Lawmaker calls for hunting tegu lizards in Everglades

A young captured tegu-lizard is on display. (AP File Photo/J Pat Carter)

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Lawmakers will be asked to fund a pilot program to hunt non-native tegu lizards said to be decimating the Everglades and other ecosystems throughout parts of southern and central Florida.

Sen. Frank Artiles, R-Miami, on Tuesday filed a measure (SB230) that would direct the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to work with the Department of Environmental Protection on the program, which would involve contracting with hunting teams to capture or destroy the black-and-white lizards native to Central and South America.

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The hunts would occur in the Everglades and the Francis S. Taylor Wildlife Management Area, along with other commission-managed areas where the lizards are breeding, according to the proposal.

The lizards, which can grow to 4-feet-long and threaten small wildlife species, are believed to have arrived in South Florida as an exotic pet around 2002.

The proposal calls for setting aside $300,000 a year, for the next two years, from the state's Land Acquisition Trust Fund.

A report on the progress of the hunting teams would be due by Jan. 1, 2020.


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