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One Photo, Two Species

Photo from Sanibel Island Golf Club

 

From the Fort Myers News-Press; article by Chad Gillis:

Florida golfers know alligators all too well, but they don’t often encounter rare American crocodiles.

That’s changing on a local barrier island, where an adult croc has recently been photographed sunning itself alongside alligators at the Sanibel Island Golf Club.

“The crocodile is here all the time, she hangs out on hole No. 11, and she’s a female,” said Mary Donnelly, wife of course owner Drew Donnelly. “Don’t ask me how they know it’s a female. And the maintenance guys call her Fred.”

Crocodiles have been documented on Sanibel before, and a few have been found in the Cape Coral area.

Their ranges overlap in extreme southern Florida, along the coasts and in Florida Bay.

Seeing one is unique, but capturing both species in one photo is akin to winning a scratch-off lottery.

University of Florida researcher and crocodile expert Frank Mazzotti said a few crocodiles have made it as far north as Tampa.

Nests have been documented on Sanibel, but none of the eggs hatched.

“Before that horrible freeze in 2010, we had a crocodile that spent much of its time in the (J.N. “Ding” Darling National Wildlife) Refuge and it used to nest in people’s yards,” Mazzotti said. “That animal nested over a number of years but there was never any evidence that the eggs were fertile.”

Mazzotti said there are fewer than 2,000 American crocodiles, which is up from a population that only had 20 recorded nests per year during the 1970s.

Today, there are more than 150 nests in an average year, he said.

Mazzotti said both American alligators and crocodiles are relatively docile among the crocodilian world, which includes the 20-foot varieties found in Africa and Australia.

“Alligators are a wee bit more aggressive,” Mazzotti admitted. “You can tell that when you catch them. Alligators put up a little more of a struggle than crocodiles.”

Who wins in a fight?

“An old newspaper article written in the 1920s described a bunch of Everglades City boys with a big alligator and some Key Largo boys that had a big croc,” Mazzotti said. “And the story is they pitted them against each other and the alligator ended up winning because it had a larger jaw.”

 

 

 

 

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