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Hawaii on lookout for snakes
December 12, 2002
AP
BY JAN TENBRUGGENCATE
HONOLULU--Hawaii officials are being placed on high alert for a possible invasion by brown tree snakes on emergency aircraft and ships helping Guam recover from Typhoon Pongsana.
Pongsana, which hit the island before dawn Sunday, along with immense devastation across the small island, has destroyed the program to stop brown tree snakes from entering seaports, airports and cargo handling areas.
''There is basically nothing to stop these snakes from going right into the ports,'' said Mike Pitzler, state director of U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services.
Brown tree snakes, known to science as Boiga irregularis, are responsible for the extinction of virtually all of Guam's forest birds. The long, very slim snakes also eat small mammals, span power lines to cause electric outages and have been known to enter homes and bite infants in their cribs.
Neil Reimer, manager of the Hawaii Department of Agriculture's plant quarantine branch, said at a minimum his agency will inspect every plane that arrives from Guam--private, commercial and military.
Reimer said the state doesn't need convincing about the dangers of the snakes.
''It is a big concern,'' he said. ''It is a top priority for us. The brown tree snake we see as a very high-risk pest.''
Four snakes have been found in Hawaii, generally at airports. None has been known to have escaped.
''Basically, if you see one, you have to kill it immediately,'' Pitzler said. ''If they get loose, they're gone. They are very secretive and can hide in very small places.''
In Guam, Pitzler's agency caught 13,000 snakes in the 2002 fiscal year. A staff of 41 manages 3,200 traps baited with live mice. The mice are in special containers in the traps, so that snakes can't get at them, even if they're inside the traps.
But most of those traps, and the fences they are hung on, were destroyed by Sunday's supertyphoon. Additionally, roads were closed because they are covered with fallen concrete power poles.
The four major fuel tanks at the main port were on fire Tuesday, Pitzler said, and nonmilitary agencies are not allowed to get fuel. As a result, the agency's 15 snake-sniffing dogs can't be deployed; their handlers can't get them to the air and sea ports.
''We've been running snake traps, dogs and inspecting cargo since 1993, and we've never been disrupted like this,'' Pitzler said.
But they know the risk. During the last typhoon, snake control efforts were briefly interrupted, and shortly afterward, brown tree snakes were found in Alaska and on Diego Garcia atoll, believed to have come from military flights from Guam.
December 12, 2002
AP
BY JAN TENBRUGGENCATE
HONOLULU--Hawaii officials are being placed on high alert for a possible invasion by brown tree snakes on emergency aircraft and ships helping Guam recover from Typhoon Pongsana.
Pongsana, which hit the island before dawn Sunday, along with immense devastation across the small island, has destroyed the program to stop brown tree snakes from entering seaports, airports and cargo handling areas.
''There is basically nothing to stop these snakes from going right into the ports,'' said Mike Pitzler, state director of U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services.
Brown tree snakes, known to science as Boiga irregularis, are responsible for the extinction of virtually all of Guam's forest birds. The long, very slim snakes also eat small mammals, span power lines to cause electric outages and have been known to enter homes and bite infants in their cribs.
Neil Reimer, manager of the Hawaii Department of Agriculture's plant quarantine branch, said at a minimum his agency will inspect every plane that arrives from Guam--private, commercial and military.
Reimer said the state doesn't need convincing about the dangers of the snakes.
''It is a big concern,'' he said. ''It is a top priority for us. The brown tree snake we see as a very high-risk pest.''
Four snakes have been found in Hawaii, generally at airports. None has been known to have escaped.
''Basically, if you see one, you have to kill it immediately,'' Pitzler said. ''If they get loose, they're gone. They are very secretive and can hide in very small places.''
In Guam, Pitzler's agency caught 13,000 snakes in the 2002 fiscal year. A staff of 41 manages 3,200 traps baited with live mice. The mice are in special containers in the traps, so that snakes can't get at them, even if they're inside the traps.
But most of those traps, and the fences they are hung on, were destroyed by Sunday's supertyphoon. Additionally, roads were closed because they are covered with fallen concrete power poles.
The four major fuel tanks at the main port were on fire Tuesday, Pitzler said, and nonmilitary agencies are not allowed to get fuel. As a result, the agency's 15 snake-sniffing dogs can't be deployed; their handlers can't get them to the air and sea ports.
''We've been running snake traps, dogs and inspecting cargo since 1993, and we've never been disrupted like this,'' Pitzler said.
But they know the risk. During the last typhoon, snake control efforts were briefly interrupted, and shortly afterward, brown tree snakes were found in Alaska and on Diego Garcia atoll, believed to have come from military flights from Guam.