Thứ Ba, 22 tháng 11, 2011

20 die in air disaster after smuggled crocodile escapes on a plane

crocodile

Wildlife smugglers will do just about anything for a quick buck, including sneaking a live predator onto an airplane with no regard for the risk to the animal or fellow passengers. This illegal activity reached a devastating and absurdist extreme recently when a man reportedly smuggled a live crocodile onto a plane departing from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The crocodile got loose, the crew and passengers panicked, and the plane crashed, killing 20 people.
Oddly enough, the crocodile survived the crash, only to be hacked to death by machete-wielding locals on the ground.
Only one passenger lived to bear witness to the events. The unnamed survivor was interviewed by the France-based African news magazine Jeune Afrique, where he said the crocodile was smuggled onto the plane in a sports bag. When the croc escaped, the passengers reportedly rushed toward the cockpit, throwing the plane off balance, the man claimed.
The magazine also reported the crocodile had been intended for resale, although how the crash survivor knew this remains unclear. The incident occurred August 25, but initial reports said the plane had simply run out of fuel.

Tarcoles River Crocodiles



Our tour leader, a crocodile whisperer if you will, knew many of the older crocs in the river. He called them by name, recognizing each by discerning physical markings and their location. I watched in anticipation as Jose waded out into the water with a hefty piece of raw chicken. Smack! smack! He thwacked the meat against the muddy riverbank, alerting the nearest croc that dinner was served. This was just one of dozens of American crocodiles that inhabit the Tarcoles, a 62-mile river that forms the northern border of Carara National Park.
The jungle crocodile safari started on a high note, as an eight-foot female silently glided up and engulfed the chicken with one clamp of her massive jaws. Believe it or not, this prehistoric reptile was on the smaller side for a Tarcoles crocodile; some of the males measure up to 18 feet from snout to tail. The river has one of the planet's biggest populations of American crocodiles, with an estimated 2,000 crocs living in its murky waters.
While scaly, carnivorous creatures aren't on the top of everyone's "must see" list in Costa Rica, once you glimpse one in the wild, it's hard to look away. Their size and strength becomes apparent as you watch two males spar over a mate, or shuffle quickly in a low, sprawled belly walk along the river shore. Not much has changed in these reptiles in the last million years.
If a boat tour with Costa Rica's Crocodile Dundee isn't on your itinerary, you can make a quick stop at the Tarcoles River bridge, just before reaching Jaco. Stop by any time and you're bound to spot several crocs basking along the river's edge. Some sport radio collars, placed by biologists for tracking purposes, while others laze in the sun au natural. Less than an hour from San Jose, the Tarcoles River has been a popular tourist pit stop for years, and will hopefully continue to be a haven for American crocodiles.

Ever wanted to wrestle a crocodile?


If you’ve ever wanted a challenge with real bite the ABC may just have the project for you.
The producers of a new documentary series Croc College on ABC1 are looking for men and women to take on a training course in the management of the world’s largest living reptile – the saltwater crocodile.
Croc College, a six episode half hour factual series, follows the men and women selected for a five-week course learning how to manage saltwater crocodiles.
The course is led by Queensland croc expert John Lever and the six successful applicants will gain enough practical experience to secure their own jobs in the crocodile industry.
They will learn how to restrain large crocodiles; how to safely raid nests and remove eggs; how to treat sick and injured crocodiles and how to interpret crocodile behaviour. 
Interested applicants should click here to visit the ABC Croc College website to apply.
Applications close at 5pm on Friday (Sydney/Eastern Standard Time), 2 December 2011. 

Nile crocodile is actually two species (and the Egyptians knew it)




The Nile crocodile is a truly iconic animal. Or, more accurately, two iconic animals. As I’ve just written over at Nature News:
The iconic Nile crocodile actually comprises two different species — and they are only distantly related. The large east African Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) is in fact more closely related to four species of Caribbean crocodile than to its small west African neighbour, which has been named (Crocodylus suchus).
Evon Hekkala of Fordham University in New York and her colleagues revealed evidence for the existence of the second species by sequencing the genes of 123 living Nile crocodiles and 57 museum specimens, including several 2,000-year-old crocodile mummies.
The results resolve a centuries-old debate about the classification of the Nile crocodile, and have important implications for the conservation of both species.
I love this story. Genetic studies have revealed many “cryptic specieshidden in plain sight among fairly well known species. But this one stands out for several reasons. The two species in question are not each other’s closest relatives. The distinction between the two species was apparently known to the ancient Egyptians and speculated about in more recent decades. Oh, and the mummies.
Go read the full Nature News piece (free registration may be required). Meanwhile, I think you’ll enjoy this transcript of my full chat with Ekon Hekkala, complete with tales of jumping into oases with crocodiles, persuading museum managers to part with mummy samples, and the amazing transatlantic swim of the Nile croc.
How did this all start?
The crocodile samples that set me off on this whole crazy search came from an oasis in Ennedi Plateau, Chad, collected by Michael Clemens. His party found six crocs in this small body of water and they just got in and swam with them at their guide’s suggestion. He thought it was curious – you’d have thought they’d be hungry!. There was a crocodile that had been killed by a falling rock so he grabbed tissue from it and brought it back to the American Museum of Natural History.
I tried to sequence the sample and I kept on sequencing it over and over again because I was convinced I was 100% wrong. It wasn’t even remotely related to the Nile crocodile samples that I had been working on. This one sample was so anomalous I knew it was a different species.
Are the two species different in recognisable ways?
For years, people have been looking at what they considered to be the Nile crocodile and they didn’t really have much material to compare across Africa. In the 1970s, the industry that was involved in tanning crocodile hides was looking for ones with fewer bony scutes. A man called Fuchs did an analysis of the scutes to identify stocks that have fewer of them. He proposed some of these subspecies but the crocodile researchers threw out his work and said this guy doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
That’s the earliest sign of a morphological difference. People had been looking and looking and they just couldn’t see these differences. There had been all this evidence throughout the years about some extreme differences but most of the anecdotes were about their behaviour. Crocodiles are generally very hard to tell apart from their exterior features.
We can now revisit the morphological data to see what springs out. There’s an unpublished preliminary analysis of skulls by Chris Brochu that does pull apart the two species based on just skull morphology. We’re working together to write a description of the new species to pull together the behavioural, genetic and morphological data.
What about their behaviour?
There was anecdotal evidence about the weird behaviour of this crocodile. Many people, from Herodotus to current researchers, have described a sort of Nile crocodile that behaved differently. From my reading of the earlier literature about the exploration of the Nile, there were some suggestions of a smaller crocodile hanging out in the estuaries while the large, aggressive ones that everyone was afraid of lived in the middle of the Nile. Matt Shirley and I have thought about analysing the fine-scale ecological differences between the two to see if you could tap into how they could have overlapped in the Nile for so long before the recent period. Did they use different habitats or have different prey?
Tara Shine found these crocs living in caves in Mauritania that initially appeared to be sluggish because they were hanging out at the hottest time of the year. But people could feed them and come up to them and they weren’t aggressive at all. And some of the local populations apparently consider these crocs sacred. She took some samples and we now know that these are C.suchus.
Does C.suchus have a common name?
Geoffrey Saint Hilaire called it the sacred crocodile in one of his papers. He didn’t specifically name it as such but he said “This sacred crocodile is called C.suchus.” We’ve talked about proposing that as a common name.
Were the Egyptians aware of the differences between the two species?
Herodotus wrote that the ancient Egyptians recognised one crocodile that was larger and aggressive and another that was tamer and considered sacred, which they raised in temples. That’s part of what Geoffrey St Hilaire used in his description of the species.
You made a point in the paper about the fact that crocodiles are considered as living fossils…
Crocodiles are constantly being put forward as this ancient species that hasn’t changed for millions of years. Our paper shows that the crocs in East Africa – the true Nile crocs – are as young as humans are. They’re very recent. C.suchus is slightly older. Its ancestor branched off from the group that includes the Nile crocodile and the Caribbean crocs around 8 million years ago.
You saw that the Nile crocodile is more closely related to Caribbean crocs than to C.suchus. What does that tell us about the spread of these animals?
We had a paper a couple of months ago which showed that the Caribbean crocs must have made a transatlantic voyage. There are currents around the southern tip of Africa that flow up and across to the Caribbean. Traders used these during the slave trade, so transoceanic dispersal isn’t unrealistic. Crocodiles can store sperm and go without eating for up to 10 months.
But the interesting thing is that the ones that arrived in the Caribbean were from the east side of Africa. They would have been more likely to be picked up by the current that flows around the Cape, because C.suchus in West Africa and the Congo is more found in the interior. It’s also possible that during some period in history, C.suchus’s habitat was contracted towards the interior of the Sahara. It was trapped in the interior of the continent for some time and during that time, the Eastern species – which appears to be more estuary-tolerant – more readily dispersed around the continent and across the Atlantic.
Where did the idea to study crocodile mummies come from?
I had data that showed there were these eastern and western lineage, but I had this big gap in the middle where I thought the boundary between the two species was. I just wanted something to fill in that gap. I just wanted to fill in my samples! Typically, I work in natural history collections but when I worked as an anthropology undergraduate, I worked in collections that had croc mummies. So I contacted these curators and managers and asked for a tiny piece. They were very nervous but I got really teeny tiny bits from many collections. Most of them I didn’t get any DNA from, but I got some from mummies that were collected during and after Napoleon’s journey to Egypt. They were housed in a separate collection in Paris and they were hatchlings.
What will this mean for conservation practices?
It’s going to shake things up. The Nile crocodile is an iconic species in the conservation literature, in the history of developing conservation programmes, as a model for the sustainable use of wildlife. There’s also been a lot of trade in crocodile skins across African borders, because the species was thought to be very widespread. Suddenly, the true Nile crocodile’s range has been cut in half.
And C.suchus’s was already rare in the region it exists in. We have evidence that its range has contracted recently and it’s locally much rarer than the Nile crocodile. It’s in areas that are under huge pressure from the oil industry and others. I don’t know what it would be listed as under the IUCN criteria but it’s more critically threatened than the eastern Nile crocodile.
There have already been a lot of problems with the monitoring of trade in the Nile crocodile as it stood already. We’ve been trying to refine the means by which we monitor that trade. Along with this paper comes a method for genetically barcoding the samples, so it’s not just that there’s a huge new problem with no solution. We have some tools that we can provide to help with the monitoring.
But it’s a huge deal. There are some countries in West Africa that thought they would be able to ramp up their trade in skins to make more money. Now, it’s unlikely that that sustainable crocodile harvest is going to be viable. Some people are going to be very unhappy.

Thứ Hai, 21 tháng 11, 2011

Psychic crocodile

Well, if I'm going to get this blog rolling again, why not start with a crazy, cash-in story?! I'm sure most people are aware by now of Paul the "psychic" octopus who has an unbroken record of accurately predicting the matches that Germany won and lost during the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. Well, Crocosaurus Cove in Darwin has clearly decided to ride the wave of anticipation over Paul's latest prediction that Spain will win the World Cup final by doing their own prediction... with a large saltwater crocodile.

And who did "Harry" the crocodile pick? Well you should click the link and watch the video to see the action as it happened, but let's just say that the animal kingdom's reputation is at stake here!

I'm sure normal programming will be resumed shortly

Croc Attack


This is what Erin and I had to go through as part of our latest television show which airs this weekend on Discovery Channel. The blue Avatar suits are to protect us from deadly box jellyfish while carrying a saltwater crocodile, which sounds more dangerous on paper than it actually was.

The show is called "Croc Attack" which, amazingly enough, has never actually been used as the title for a TV show about crocodiles before. For some reason which I can't quite put my finger on, it's airing as part of Shark Week. Hey, if you don't tell anyone, I won't either, ok?

It's on at 9pm ET/PT Saturday 7th August, 12am ET/PT Sunday 8th August and 6pm ET/PT Sunday 8th August.

If enough people watch the show, and I hope you all do, we'll get to do more! It's our quest to get a bit more science and interesting stories in crocodile documentaries, which you know is the right way to go. If you're on the fence about it, bear in mind it features Smaug at 1,000 frames per second. He looks great at that frame rate. 

Malcolm Douglas

Of all the characters who work with crocodiles in Australia, Malcolm Douglas was that rare person who not only talked the talk, but walked the walk. Long before anyone had heard of the "Crocodile Hunter", Malcolm was out there fighting passionately for the animals and bush he believed in. I only met Malcolm once in Broome at his Crocodile Park but it was a memorable trip. He was one of those people who really understood crocodiles, and his passion for them was obvious. What he didn't know about the bush probably wasn't worth knowing, and his numerous documentaries and series are still captivating.

Malcolm was tragically killed last Wednesday on a dirt road in his new Wilderness Park. But his status as legend is undiminished. Just take a look at this:



This photograph has been doing the rounds lately. It purportedly shows a giant 6.5 metre (22 foot) saltwater crocodile that was shot in... well, there's the rub. There seems to be some disagreement about whether it was shot in Queensland, or the Northern Territory, and therefore who owns Australia's largest (dead) crocodile. This disagreement has spilled over into the international media, all of whom love a good story about giant crocodiles.

There's only one problem with all this. That crocodile is certainly not 6.5 metres long. Not even close. If you ask me, it's probably a little over 5 metres long. How do I know this? Well, all the clues are in the photo. First of all, that truck (a Toyota Landcruiser FJ40 series station wagon) is roughly the same length as the crocodile, give or take. It's hard to tell because the back of the crocodile's tail isn't in the shot. So how long is that truck? It's around 4.7 metres. Secondly, the photograph uses all the classic perspective tricks to fool the eye into emphasising the size of the crocodile - low to the ground, wide-angle lens, small child in the foreground, truck in the background (the distance could be several metres, further exaggerating the size of the crocodile). And if that wasn't enough, the crocodile is clearly starting to bloat from decomposition, making it look even larger. So if you add all this up, look at the size of the truck and where the crocodile is positioned in relation to it, considering how much of its tail is missing, it can't be much more than 5 metres long. That's around 17 feet at best. That's certainly a very impressive, very large crocodile, but it's nowhere near the size they're claiming, and it's certainly not the largest croc ever found in Australia.

Fake original



I've got to hand it to them, it's quite a neat Photoshop job.

But that's not really the point of this post. What I'd like to draw attention to is just how remarkably dangerous these jumping crocodile cruises are becoming. Don't get me wrong, I have no problem with the principle of showing tourists wild crocodile behaviour when it's done safely and responsibly, especially considering that crocodiles need all the good publicity they can get. Indeed, some of the licensed cruises who've been doing this for years have strict rules about safety. But the above photo is a fine illustration of how not to do it right, and it's certainly not an isolated incident. I've seen what happens when crocs next to boats slam their jaws sideways into the railings or gunnels. All it takes is for someone to be leaning over the edge like this photographer is doing, or simply to be resting their hand or arm on the top of the railing, and if the croc decides not to play nice then a tourist who doesn't appreciate what these animals are capable of is going to lose more than their pride. If that happens then the Adelaide River's famous jumping crocodiles will very likely become a thing of the past.

You don't want your unique, endemic species anymore?


This kind of story is tragic and sad, but typical of the problems faced with conservation of crocodiles. The Philippine crocodile (Crocodylus mindorensis) is considered perhaps the most endangered of all the species, with less than 100 individuals remaining in the wild and considerable pressure on its remaining habitat. Yet there are now estimated to be 7,000 Philippine crocodiles in captivity, more than enough to help replenish wild populations before they disappear forever. The problem is getting permission to release them. It seems nobody in a position to grant this permission wants any Philippine crocodiles released back into the wild, based on unfounded fears that these crocodiles may start to kill people (there has not been a single documented attack by a Philippine crocodile on a human recorded). There has always been confusion in the Philippines between the Philippine crocodile and the saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) and the admittedly rare attacks by the latter species have unfortunately also tarred the reputation of the former.

Yet it should be clear to anyone in the Philippines of the value of crocodiles to their country, on a week after the world's largest saltwater crocodile was captured and placed into captivity for the purposes of tourism and education about crocodiles. Perhaps those same officials who refuse to consider releasing an endemic and unique crocodile, a species that should be a source of national pride for their country (and international derision should it be allowed to disappear forever), should read their own newspapers and realise how important (and valuable) crocodiles can be for a country that is lucky enough to still have them.