How a mega freeze in Florida may have caused Burmese pythons to evolve at a blindingly fast speed

by oqtey

Fifteen years ago, a cold snap froze much of Florida’s wildlife to death — including many of the state’s invasive Burmese pythons (Python bivittatus). But in this excerpt from “Slither: How Nature’s Most Maligned Creatures Illuminate Our World” (Gand Central Publishing, 2025), science writer Stephen Hall reveals that a subset of these pythons were genetically predisposed to survive the cold, setting the stage for rapid evolution that could help the invasive snakes spread further into North America.


In early January 2010, a historic and prolonged deep freeze swept across the southeast United States, reaching all the way into the subtropical Everglades. Temperatures hovered around 50 degrees Fahrenheit (10 degrees Celsius) for 48 hours; on Jan. 11, thermometers in South Florida dipped as low as 24.8 F (minus 4 C). Most people remember it, if at all, for the frozen iguanas that dropped out of trees and photos of citrus trees encased in icicles, like some fugitive Minnesota winter carnival smuggled into the Deep South.

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