I thought that the state conducts a hunt every year with the cooperation of the National Park Service. Aren't there also a lot of boas and anacondas?
The state (FL Fish & Squish) conducts a hunt by permitted hunters on a very limited scale, but it's all outside Everglades NP. Many of the adventurers get nothing. The most successful group of hunters got 15 snakes in a month of hunting.
No hunting is allowed inside the park. There has been some
talk of possibly starting inside the park, but it's ten years too late for Everglades NP. And it will take them ten more years to make a decision.
Last year, a total of 106 snakes were killed in the month-long hunt outside the park. That's a drop in the bucket when you consider that
one female can have 50-60 young in one batch. The FWC's hearts are in the right place (they actually
care), but the results just aren't there.
The situation gets even worse when you consider that NPS
captures females, attaches radio chips,
releases the female, tracks her and then rounds up a bunch of males (8-10, whatever).
Problem is, the female has
already bred with those snakes and she
stores their semen -- to use 3 months from now, 6 months from now, a year from now to fertilize her eggs. Sound like a sound plan to you?