Mongoose On The Loose: Larry Luxner
Mongoose On The Loose: Larry Luxner
Mongoose On The Loose: Larry Luxner
Population
Explodes
With
no
natural
predators
—
like
wolves,
coyotes,
or
poisonous
snakes
—
the
mongoose
population
exploded,
and
within
a
few
years,
they
were
killing
not
just
rats
but
pigs,
lambs,
chickens,
puppies,
and
kittens.
Dr.
G.
Roy
Horst,
a
U.S.
expert
on
mongooses,
says
that
today
mongooses
live
on
seventeen
Caribbean
islands
as
well
as
Hawaii
and
Fiji,
where
they
have
attacked
small
animals,
threatened
endangered
species,
and
even
spread
minor
rabies
epidemics.
In
Puerto
Rico,
there
are
from
800,000
to
one
million
of
them.
That
is
about
one
mongoose
for
every
four
humans.
In
St.
Croix,
there
are
100,000
mongooses,
about
twice
as
many
as
the
human
population.
“It’s
impossible
to
eliminate
the
mongoose
population,
short
of
nuclear
war,”
says
Horst.
“You
can’t
poison
them,
because
cats,
dogs,
and
chickens
get
poisoned,
too.
I’m
not
a
prophet
crying
in
the
wilderness,
but
the
potential
for
real
trouble
is
there,”
says
Horst.
According
to
Horst,
great
efforts
have
been
made
to
rid
the
islands
of
mongooses,
which
have
killed
off
a
number
of
species
including
the
Amevia
lizard
on
St.
Croix,
presumed
extinct
for
several
decades.
On
Hawaii,
the
combination
of
mongooses
and
sports
hunting
has
reduced
the
Hawaiian
goose,
or
nene,
to
less
than
two
dozen
individuals.
Scientist
Studies
Problem
The
fifty-‐nine-‐year-‐old
biology
professor,
who
teaches
at
Potsdam
College
in
upstate
New
York,
recently
finished
his
third
season
at
the
500-‐acre
Cabo
Rojo
National
Wildlife
Refuge
in
southwestern
Puerto
Rico,
using
microchips
to
study
the
life
cycle
and
reproductive
habits
of
the
Caribbean
mongoose.
(He
is
also
doing
similar
work
at
the
Sandy
Point
Fish
and
Wildlife
Refuge
on
St.
Croix
in
the
U.S.
Virgin
Islands.)
“I
want
to
know
what
happens
when
you
take
a
small
animal
and
put
him
in
an
area
with
no
competition.
This
is
a
model
that
doesn’t
exist
anywhere
else
in
the
world.”
Horst’s
five-‐year,
$60,000
study
is
being
sponsored
by
Earthwatch
Incorporated,
a
non-‐profit
group
that
has
funded
some
1,300
research
projects
in
eighty-‐seven
countries.
Volunteers
pay
$1,500
each
(not
including
airfare)
to
come
to
Puerto
Rico
for
ten
days
and
help
Horst
set
out
mongoose
traps,
study
the
animals,
and
keep
records.
Often
he
and
his
volunteers
spend
a
sweaty
day
walking
about
ten
miles
while
setting
out
mongoose
traps
in
the
wilderness.
Later,
they
perform
surgery
on
their
unwilling
subjects
to
implant
the
electronic
devices
that
will
allow
them
to
track
the
animal’s
habits.
______________________________________
Horst
has
tagged
more
than
400
mongooses
with
PITs
(permanently
implanted
transponders),
a
new
microchip
technology,
which
he
says
has
changed
his
work
dramatically.
“You
couldn’t
do
this
with
ear
tags.
It
was
very
hard
to
permanently
mark
these
animals
until
this
technology
came
along,”
he
said.
Horst
has
caught
thousands
of
mongooses
and
has
reached
some
interesting
conclusions.
Among
them:
mongooses
have
a
life
expectancy
of
six
to
ten
years,
much
longer
than
the
previously
accepted
figure
of
three
years.
Horst
says
his
research
will
provide
local
and
federal
health
officials
with
extremely
valuable
information
if
they
ever
decide
to
launch
a
campaign
against
rabies
in
Puerto
Rico
or
the
U.S.
Virgin
Islands.