For one thing, pythons are not native to North America, and they can be a threat to foreign ecosystems. South Florida, for example, already has a Burmese python problem due to escapees from the exotic pet trade...in places that do farm reptiles, snake escapes are pretty common. It may sound dramatic, but if we become a snake farming country, we should be prepared for the possibility of rogue pythons on the loose, eating whatever other animals (farm or pet) they come into contact with.
To meet wide demand, python farming in the U.S. would have to go the industrial agriculture (aka, factory farming) route, and that's guaranteed to have negative ecological consequences...For instance: snakes may mostly eat "waste" animals, like rodents that we consider pests and want to exterminate anyway, but that will cease to be practical if an entire snake meat industry crops up where there wasn't one before. (In fact, there's already an entire mouse farming industry dedicated to feeding pet snakes.)
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