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After decadelong hunt, 1,300-pound crocodile captured

‘Big fella’ is 15 feet long, estimated to be 60 years old

By Lindsey Bever, The Washington Post
Published: July 11, 2018, 8:07pm
2 Photos
In this Monday, July 9, 2018, photo provided by the Northern Territory Department of Tourism and Culture, a large crocodile is captured in a trap near Katherine, Australia. Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife said in a statement on Tuesday, July 10, 2018, it had trapped the 600-kilogram (1,300-pound) reptile only 30 kilometers (19 miles) downstream from Katherine Gorge, a major tourist attraction outside the Northern Territory town of Katherine.
In this Monday, July 9, 2018, photo provided by the Northern Territory Department of Tourism and Culture, a large crocodile is captured in a trap near Katherine, Australia. Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife said in a statement on Tuesday, July 10, 2018, it had trapped the 600-kilogram (1,300-pound) reptile only 30 kilometers (19 miles) downstream from Katherine Gorge, a major tourist attraction outside the Northern Territory town of Katherine. (NT Department of Tourism and Culture via AP) Photo Gallery

Following a nearly decadelong hunt, a massive saltwater crocodile has been captured in northern Australia, according to wildlife authorities.

Rangers caught the crocodile Monday after setting a trap on a private property near Katherine, a town in Northern Territory, Australia.

The evasive crocodile is said to be one of the largest trapped in the region, which is not far from the Nitmiluk and Kakadu national parks. It was estimated to be about 60 years old, but it is the reptile’s size that is shocking — measuring more than 15 feet long (the average length of a car) and weighing more than 1,300 pounds, according to the Katherine Times.

“It is a bit of a thrill,” wildlife ranger John Burke told the Australian Broadcasting Corp., “but you’ve also got to admire the size of the animal and how old it is. You’ve got to have a bit of respect for it.”

Rangers had been on the lookout for the giant creature since it was first seen nearly 10 years ago.

In May, rangers saw three crocodiles while surveying the land, according to the Katherine Times. A trap was then set a couple weeks ago near Katherine River — and the crocodile, dubbed “big fella,” swam right into it.

A smaller crocodile, measuring almost 8 feet, was also captured, according to the newspaper.

Ranger Chris Heydon told the Katherine Times that once in the trap, the giant reptiles are sedated, “so there is no chance of us getting chomped.”

The crocodile, a male, was “removed” to “help prevent human interaction in the more populated areas,” the Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife said in a Facebook post.

The post included a photo showing the crocodile tied down on a trailer with duct tape around its jaw. The caption warned: “Large crocodiles can move around Top End waterways undetected and you should always Be Crocwise.”

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