00:00We have a lot of them by the river or next to the fish pond.
00:14The number of them depends on the number of trees.
00:21We have a lot of trees by the river.
00:25Hello, hello, hello, how are you?
00:29Ok, ok, good.
00:37Of course, if you catch them, you can't bite them.
00:40This one can't be.
00:43The size is about the size of a month.
00:48At the peak, 200 fish come in 6 hours a night.
00:54Of course, it's a team effort, not just me.
00:57It's a team effort, everyone working together.
00:59If we're talking about individuals,
01:0130 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.
01:16If you've caught this one, you'll be able to put it on the ground.
01:20If you catch this one, you'll be able to put it on the ground.
01:23If you don't catch this one, you won't be able to put it on the ground.
01:32We started to face the threat of greenhouse gas
01:35about five or six years ago.
01:37But at that time, there was only a small amount.
01:39And then, more and more of them started to reproduce.
01:41And then, the more crops we ate,
01:43the more people started to arrest it
01:45and focus on this problem.
01:48And then, we could only use micro-arrests.
01:50Because it moves very fast.
01:52We couldn't catch it at all.
02:03This greenhouse gas is actually a native species
02:06in Central America.
02:09It's probably a foreign species to Taiwan.
02:13In fact, it's also because people
02:16treat it as a pet.
02:43Put it on the side.
03:13Put it on the side.
03:15Put it on the side.
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