Pythons are an invasive species that have harmed the South Florida ecosystem.

Bounty hunters

Officials have also hired bounty hunters to help wildlife experts remove the pythons.


Full story

Florida officials have deployed an innovative tool to fight against invasive pythons in the Everglades. They’re now using remote-controlled robotic rabbits to lure pythons out of hiding and remove them from the Everglades ecosystem through euthanization.

As of 2000, pythons have established a breeding population across South Florida, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The USGS reports that people brought approximately 180,000 Burmese pythons into the United States between 1975 and 2018, releasing them into the wild either accidentally or intentionally. The snakes are now present across more than 1,000 square miles in South Florida.

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Harm to native animals

The snakes wreaked havoc on the region’s ecosystem, killing off native species like foxes, opossums, raccoons and eliminating food sources for panthers, bobcats and other native predators. According to a study in 2012, the raccoon population in Florida has seen a 99.3% decline since 1997, while opossums experienced a 98.9% decline and bobcats saw an 87.5% decline. Meanwhile, a 2015 study states predators have essentially eradicated marsh rabbits, cottontail rabbits and foxes.

Pythons are notoriously difficult to detect and capture. That’s why scientists from the South Florida Water Management District and the University of Florida are working together to use robotic rabbit decoys as one method to remove the pythons from an environment they were never meant to inhabit. 

Florida officials say the robots produce a heat signature and scent that attract the snakes. The cameras on the robotic bunnies actively monitor pythons and alert officials when they detect a snake. Once alerted, the management district dispatches an official to the area, where they permanently remove the python. Researchers have deployed 40 of the waterproof, solar-powered rabbits to the area. 

Other hunting efforts

This isn’t the first effort by snake hunters to eliminate the species. In 2020, officials sent out snake-sniffing detector K9s to capture pythons in South Florida.

Additionally, in 2022, University of Florida scientists put live rabbits in cages in the Everglades to attract the snakes. Over a three-month period, nine rabbits brought in 22 pythons, which led to the snakes staying in the area for more than an hour on average, as noted in the state report. 

Researchers have fitted prey animals like rabbits, raccoons, and opossums with trackers to help hunters locate pythons after the snakes consume them.

State officials also hire bounty hunters to control the python population and have fitted tracking technology to male snakes to lead them to egg-laying females.

The problem is likely to remain

Biologists say it is unlikely that pythons will ever be truly eradicated from the ecosystem in Florida, despite a 2012 ban on their importation.

District officials say these efforts help protect the Everglades and Florida’s native wildlife. 

The USGS has discovered that Burmese pythons have consumed at least 76 species over the past several decades, including birds, mammals, iguanas and even alligators.

In 2022, scientists found a nearly 15-foot Burmese python in the middle of eating an adult white-tailed deer, as reported by ABC News. However, native animals have also been known to take the fight to pythons as well. There have been cases of alligators, cottonmouth snakes and bobcats killing pythons.

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Why this story matters

Efforts to control invasive Burmese pythons in Florida’s Everglades highlight ongoing challenges to native wildlife conservation and showcase new technologies aimed at managing ecological threats posed by non-native species.

Invasive species management

The deployment of robotic rabbits and other methods reveals ongoing initiatives to address the ecological disruption caused by invasive Burmese pythons in South Florida.

Technology and innovation

The use of remote-controlled, heat-signature-emitting robotic decoys demonstrates how technology is being harnessed in attempts to locate and remove elusive invasive predators.

Impact on native wildlife

Burmese pythons have caused declines in several native animal populations, fundamentally altering the Everglades ecosystem and threatening local biodiversity.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

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