I was reading newspaper
early this morning when I read about this giant crocodile that was captured in
Agusan Del Sur province in the southern Philippines.
Should Filipinos be
surprised about this giant crocodile?
May be not; Because there is
more gigantic crocodile out there in the wild offices of the government.
Crocodile Dundees’ after bigger croc than ‘Lolong’
Inquirer Mindanao
2:58 am | Wednesday, September 7th,
2011
SAY HELLO TO ‘LOLONG.’ In this photo
taken Sunday, Sept. 4, 2011, a Philippine National Police officer stands next a
giant saltwater crocodile which was captured by residents and crocodile farm
staff along a creek in Bunawan township, Agusan Del Sur province in southern
Philippines late Saturday. Mayor Cox Elorde of Bunawan said that dozens of
villagers and experts ensnared the 21-foot (6.4-meter) male crocodile along a
creek in his township after a three-week hunt. It was one of the largest
crocodiles to be captured alive in the Philippines in recent years. (AP Photo)
Butuan City—After capturing what
could be the biggest crocodile caught alive in the world, hunters are already
talking of going after an even bigger croc, possibly lurking in the creeks of
Agusan del Sur.
The monster, 6.1-meter (20-foot)
saltwater crocodile ensnared on Saturday in Bunawan town after a 24-day hunt
has already been named “Lolong” by the villagers—and experts say Lolong may not
be alone.
Wildlife official Ronnie Sumiller,
who has hunted “nuisance crocodiles” for 20 years and led the team behind the
weekend capture in Bunawan, said a search was under way for a possibly larger
crocodile that he and the villagers have seen roaming in the farming town’s
marshy outskirts.
“There is a bigger one and it could
be the one creating problems,” Sumiller told The Associated Press by telephone
from Bunawan.
The captured crocodile has been
named after Ernesto “Lolong” Conate, a Palawan-based hunter hired to help catch
it.
But Conate died of a stroke a few
days ago while working out the plans for capturing the beast, which was
eventually caught by a team of crocodile experts and villagers near Lake
Mihaba, one of the several lakes crisscrossing Agusan Marsh, the country’s
largest marshland.
Josefina de Leon, wildlife division
chief of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, said the beast
was likely the biggest crocodile ever captured anywhere in the world.
“Based on existing records the
largest that had been captured previously was 5.48 meters (18 feet) long,” she
told Agence France-Presse.
The Philippine specimen would easily
dwarf the largest captive saltwater crocodile, which the Guinness World Records
website lists as Cassius, a 5.48-meter male which lives at an Australian nature
park.
Press reports also describe other
huge crocs including a 6.2-meter adult male killed in Papua New Guinea in 1982
that was measured after it was skinned.
Crocodile attacks
The hunt was launched after a local
fisherman went missing near a marshy creek early last month and after a
reported crocodile attack on a carabao.
Villagers also claimed that a
crocodile attacked and killed a 12-year-old girl, identified as Rowena Romano,
in the same waters on March 7, 2009.
Mundita Lim, director of the
Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau (PAWB), said the reptile weighed 1,075
kilograms and its body was one meter (3.3 feet) wide.
The PAWB has yet to have an estimate
of the animal’s age.
No remains
“The community was relieved,”
Sumiller said of the capture, but added: “We’re not really sure if this is the
man-eater, because there have been other sightings of other crocodiles in the
area.”
The local government of the
impoverished town of 37,000 people has decided against putting down the
reptile, and will instead build a nature park where it will go on display.
Pork and dog meat
The Bunawan hunting team, employed
by a government-run crocodile breeding farm, began laying bait using chicken,
pork and dog meat on Aug. 15 in an attempt to snare the beast.
But the reptile simply bit off both
the meat and the line it was skewered on.
A heavy metal cable finally proved
beyond the power of its jaws, and the beast was subdued in a creek late
Saturday with the help of about 30 local men.
TOURIST ATTRACTION. The 6.1-meter
(20-foot) saltwater crocodile, now named "Lolong," weighing 1,075
kilograms (2,370 pounds), was the biggest to be caught alive in the Philippines
in recent years. Wildlife officials were trying to confirm whether it was the
largest such catch in the world, said Theresa Mundita Lim of the government's Protected Areas and Wildlife
Bureau. (AP Photo)
Beyond the mark of the hook inside
its upper jaw, the crocodile did not appear to have sustained any serious
injuries.
Star attraction
Bunawan Mayor Cox Elorde said that
Lolong would become the star of the planned ecotourism and conservation
park near the Agusan Marsh.
“We will take advantage of this
crocodile as a tourism attraction and we hope it will help us generate income
and jobs,” Elorde told the Inquirer by phone.
He said the people of Bunawan
believed Lolong was not the only large crocodile lurking in the 113,910-hectare
Agusan Marsh, which straddles several towns.
But Elorde disagreed with statements
by PAWB officials that more searches for crocodiles would be launched. He said
there was no more hunt for crocodiles in his town.
50 years old
Lolong, believed by some residents
to be 50 years old, is now kept in a huge metal cage.
“We are eyeing a Guinness Record for
Lolong,” Elorde said.
Relieved villagers in Bunawan threw
a fiesta to celebrate the capture of the crocodile, which had to be pulled by
rope by about 100 people from the creek to a clearing, where a crane lifted it
onto a truck.
“It was like a feast, so many
villagers turned up,” Elorde said.
“The villagers were saying 10
percent of their fear was gone because of the first capture,” Sumiller said.
“But there is still the other 90 percent to take care of.”
Philippine laws strictly prohibit
civilians from killing endangered crocodiles, with violators facing up to 12
years in prison and a fine of P1 million.
The world’s most endangered
freshwater variety, Crocodylus Mindorensis, is found only in the Philippines,
where only about 250 are known to be in the wild.
About 1,000 of the larger saltwater
type, or Crocodylus Porosus, like the one captured in Bunawan, are scattered
mostly in the country’s southern swamplands, wildlife official Glen Rebong
said.
Crocodiles have been hunted in the
country by poachers hoping to cash in on the high demand in wealthy Asian
countries for their skin, which is coveted for vanity products ranging from
bags to cell phone cases. Reports from Franklin A. Caliguid,
Inquirer Mindanao; Kristine L. Alave in Manila, AP and AFP