Nature

Love At First Bite, Male Crocodile Gets Snappy With New Girlfriend

It was love at first bite when the male crocodile Meunga gave a snappy welcome to resident female Alice at an Australian zoo after being kept apart for several months.

The introduction was filmed at Snakes Downunder Reptile Park and Zoo in the town of Childers in the Australian state of Queensland earlier this week.

The zoo said on Facebook: “Introducing saltwater crocodile Alice to new male Meunga for the first time. A bit more aggression from him than we had hoped, but things seem to have settled down.”

The crocodile Meunga joins Alice for the first time at the Snakes Downunder Reptile Park and Zoo in Childers Queensland in Australia. (Snakes Downunder Reptile Park and Zoo/Newsflash)

Ian, spokesperson for Snakes Downunder Reptile Park and Zoo, told Newsflash that the introduction was necessary after the unexpected loss of their previous male crocodile.

He said: “Our previous male saltwater (estuarine) crocodile, Macca, unfortunately died from a very long term viral lung infection late last November. He had hidden this from us completely until the last eight days when we could tell there was something not right.

“He finally crashed one afternoon. I ended up in the water with him to turn him the right way up and to hold his head out of the water, but he couldn’t be saved. It was a great shock to us and very sad. He had been with us for over 14 years, a part of our zoo family, and was the star of Snakes Downunder Reptile Park and Zoo.

The crocodile Meunga joins Alice for the first time at the Snakes Downunder Reptile Park and Zoo in Childers Queensland in Australia. (Snakes Downunder Reptile Park and Zoo/Newsflash)

“Steve Irwin’s Australia Zoo kindly donated another male croc to us. His name is Meunga. We kept him separated by a double fence from our female, Alice, for five months so they could get to know each other before we introduced them properly.

Ian told Newsflash: “We exhibit 20 species of snakes here. All bar one are Australian.

“Australia has approx 200 species of snakes and approx 400 species of lizards. We exhibit five out of the top six of the world’s most venomous snakes in our daily snake shows.”

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