QUOTE(velma @ Apr 7 2007, 02:01 PM)

Recently I heard that there were 200 mongooses released in there to help cure the problems of snakes as many people have been bitten.
I wonder though whether this idea will work out or will it tip the scales and form a unnatural number of mongooses.
I personally have no idea whether 200 mongooses are significant enough to noticeably disturb ecology. I do think that there is more to this than just 200, though. What if those mongooses breed as successfully as wabbits? Are they all male mongooses? Sterile?
Maybe this should be better implemented only as a short-term solution? Something like allowing those mongooses to root out the snakes for a month then going in and retrieving
all 200 mongooses. While this still is not as accurate in predicting long-term effects, it might help buffer the effects of suddenly incorporating all those mongooses in a habitat that wasn't their own.
For example, after one month of mongoose reign, retrieve them all. Now, observe. If the snakes fire up again, then re-introduce the mongooses for another month. And so on and so forth. Now, isn't that much better than installing them as a permanent fixture in the caves?
Well, of course not. People up there will definitely be concerned with the cost of transferring mongooses to and fro ever and anon. "Won't it be much more inexpensive to just let them be? After all, they seem to be happy with their meals in those caves," they might say.
Well, what happens when the mongooses run out of snakes? What, or who, will they eat, or attack, next?

Reply