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| Officials in Queensland have set a trap to catch the saltwater crocodile, who residents have nicknamed Howard |
A crocodile living in a creek in northwestern Australia is at the centre of a battle between authorities who want to remove it, and locals who have grown fond of the massive reptile.
Officials
in the state of Queensland have set a trap to catch the saltwater croc, who
residents have nicknamed Howard, saying he is a danger to humans.
One
schoolboy is so distraught by the decision he has written a letter to state
environment minister Leeanne Enoch begging her to let the creature stay.
"I
lived at Bamboo Creek Road for five years and I loved watching Howard sunbake
and seeing him from the bridge every afternoon," wrote 10-year-old Elroy
Woods, from the small locality of Miallo.
David
White, who owns a local crocodile-cruise business, said there had been 300
emails sent in support of keeping the four-metre-long animal where it is, and
just one complaint.
Even
Queensland's Australia Zoo, run by the widow of late celebrity "crocodile
hunter" Steve Irwin, has pitched in.
The zoo
said in a tweet it was "so proud" of Elroy's efforts to protect
Howard, adding that predators at the top of the food chain were "the most
important in any ecosystem".
However the
government has indicated the trap will remain in place, saying the crocodile
will not be destroyed when caught.
A balance
"between the need to protect public safety, and the need to conserve
estuarine crocodile populations in the wild" must be found, said an
environment department official.

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