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    Crikey! Huge crocodile captured in Philippines

    MANILA, Philippines (AP) — What a croc!

    Its mighty snout wrapped tightly with ropes, a one-ton, 20-foot saltwater crocodile was captured and put on display in a town in the southern Philippines — one of the biggest such reptiles to be caught in recent years.

    But shed no crocodile tears for this colossal captive.

    "Lolong," as it has been nicknamed, is about to become the star attraction of an ecotourism park — unless it is upstaged by an even larger reptile that may be still be on the loose.

    Residents of Bunawan township celebrated when they captured the croc, with about 100 people pulling the feared beast from a creek by rope, then hoisting it by crane onto a truck. While the beast was safely tied up, they examined its teeth, claws and stubby legs with fascination.

    Their party may have been premature, however.

    After the 20-foot (6.1-meter) reptile was caught over the weekend, authorities said Tuesday an even bigger crocodile may still be lurking in creeks of the remote region in Agusan del Sur province.

    The scaly skinned Lolong — which tips the scales at 2,370 pounds (1,075 kilograms) — is estimated to be at least 50 years old. 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.

    It was captured alive after a three-week hunt, easing some fears among the locals. A child was killed two years ago in the township by a crocodile, and a croc is suspected of killing a fisherman who has been missing since July. Last month, residents saw a crocodile killing a water buffalo.

    The party thrown after Lolong's capture "was like a feast, so many villagers turned up," said Mayor Edwin Cox Elorde.

    Wildlife official Ronnie Sumiller, who has hunted "nuisance crocodiles" for 20 years and led the team that captured Lolong, said another search was under way for the possibly larger croc that he and residents have seen in the 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, about 515 miles (830 kilometers) southeast of Manila.

    "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."

    Backed by five village hunters he trained, Sumiller has set 20 steel cable traps with an animal carcass as bait in nearby vast marshland and along the creek where Lolong was caught.

    Sumiller said he found no human remains when he induced the captured crocodile to vomit.

    Residents of the farming town of about 37,000 people have been told to avoid venturing into marshy areas alone at night, Elorde said.

    Guinness World Records lists a saltwater crocodile caught in Australia as the largest crocodile in captivity, measuring 17 feet 11.75 inches (5.48 meters). Saltwater crocodiles can live for more than 100 years and grow to 23 feet (7 meters).

    A website for a park called Action Adventure in North Myrtle Beach, S.C., says it is home to Utan, "King of the Crocs," which it bills as the largest crocodile in the United States, measuring more than 20 feet. Park officials did not immediately respond to telephone calls or email requests for information about their crocodile.

    Elorde said he plans to make Lolong "the biggest star" in a planned ecotourism park.

    Philippine laws strictly prohibit civilians from killing endangered crocodiles, with violators facing up to 12 years in prison and a fine of 1 million pesos ($24,000).

    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.

    Environment Secretary Ramon Paje said the enormous crocodile was captured because it was a threat to the community. He added the reptiles remind that the Philippines' remaining rich habitats need to be constantly protected.

    Crocodiles have been hunted in the Philippines by poachers hoping to cash in on the high demand in wealthy Asian countries for their hide, which is coveted for products ranging from bags and shoes to cellphone cases.

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    49 comments

    • pistolwhips  •  8 months ago
      I'm tired of seeing it tied up.
    • WildBillCody  •  8 months ago
      Anyone know if these saltwater crocs are the largest crocs on earth or are African crocodiles?
    • WildBillCody  •  8 months ago
      Steve Erwin would be tremendously proud of these folks for capturing it ALIVE and not killing it. He's up there smiling down on these people right now. yelling WOOO HOOOOOO!!!
    • Kristian  •  8 months ago
      GO FILIPINOS!!
    • teddy  •  8 months ago
      it's so huge.
    • JudithS  •  8 months ago
      omgosh.......that's one big dude ~....thinking he would have taken up the entire alligator 'pond' at the Steinhart Aquarium in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco. Kudos to the brave people who captured the ~GI-normous croc.
    • Animosity  •  8 months ago
      Now all they need is a 21 foot Croc Pot to cook it in. Get it, Croc(k) Pot. LOL. I crack my self up sometimes. Some taters & carrots and you got a meal to serve.
    • wilferd  •  8 months ago
      Does the Croc go "Tick Tock", and has any one seen Captain Hook?
    • Desi  •  8 months ago
      The crocs they catched with four feet are just the very ordinary crocodile in Philippines.. The most amazing are the crocodile with two legs and trippled thicker skin specially at face. There were million living species all over the philippines..
      • WildBillCody 8 months ago
        Yeap, they're called Saltwater Crocodiles, they are the largest crocodiles on Earth, IIRC, African crocs might be bigger than them.........
    • Me  •  8 months ago
      This is a whole lotta croc!
    • Pons  •  8 months ago
      Imelda Marcos would have made shoes out of that big boy!
    • pjd19  •  8 months ago
      hope they feed them all politician
    • Tu Papa!  •  8 months ago
      crikey?? i hope Steve Irwins family sues yahoo and theyre horrible writers haha
    • Otto Pilot  •  8 months ago
      How does one induce a croc to vomit?
      • EM 8 months ago
        You show him Obama's accomplishments as President.
      • Denny 8 months ago
        you show him a Picture of Obama's Wife !
    • Frankie Areizaga  •  8 months ago
      dont dont kill croc the world 3000 pound 21 feet awesome
    • END_MONEY_LOBBYING  •  8 months ago
      GO GATORS !
    • RobinD  •  8 months ago
      I saw like one of the other commenters..about how big certain spiecies are getting..this keep up and we will be the endangered ones. Bad congressman don't help either.
    • orions stars  •  8 months ago
      Put it in the Circus with the "Duck"
    • Cyn  •  8 months ago
      50 years of care-free eating only to be tied up and land on the cover page of yahoo! news..must be demoralizing
      • James Ronald 8 months ago
        care free eating, not a prob to locals, until he started eating people :( He will still be taken cared of.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  8 months ago
      That fat Croc is a result of either Roids or GMO
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