Crocodiles under threat from a South African dam

Scientists in South Africa’s Loskop Nature Reserve in Mpumalanga province have fitted crocodiles with satellite transmitters to see if they are keeping safe following a recent spill from a nearby coal mine into a dam where they live.

They want to see “where the animals are staying and whether they are staying out of harm's way”, Dr Hannes Botha, a reptile scientist at the Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency, told the BBC’s Newsday programme.

But this is not the first time the crocodiles have been threatened: “The crocodiles have been dying over quite a long period of time,” Dr Botha said, describing “mass mortality” events in 2005 and 2006 when the dam lost most of its crocodile population.

A survey in 2011 counted three animals in the whole dam - the population had been practically “wiped out”, Dr Botha said.

The animals have not been removed from the dam, because doing so would be a big “undertaking” and they were only reintroduced to the area last year, before the spill.

The crocodiles are a huge tourist attraction to the area, Dr Botha said, because they are “impressive” animals and “top predators”.

This article originally appeared on BBC Sport

Photo: Getty Images

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