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Maggot

"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood"
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Minuteman
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  • Jul 27, 2007
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    Virginia
    8 million of them no less.



    Operation Dead-Mouse Drop



    A group of 2,000 dead mice equipped with cardboard parachutes have been airdropped over a United States Air Force base in Guam in order to poison brown tree snakes.

    It may sound like the plot to an animated movie starring the vocal talents of Gilbert Godfried, but we assure you this is actually happening.

    NBC News reports that the dead mice were pumped full of acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol. The hope is that the snakes, which are invasive to the area and cause harm to exotic native birds and the island's power grid, will be drawn to the toxic rodents, eat them, and then croak. Other animals face minimal risk, reports the Air Force Times.

    Dan Vice, the Agriculture Department's assistant supervisory wildlife biologist for Guam, told KUAM that the mice are dropped in a time sequence from low-flying helicopters. Each rodent is strung up to a tiny parachute made of cardboard and tissue paper.

    Via NBC News:

    "The cardboard is heavier than the tissue paper and opens up in an inverted horseshoe," Vice said. "It then floats down and ultimately hangs up in the forest canopy. Once it's hung in the forest canopy, snakes have an opportunity to consume the bait."

    So how will workers know if the plan is working? After all, it's not like the mice can radio back to base. Or can they? The workers behind the plan told NBC News that some of the mice will have data-transmitting via radios.

    The mission is part of an $8 million program from the Interior and Defense departments, Phys.org reports. If the mission is successful, experts may expand it to other parts of Guam. In other words, maybe a sequel is forthcoming.
     
    Snakes will eat dead rats. I had snake in the past and you can feed them dead rats. May not work as good in the wild as in a caged area but I know this as fact. My dad built a snake cage, It was like a piece of furniture and he had it silled up fairly well. We had the heat lamps on a temp control and heat rocks in the cage. We but the snakes in there and there scales started turning up. Dad took one over to a vet that worked with them and he told us we where dry roasting them. To much heat with little to no humidity in cage. So we install humidifiers and a humidistate to control them to the cage. The vet also gave us IV soluition and a medicine we had to inject into the rats. We also had to soak the snakes in the IV soluition for a hour very other day until scales laid back down.
     
    Snakes will eat dead rats. I had snake in the past and you can feed them dead rats. May not work as good in the wild as in a caged area but I know this as fact. My dad built a snake cage, It was like a piece of furniture and he had it silled up fairly well. We had the heat lamps on a temp control and heat rocks in the cage. We but the snakes in there and there scales started turning up. Dad took one over to a vet that worked with them and he told us we where dry roasting them. To much heat with little to no humidity in cage. So we install humidifiers and a humidistate to control them to the cage. The vet also gave us IV soluition and a medicine we had to inject into the rats. We also had to soak the snakes in the IV soluition for a hour very other day until scales laid back down.

    You are a crazy person. I'd never keep a snake in the house, much less nurse it back to perfect human killing ability.
     
    If the snake problem is as bad as reported
    I hope it works.
    It amazing one little snake can hop a ride and
    multiply enough to ruin a whole island ecosystem

    This is not a new problem, they have been trying to contain
    those snakes for years.
     
    No I'm not a crazy person. The snakes where a Copperhead and a Timber rattler they would not hurt a fly. Just pulling your chain man they where however a ball python and a Red-tailed Boa. The Boa got my old man over his snake phobia. The RTB (bobo) was a cool dude he was very gentle and only bite my mom once her fault. The ball never bite anyone I know of, she had been injuried right behind her head by someone before we got her and she was very head shy which is a trait in ball python to being with. These are the only snake I've had and we still had not learned enough to have them it seems. We keep aspen chips in the cage for bedding. We also feed in this cage with the chips down mistake. Bobo second to last meal he got a mouth full of the chips, we assume it stopped him up tight. He only ate one small mouse after that say 1 1/2 year after the mouth full of chips. The vet said he was just fasting that they do that from time to time. Will after the small mouse he leaved about another year. We think my dad found out about his lung cancer along this time. And I was out of the house and no one else could feed them other than him or me, mom just wasn't but to it. So one day he took them both out and give them a load of #8 behind the head. Hell it broke the old man up to do it or the knowledge of the cancer he think he was hinding at the time. Bobo was about 7' long and could eat large rats and about ready to move to small rabbits when he got the mouth full of chips. In the next 2 1/2 years he got down to about the size of a half dollar or so and his lower half just felt dead. He had little to no muscle mass at the end but he was cool as hell. and very beautiful to watch under the red heat lamps right after a shead.
     
    They are pissing into the wind. Though a snake may et dead mice in a cage, in the wild they do find them by the heat signature, and there wont be any on dead mice. They will just hang there and rot like French paratroopers in the trees around Dien Bien Phu.