Florida Park Asks Visitors to Pick Up Their Trash After Gator Munching on Plastic Caught on Video

Web Staff
By Web Staff
June 26, 2019US News
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Florida Park Asks Visitors to Pick Up Their Trash After Gator Munching on Plastic Caught on Video
An alligator is seen at the Gator Park in the Florida Everglades on May 17, 2006. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

We’ve seen it with whales, we’ve seen it with dolphins and now it’s gators.

Animals keep mistakenly eating our trash.

A visitor posted a video showing an alligator at the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, in Crawfordville, Florida, chewing on a plastic bag. The park said the gator likely thought it contained something edible.

“This is a strong reminder to please secure your trash when you carry it home with you,” the park said. “Help protect our wildlife. Please keep an eye out for a gator in distress or one trailing a rope or string.”

The visitor who captured the footage, Corine Samwel, posted a series of videos with the animal’s actions.

The reptile approaches the bag slowly before beginning to chew on it. Another video shows the gator walking toward a body of water with a string attached to its body, seemingly coming from its mouth.

“When the gator goes back to the water a rope is hanging out of its mouth,” Samwel wrote on Facebook.

“Please people, do not use single-use plastic and do not litter!” Samwel said. “I then picked up about five plastic bottles, ten beer cans, cigarette butts, surgical gloves, bike gloves, a rope, and all sorts of stuff.”

12-Foot 500-Pound Alligator Captured Alive

An enormous 12-foot, 500-pound alligator was captured alive in Parrish, Florida, lurking in the water. It seems all the crazy stories really do happen in Florida.

The gator was captured on Dec. 19, as it was threatening divers who were working on a private project on the waterway, according to WKMG-TV.

It took more than two hours to wrangle the gator out of the water and onto the shore. The gator did give them a “long-fought tug of war,” Cutway said, adding “That one was very girthy, big bull gator.”

Watch:

Eventually, the large gator was taken to an alligator farm on the state’s east coast, the WKMG-TV reported.

Alligators versus Crocodiles

The American alligator is not nearly as big as the Nile crocodile, which can get as long as 15 feet in length. While that may already sound massive, the biggest Nile crocodiles can grow as long as a giraffe is tall, according to National Geographic.

While average-size Nile crocs weigh around 500 pounds, large ones can weigh up to 1,650 pounds.

Head Shape

Another difference is head shape.

Alligators have broader, more U-shaped heads; while crocodiles have longer and narrower V-shaped skulls.

However, as with most things in life, there are exceptions to the rule.

Mugger crocodiles, Crocodilis palustris, have a broad snout like an alligator.

Habitat

Habitat is another big difference.

All crocodiles have glands in their tongues to help them get rid of excess salt. This helps them to live in habitats with high salt content, like mangrove swamps and estuaries. Alligators, on the other hand, prefer to live in freshwater habitats, partly because they don’t have the same salt-processing functions.

However, saltwater crocodiles are happy in both freshwater and saltwater and like to swim along coastlines.

Teeth

Teeth, too, are a point of difference.

Crocodiles are the ones that show their teeth even when their mouths are closed. The fourth tooth on the bottom jaw pokes up and sits in front of the top lip. You can’t see alligators’ teeth when their mouths are closed though.

Offspring

Nile crocodiles also have fewer offspring than American alligators, according to Abby Lawson, a doctoral candidate in the Department of Forestry and Environmental Conservation and the South Carolina Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at Clemson University.

Aggressiveness

“Nile crocodiles are generally considered to be much more aggressive than American alligators or American crocodiles,” crocodile expert Adam Rosenblatt told National Geographic.

With its man-eater reputation, the Nile crocodile can grow to 15 feet in length and have its way with all manner of animals, from hippos to humans, the National Geographic reported.

Nile crocodiles aren’t picky eaters, although their primary diet consists of fish. Their indiscriminate diet means they’ll happily take a chomp out of whatever, or whomever, crosses their paths, from zebras to porcupines, humans, and even other crocodiles. At each feeding session, a Nile crocodile can eat up to half its weight.

While American alligators and crocodiles account for 33 human fatalities since 2000, the Nile crocodile has killed 268 people in the same time span, according to CrocBITE, a worldwide crocodilian-attack database.

Because of its vicious reputation, the Nile crocodile was hunted close to extinction in the 1940s through the 1960s. Since then, local and international protection has helped them rebound in most areas.

In some regions, pollution, hunting, and habitat loss, however, have severely depleted their numbers.

Actually, the Nile crocodile is not the largest crocodilian.

The largest is the Crocodylus porosus, known as the saltwater crocodile, which can reach 23 feet and weigh up to 2,600 pounds.

Epoch Times reporter Tiffany Meier and The CNN Wire contributed to this article.

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