Florida Trains Hunters In Python Eradication

MIAMI - FEBRUARY 22: People look on as snake hunter Michael Cole holds a Burmese Python that was captured during a Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission nonnative snake hunt training session on February 22, 2010 in Miami, Florida. The python was thought to have been effected by the recent cold weather in Florida because it was lethargic and barely moving when hunters found it along a levee in the Everglades. The training session was for hunters that plan to capture reptiles of concern from March 8 to April 17. Some experts believe more than 100,000 non-native Burmese pythons inhabit the Florida Everglades and are damaging the region's endangered wildlife. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
MIAMI - FEBRUARY 22: People look on as snake hunter Michael Cole holds a Burmese Python that was captured during a Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission nonnative snake hunt training session on February 22, 2010 in Miami, Florida. The python was thought to have been effected by the recent cold weather in Florida because it was lethargic and barely moving when hunters found it along a levee in the Everglades. The training session was for hunters that plan to capture reptiles of concern from March 8 to April 17. Some experts believe more than 100,000 non-native Burmese pythons inhabit the Florida Everglades and are damaging the region's endangered wildlife. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Florida Trains Hunters In Python Eradication
PURCHASE A LICENCE
How can I use this image?
₹23,000.00
INR

DETAILS

Restrictions:
Contact your local office for all commercial or promotional uses. Full editorial rights UK, US, Ireland, Canada (not Quebec). Restricted editorial rights for daily newspapers elsewhere, please call.
Credit:
Joe Raedle / Staff
Editorial #:
96961542
Collection:
Getty Images News
Date created:
22 February, 2010
Upload date:
Licence type:
Release info:
Not released. More information
Source:
Getty Images North America
Object name:
59698149