00:00There are a lot of them by the river or next to the fishpond.
00:14There are more of them on the trees.
00:21There are more of them by the river.
00:25Hi, you caught a big one.
00:32Okay.
00:36It's hard to catch when you catch it like that.
00:39I can't catch it this time.
00:44It's about the size of a month.
00:49There are 200 of them in the peak season every night for 6 hours.
00:54Of course, it's a team effort, not just me, it's a team effort, everyone working together.
00:58If we're talking about individuals, 30 to 50 chickens a night is not a problem.
01:04Of course, the temperature is also a very important factor.
01:08Because the weather is cold, it's harder for them to come out.
01:11We started to be threatened by greenhouse gases about five or six years ago, but at that time there were only a few.
01:38Later on, more and more of them started to reproduce, and more and more of them started to eat plants.
01:42That's when people started to encroach on them and focus on this problem.
01:47We can only encroach on them, because their movements are very fast.
01:52We can't catch them at all.
01:54This greenhouse gas is actually a native species of Central America.
02:09It's a foreign species to Taiwan.
02:13In fact, it's also because people treat it as a pet.
02:44Put it next to it.
02:55Mom.
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