Not likely, but you might contact the Everglades Park Service and ask if they are paying a bounty. Once the pythons are there, they're probably there to stay. Population control might be practical, but total extermination is not.
pythons
No. They are not. There are no native pythons in North or South America. However, some species of python from Africa and Asia have been introduced to the Everglades.
since 1409
Scientists estimate the number at 150,000
Pythons got into Florida because people had kept pythons as exotic pets, but as they grew bigger, people realized that they didn't want their pythons anymore because they got too big to live in their house, so the people in Florida who had pythons released them into the wild. Because there were numerous people who had pythons as exotic pets, and then released them in the Everglades into the wild, there were eventually enough pythons that they could successfully reproduce and live in the Florida Everglades.
The everglades are in danger due to global warming and position. The everglades contain a large sea life and marine population that is now endangered due to human tampering, negligence and global temperature changes.
150,000 of the reptiles (including pythons and other snakes) are estimated to be crawling through Everglades National Park and the surrounding areas.
The Daily Orbit - 2012 Hunt Is on the Rid the Everglades of Invasive Pythons 1-73 was released on: USA: 10 December 2012
People, and the Burmese Pythons which have been released into the Everglades. Naturally, they're an apex predator.
increasing population of people leads to larger urban areas, which often leads to destruction or damage to the surrounding environments
Tropical wading birds, alligators and Burmese pythons are examples of animals that use the Everglades for breeding grounds. The latter is an invasive species.