Australian study finds crocodiles make up for their poor swimming by surfing across the ocean

By Rod Mcguirk, AP
Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Australian study finds crocodiles surf the seas

CANBERRA, Australia — Crocodiles can surf ocean currents to take long leisurely journeys across open seas in the South Pacific, a researcher said on Wednesday.

The research by a group of Australian ecologists published this week in the British Ecological Society’s “Journal of Animal Ecology” explains how the world’s largest living reptile came to occupy so many South Pacific islands despite having little stamina for swimming.

Like a surfer catching a wave, estuarine crocodiles — which can grow up to 20 feet (6 meters) — can ride currents to cross hundreds of miles (kilometers) of open sea, study author Hamish Campbell said.

The research began in 2002 in the tropics of Australia’s Queensland state and involved environmentalist and television personality Steve Irwin, the so-called Crocodile Hunter who was killed by a stingray barb off Queensland in 2006.

Campbell, a University of Queensland ecologist, teamed up with government rangers and the Irwin family’s Australia Zoo to tag 27 adult crocodiles in the remote Kennedy River. They used sonar transmitters and underwater receivers to track their movements over 12 months.

Campbell said a 20-minute swim is hard work for a crocodile, so he was surprised that eight of the tagged crocodiles repeatedly took long journeys out to sea from their river home area that was more than 35 miles (60 kilometers) upstream.

“It did seem unlikely that they were swimming the entire way and when we looked at residual surface currents from satellite (images), you could see quite clearly that they were indeed following the current systems,” Campbell told The Associated Press.

One 13-foot (3.8-meter) male swam 367 miles (590 kilometers) over 25 days to another river system where it stayed for seven months before returning.

“Why he went there, we have absolutely no idea, but it seems very deliberate, purposeful movements,” Campbell said.

He said the research showed that currents could carry crocodiles — which can survive for months without food or fresh water — across vast tracks of ocean.

The research also explains why the same species of estuarine crocodile is found in various countries separated by seas.

Zoologist Grahame Webb, an Australian crocodile expert independent of the study, welcomed the research as the first demonstration of how crocodiles use currents.

“Long distances voyages at sea have always been a bit rare with crocs, and people have suspected that currents played a part,” Webb said.

“The research shows they’re much more mobile than people realize, and how they can be so energy efficient that a giant reptile weighing nearly a ton can survive on one or two chickens a week,” Webb said.

Large crocodiles are powerful, but tire quickly. A 20-minute struggle in a trap can kill a crocodile, because exertion causes a rapid buildup of lactic acid in their blood, Webb said.

Estuarine crocodiles mainly live in rivers and mangroves in a range extending over more than 3,800 square miles (10,000 square kilometers) of the Southeast Pacific from India to Fiji and from China to Australia.

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