CANBERRA, Australia – The government on Thursday rejected a plan to allow trophy hunting of saltwater crocodiles in northern Australia despite two recent fatal attacks on divers.
Crocodile numbers have exploded in Australia since a 1971 federal ban on hunting the creatures.
Some northern Australians called for lifting the ban after two men were killed by crocodiles in a span of five days in September while snorkeling in the Northern Territory.
The territorial government proposed allowing trophy hunters to annually shoot 25 crocodiles longer than 13 feet as a means of controlling their numbers and earning income for Aborigines, who own much of the giant reptiles’ habitat in the sparsely populated northern province.
The proposal was backed by international experts, but opposed by animal welfare organizations, who regarded it as cruel.
Federal Environment Minister Ian Campbell said Thursday he had ruled out allowing trophy hunting.
“I do not believe safari hunting of crocodiles is consistent with a modern-day approach to animal welfare and responsible management,” he said.
Campbell said it would have been difficult to achieve humane recreational hunting.
“The problem is, if you’ve got an amateur shooter traveling from overseas to Australia shooting a crocodile from 50 yards, they’re very hard to shoot in a humane way where you can guarantee a kill with a first shot,” he told Nine Network television.
A crocodile expert, zoologist Grahame Webb, dismissed the cruelty argument as a fabrication, saying crocodiles that aren’t killed or captured by humans are eventually torn apart by other crocodiles in the wild.
“It’s crocs controlling crocs out there,” Webb said.
“Catch 10 big crocs, and seven or eight of them will have had a leg ripped off or significant chunks ripped out of the tail, or head or snout,” he said.
Webb is chairman of the Crocodile Specialist Group, a 350-member global network involved in crocodile conservation and management. The group backed the trophy hunting proposal.
The population of crocodiles in the Northern Territory has soared to about 60,000 since they became protected. Years of hunting had reduced their numbers to about 5,000.
Crocodiles, which can grow to 23 feet, lurk in rivers and the sea throughout the tropical north and regularly attack and sometimes kill swimmers.
The government will continue to allow 600 crocodiles a year to be trapped and shot by professionals for farming, skin and meat, or because they threaten humans.
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