expat wrote:
Thought snakes liked food warm, i,e alive ?
Generally they do. The brown tree snake is unusual in that it doesn't mind dead food.
This apparently is a really major problem.

The snakes are mildly venomous and dangerous only to children because of their low body mass. (Which makes me think -- what a-hole would see this and pause to
take a picture?) But they have wiped out a bunch of defenseless species on the island and are making inroads on the rest.
Other Pacific islands including Hawaii are scared of the same thing. If you spend any time in Hawaii you learn how strict they are about intentional and accidental snake imports. Important critters like the state bird, the nei-nei, live and nest on the ground with basically no defense against predators. Some snakes slip through and are found in Hawaii but it seems they are winning the continual war not to let a breeding population get established.
This is the problem I see with Guam. OK, so the snakes are tylenol intolerant and you can kill them with dead mice. What if you kill 99% of the 2 million that are there? Seems like the remaining 20,000 would be more than enough to breed the population back up in a few generations. And they might be a strain of tylenol tolerant supersnakes. "Life finds a way." - Michael Crighton.
August