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Natal origin and dispersal of problem saltwater crocodiles in the Darwin Harbor, Australia

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Authors

Fukuda, Yusuke
Moritz, Craig
FitzSimmons, Nancy N.
Jang, Namchul
Webb, Grahame J
Lindner, Garry
Campbell, Hamish
Christian, Keith
Leeder, Steven
Banks, Sam C.

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Wildlife Society

Abstract

Management programs that successfully recovered wild saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) populations in the Northern Territory of Australia did so with an expanding commitment to maintaining public safety. One aspect of the program is the ongoing removal of resident and immigrant crocodiles within Darwin Harbor (since 1979), the main urban center. We determined the likely sources of crocodiles caught as problem animals between 2015–2017 by comparing recently developed methods for population assignment. Depending on the assignment model used, we estimated that between 30% and 50% of crocodiles in Darwin Harbor originated from the Adelaide and Mary rivers, and the Kakadu region east of Darwin, and between 20% and 30% of crocodiles originated from the Finniss, Reynolds, and Daly rivers southwest of Darwin. Saltwater crocodiles occur at particularly high densities in these catchments. The remainder came from a mixture of different sources across the Northern Territory. The most common animals captured were immature (150–180 cm) males that have traveled 100–200 km. We did not identify any relationships between the distance from the inferred origin to Darwin Harbor and the size and sex of the crocodiles, or the year of capture. The targeted removal of crocodiles from specific sites such as Darwin Harbor, near where most people live, improves public safety in the highest risk areas, without compromising abundant source populations in most areas.

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Journal of Wildlife Management

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Open Access

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Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs License

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