Saltwater crocodiles are slowly returning to Bali and Java. Can we learn to live alongside them?
- October 20, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Saltwater crocodiles are slowly returning to Bali and Java. Can we learn to live alongside them?
Subject: Geography
Section: Species in news
Context:
- A three-metre saltwater crocodile was seen on the Legian Beach, one of Bali’s most popular spots. Another was seen in Lombok’s Awang Bay, Indonesia.
Saltwater crocodiles:
- Saltwater crocodiles (Crocodylusporosus) are also known as estuarine crocodiles, as they prefer to live in mangrove-lined rivers, and native to saltwater habitats, brackish wetlands and freshwater rivers from India’s east coast across Southeast Asia and the Sundaic region to northern Australia and Micronesia.
- They’re the largest living reptile, reaching up to seven metres in length– far larger than Indonesia’s famous Komodo dragon, which tops out at three metres.
- These crocodiles are the most territorial of all crocodilians. Dominant males push out smaller male crocodiles, who set out in search of new habitat.
- Worldwide, saltwater crocodiles are listed as a species of least concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
- There is a full population recovery in parts of northern Australia.
- In Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam the species is extinct.
Saltwater crocodile in Indonesia:
- Historically found throughout Indonesia.
- Killed off in Bali, Lombok, and Java. But survived in remote parts of Indonesia.
- They emerge again on the island of Java, Bangka-Belitung islands off Sumatra and the provinces of East Kalimantan, East Nusa Tenggara and Riau.
- For Bali and Lombok, crocodiles are likely migrating from the islands to the east, such as Flores, Lembata, Sumba and Timor.
Source: DownToEarth