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  • 24
    Jan
    2013
    3:37pm, EST

    15,000 crocodiles escape from South Africa farm

    Cameron Spencer/Getty Images file

    A crocodile drifts past a hippopotamus in the Limpopo River at the Pafuri game reserve in South Africa in July 2010.

    By Peroshni Govender, Reuters

    JOHANNESBURG -- Some 15,000 crocodiles escaped from a South African reptile farm during a flood this week and about half of them are still on the loose in and around one of southern Africa's biggest rivers, a newspaper reported on Thursday.

    "There used to be only a few crocodiles in the Limpopo River. Now there are a lot," Zane Langman, whose in-laws own the farm in the northern part of the country told Beeld newspaper.


    Langman said only half the escaped crocodiles from the Rakwena Crocodile Farm close to the Botswana border had been recaptured, the report said.

    Langman added that farm gates were opened out of fear the rushing flood water would crush the crocodiles.

    Officials from the farm were not immediately available for comment.

    One crocodile apparently from the farm was captured about 75 miles away at a school rugby field, it said.

    The heavy rains and flooding have claimed at least 20 lives in Mozambique and South Africa and led to the evacuations of thousands of people.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    33 comments

    Because in their habitats, they are the apex predator. They are better at maintaining natural balance than humans are. I just wish we could find a way to expand their territory for them, say Iran and North Korea maybe?

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    Explore related topics: farm, flood, south-africa, featured, crocodiles, reptile

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