600kg crocodile captured to stop it from going 'walkabout' in Aussie town

A near 5-metre crocodile captured in Taylor's Park in the Northern Territory. Picture: AAP Image/Supplied by Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife via Reuters

A near 5-metre crocodile captured in Taylor's Park in the Northern Territory. Picture: AAP Image/Supplied by Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife via Reuters

Published Jul 11, 2018

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Sydney - Authorities in Australia have

caught a saltwater crocodile measuring almost 5 metres (16.4

ft), one of the biggest on record, to stop it from reaching a

populated area, the Department of Tourism said on Tuesday.

Weighing up to 600 kg (1,322 lb), the 60-year old crocodile

is the biggest ever removed from the Katherine River in the

remote Northern Territory.

It was moved to live out its days at a crocodile farm.

The largest crocodile ever captured in Australia measured

6.4 metres, according to records. It was caught and killed in

1974, also in the Northern Territory.

A large crocodile is bound on a trailer after it was captured near Katherine, Australia. Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife said it had trapped the 600-kilogram (1 300-pound) reptile only 30 kilometres (19 miles) downstream from Katherine Gorge, a major tourist attraction. Picture: NT Department of Tourism and Culture via AP

Rangers caught the 4.7 metre (15.4 feet) male crocodile 60

km (37 miles) downstream from the town of Katherine, on Monday

after sedating it, media reported. They had been hunting it

since they first spotted it in 2010.

"He was removed downstream from Katherine to help prevent

human interaction in the more populated areas," said Tracey

Duldig, acting director of the Department of Tourism and

Culture.

"He has been taken to a croc farm in the Katherine region."

Known for its exotic and sometimes dangerous wildlife such

as sharks and Tasmanian devils, Australia is home to over

150,000 crocodiles.

Authorities routinely move them away from people.

In 2017, 371 crocodiles were captured by rangers in the

Northern Territory cities of Darwin, Palmerston and Katherine

alone, according to the department's website. This year, 190

have been captured.

Reuters

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