Australian rangers kill crocodile that fatally attacked 12-year-old girl swimming in creek

The attack occurred in Mango Creek near Palumpa, an Outback Indigenous community in the Northern Territory

12-year-old girl's remains discovered after crocodile attack

After a nearly two-day search, authorities in Palumpa, Northern Australia discovered the remains of a missing girl in a riverbed where she had been swimming. (Credit: AP)

  • A crocodile in northern Australia was shot dead by rangers after it fatally attacked a 12-year-old girl who was swimming with her family.
  • The attack occurred in Mango Creek near Palumpa, an Outback Indigenous community in the Northern Territory.
  • The crocodile was shot after rangers received permission from traditional landowners, who regard saltwater crocodiles as a totem.

Rangers have shot dead a 14-foot crocodile in northern Australia after it killed a 12-year-old girl while she was swimming with her family last week, police said Wednesday.

The girl’s death was the first fatal crocodile attack in the Northern Territory since 2018 when an Indigenous woman was killed while gathering mussels in a river. The attack has rekindled debate on whether more should be done to curb the crocodile population in the Northern Territory, where the protected species has increasingly encroached on human populations.

Wildlife rangers had been attempting to trap or shoot the crocodile since the girl was attacked last week in Mango Creek near Palumpa, an Outback Indigenous community in the Northern Territory.

AUSTRALIAN GIRL, 12, KILLED BY CROCODILE WHILE SWIMMING IN CREEK

They shot the animal Sunday after getting permission from the region’s traditional landowners. Saltwater crocodiles are considered a totem by many Indigenous Australians.

A road sign pointing to the Indigenous region of Palumpa, background, and a saltwater crocodile, inset

Rangers have shot dead a 14-foot crocodile in northern Australia after it killed a 12-year-old girl while she was swimming with her family last week, police said on Wednesday. (AP Newsroom/Getty Images)

Police said analysis had confirmed the animal was the one that killed the girl.

"The events of last week have had a huge impact on the family and local police are continuing to provide support to everyone impacted," senior Sgt. Erica Gibson said in the police statement.

Northern Territory-based crocodile scientist Grahame Webb said a reptile the size of the one shot had to be male and at least 30 years old. They grow throughout their lives and can live up to 70 years.

The girl’s death came weeks after the Northern Territory approved a 10-year plan to contain croc numbers, lifting the rate of culling near human habitat from 300 to 1,200 a year.

The Northern Territory government said after the latest fatality that crocs could not be allowed to outnumber humans.

The Northern Territory has a land area around the size of France and Spain combined but only 250,000 people. Croc numbers are estimated at 100,000. The crocodile population was as low as 3,000 before hunting them was outlawed by federal legislation in 1971.

Webb said the territory’s crocs had largely stabilized their own population in recent years by killing each other for food or territory. "They eat each other. The crocs have been controlling their own population. It’s not really people that have been controlling them," Webb said.

via FoxNews July 10th 2024