logo
'I saw them as monsters and man-eaters': Saving the world's rarest crocodile from its bad reputation

'I saw them as monsters and man-eaters': Saving the world's rarest crocodile from its bad reputation

BBC News4 days ago
It's known for its deadly bite, but the Philippine crocodile – thought to be the rarest in the world – has a lot more to give than it gets credit for. An effort blending science and indigenous knowledge to protect the species is helping replenish ecosystems and livelihoods.
In the lush, humid forest of the Philippines' Northern Sierra Madre Natural Park, three men in shorts, T-shirts and headlamps shape themselves a path through the night's thick vegetation with long sticks. They're treading quietly, calf-deep into turbid waters, and shining their torches against the darkness whirlpooling around their feet. Then, they see it. Quickly, they snatch the slender baby crocodile straight out of the safety of its muddy pond. What they are doing is not hunting or harming the infant yet stoic creature – one of the rarest crocodile species on the planet – but rather saving it from the brink of extinction.
Throughout history, the Philippine crocodile – known to science as Crocodylus mindorensis – could be found all over the Filipino archipelago, crawling around marshes, splashing in ponds and creeks, and trailing across fast-paced rivers nestled in limestone formations across the dense forests.
Historical records show that the indigenous people of the Philippines likely feared the small reptilian predator – which they called buwaya (crocodile) and bukarot (Philippine crocodile) – yet revered, venerated and respected it, living in harmony with it. Crocodiles were a symbol of strength and power, and villagers, especially tribe chiefs and the reptiles were thought to share intimate spiritual bonds. Some ethnicities believed that their ancestors would reincarnate as crocodiles, guarding over them in the years to come. If they spotted one among the turbid waters, they'd call out to them "Nono", or grandfather.
Spear fisherfolk were known to ask the crocodiles for permission to pass through their stretches of water and share nature's bounty, according to Nestor Aliejo, a leader of the indigenous Agta community in Dunoy and Villa Miranda, in the northern Philippines. "The crocodile is not really that harmful, as long as you don't hurt them," says Aliejo.
It was likely when the Spanish colonisers of the 1560s set foot on the islands that the perception of the reptilians started shifting. Apart from getting their taxonomy wrong and not distinguishing the Philippine crocodile from the saltwater crocodiles also found in the archipelago, records show high-ranking colonial officers wrote in their letters that crocodiles were everywhere, and they were "very bloodthirsty and cruel". One church fresco from San Mariano depicts a saint saving his people by stomping on a crocodile. Historians from the 1700s described crocodiles as "monstrous caimans" who killed people, especially children. (While indigenous credence among some ethnicities was actually that crocodiles never randomly assaulted humans, but rather they acted as divine arbiters, pruning evil in society.)
Over time, the Philippine crocodile's habitat was gnawed away at consistently through agricultural and industrial development, urbanisation, mining, slash-and-burn agriculture, and, since the late 1900s, legal and illegal logging as the Philippines became one of the world's largest exporters of tropical hardwoods. The rise of aggressive overfishing techniques like electrofishing also posed a risk to the wildlife in rivers.
The buwaya became indiscriminately persecuted: they were hunted out of fear of their attacks, for fun, as well as for the trade of their meat and precious skin. Their numbers plummeted. Estimates suggest that more than 80% of all of the archipelago's crocodiles have been killed in the past century – going from around 10,000 crocodiles (although this is hard to verify) to just 100 in the wild by the early 1990s – leaving small and rare pockets of populations in secluded inland freshwater habitats.
By the 2000s, all scientists could find was 20 crocodiles split among three interconnected river systemsin the Sierra Madre Mountains in north-eastern Luzon, a fragment of population in the small island of Dalupiri, and a likely larger population on the island of Mindanao. The latter, though, has been difficult to survey given the socio-political unrest in the area and there being armed groups in the marsh.
As a result, the Philippine crocodile was quickly listed as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species, and experts established the Philippine Crocodile National Recovery Team to attempt to bring the crocodile back from the brink.
Action to save the crocodile took several forms. The Filipino government, universities and organisations focused on rearing Philippine crocodiles in captivity. This was already underway from 1981, when Silliman University pioneered captive breeding and, starting with two adults, they hatched 114 baby crocodiles over 13 years, then distributed them to private institutions for safekeeping and further rearing programmes.
Starting from those first crocodiles in the 1980s, local governments, non-profits and private organisations have continued a wide range of captivity rearing programmes, with mixed results. In 2010, the first ever 50 captive-bred Philippine crocodiles we reintroduced, but they all died because they were not fit enough for wild conditions and they were killed by people. Now the six crocodile farms that make up the non-profit organisation Crocodylus Porosus Philippines. lead the way on these types of reintroduction projects to the wild or semi-captive habitats. In 2013, they successfully released some crocodiles in the Paghungawan Marsh on Siargao Island, now a popular tourist attraction, and by 2021, these released crocodiles even had young in the wild.
Zoos from all over the world – including the US, Australia, and several throughout Europe – have also pitched in, even launching their own purebred C. mindorensis breeding efforts.
"We're really just trying to ensure that there is a viable population [living outside its natural habitat] that would support the wild population if that need arises," says Chris Banks, the international conservation manager at Zoos Victoria in Australia.
The day we spoke, a female Philippine crocodile was flying on a plane over to Victoria from the Cologne Zoo in Germany. (The Cologne Zoo had already sent two male crocodiles called Hulky and Dodong back to the Philippines for reintroduction in the wild in 2020.)
On the other hand, conservationists argue that captive breeding and reintroduction programmes cannot exist in a silo – especially not without mending the relationship between wild populations of crocodiles and the people with whom they share the land.
The non-profit foundation Mabuwaya – which first surveyed the crocodiles in the Sierra Madre Mountains in the 2000s, and reintroduced those first 50 captive-bred crocodiles – aims to combine conservation efforts with local indigenous knowledge to preserve the remaining C. mindorensis. Together with the Kalingha people, the Agta people, and immigrant farmers in San Mariano, they are creating buffer zones for reforestation and the reintroduction of native plants to the crocodile's habitat, and they have founded eight crocodile sanctuaries where commercial agriculture, farming and fishing are now illegal.
Olalia Infiel, an Agta woman from the Dunoy village, says she teaches the village youth: "Go fishing, but don't mess with the crocodiles… you should not hurt them, and they will also respect you."
Since law enforcement in these remote islands of the archipelago is scarce, these sanctuaries are run by community leaders, representatives of the local government, and 12 volunteer community leaders – some indigenous, some not – known as the Bantay Santuwaryo, or guardians of the sanctuaries. Mabuwaya trains them in population monitoring to survey the existing crocodile numbers, a task which they carry out every three months. They are also trained by lawyers on environmental law, how to collect evidence, how to confiscate incriminating materials, how to conduct a proper arrest, and how to file a case, and they are deputised by the municipal government as environmental law enforcers.
"Before there were people who were hunting crocodiles, it was normal. [Nobody said] 'that's not good', because there were no rules or laws [in] those times," says Victorino Montanes, the first local to be appointed as Bantay Santuwaryo in 2004. (It is the Wildlife Act of 2001 that made it punishable by law to kill a crocodile.)
Now, on top of their full-time jobs as fishers and farmers, Montanes and his colleagues also patrol the wetlands and rivers where the wild crocodiles reside, looking over them. Recently, the volunteers also found a deceased juvenile crocodile trapped in a fishing net next to a rice field.
Nestor Gumarang, a member of the Bantay Santuwaryo since 2016, believes authorities should "make an example of whoever kills crocodiles, they should punish or imprison them so that everybody will listen".
This type of environmental stewardship isn't just to save the crocodiles from extinction, according to Marshall Magas, an Agta man from Gab-Gab village. But rather, it is also to improve the local community's livelihood by restoring environmental equilibria and, hopefully, bringing wildlife populations back to healthier numbers.
"When I was young… I could catch a lot of fish, eels, even wild boar and other animals. But now it's very difficult," says Magas. Saving the crocodiles would potentially give life back to the local waters, also helping keep the Agta people's hunting and foraging traditions alive.
In their role as crocodile wardens, the Bantay Santuwaryo also actively help baby crocodiles make it into adulthood. Hatchlings are so small they're sometimes swept away by strong currents and killed, or easily targeted by predators like snakes, monitor lizards, birds and even huge fire ants. So the volunteers patrol the rivers at night, torches in hand, to protect the crocodile nests from destruction. They collect young hatchlings as soon as they are born, and take them to a conservation center where scientists raise them in semi-captivity until they are strong enough to be released back into the wild.
Thanks to this method, the survival rate of Philippine crocodile hatchlings in the Sierra Madre area has been 79% throughout the entirety of the headstart programme, says Merlijn Van Weerd, one of the founders of Mabuwaya Foundation. A study looking at the results of release after one year in captivity, head-started Philippine crocodile hatchling survival was 72% compared to 47% for wild hatchlings, and at least 53% of those head-started hatchling crocodiles were still alive after a year in the wild.
This population is now up to about 125 individuals, including 17 adults, 41 juveniles, and dozens of hatchlings, the Mabuwaya team says. Breeding attempts in captivity haven't been successful so far, but the conservationists are hopeful.
Still, while conservationists would love to see the crocodiles back to their original distribution – from the top of the archipelago all the way to the bottom – that'll likely not be possible, because of habitat alteration and the sheer abundance of the human population in those areas, according to Charlie Manolis, co-chair of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group, who is not actively involved with the Mabuwaya efforts.
"The difficulty for the Philippine crocodile is that it lives in a place where there's a gazillion people," says Manolis. "Once people have gone long periods of time not having crocodilians around them, bringing them back is really, really a lot more difficult, because people don't have a living memory of living with them."
Community dedication, in fact, is key to the success of the reintroduction.
Bernard Tarun, now a biodiversity expert at the Mabuwaya Foundation, wasn't a fan of crocodiles when he started off. The first time he held a Philippine crocodile in his hands, he was bitten. But instead of shunning the creatures, he grew adamant he'd establish rapport with them, learn how to manage them, and never get bitten again. "Especially those communities living near the crocodile localities, they already changed their mind," says Tarun. "From 'Oh, you have to kill that one', now to 'Okay, don't disturb, enjoy watching the crocodile'."
Ultimately, almost all efforts of the Bantay Santuwaryo, the Mabuwaya foundation, and the Agta community go towards educational projects to change people's perception of crocodiles.
More like this:• This Hawaiian island's "freakosystems" are a warning from the future• How alligators are breathing life into Florida's Everglades• The Permian monsters that ruled the Earth before dinosaurs
In mainstream Filipino culture, fear and negative preconceptions about the apex predators still linger: crocodiles are perceived as bloodthirsty people-eaters. In the media, corrupt politicians, self-serving government officers, or moneylenders and landlords are often referred to as buwaya in disrespect.
Instead, the indigenous Kalinga people sing about the bond between their chiefs and crocodiles, the Magindanaon people still believe they descend from crocodiles, and the Tagbanwa say their ancestors made a blood pact with the reptiles to keep them safe from their hunger.
"We have never met an Agta who hates crocodile or who would kill crocodiles," says Van Weerd. "We're trying to get that relationship back in which there is respect for the crocodiles."
So the teams have been running intensive communication, education and public-awareness campaigns, including everything from posters and calendars to radio programs, puppet shows, school visits and launching a crocodile mascot. They're also kickstarting projects on getting more women involved in biodiversity conservation – so far, the Bantay Santuwaryo only has two women on board – as well as promoting the Philippine crocodile as a tourist attraction for the area, says Marites Gatan-Balbas, one of the founders of Mabuwaya Foundation.
It was she who started the team's interest in the crocodile species when, while doing fieldwork out in Sierra Madre on March 17, 1999, a fisherman asked her to buy a C. mindorensis from him. "When they showed me the croc, I just didn't care about it, because I also saw them as monsters and man-eaters," says Gatan-Balbas. Now, though, "our slogan is 'Philippine crocodile, something to be proud of'." That fisherman used to reel in baby crocodiles as bycatch and sell them as pets. He too, now, works for the Bantay Santuaryo instead.
--
For essential climate news and hopeful developments to your inbox, sign up to the Future Earth newsletter, while The Essential List delivers a handpicked selection of features and insights twice a week.
For more science, technology, environment and health stories from the BBC, follow us on Facebook and Instagram.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Four rare Barbary lion cubs born at Czech zoo
Four rare Barbary lion cubs born at Czech zoo

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Four rare Barbary lion cubs born at Czech zoo

Four Barbary lion cubs were born recently in a Czech zoo, a vital contribution for the small surviving population of a rare lion that is extinct in the wild. The three females and one male were seen playing in their outdoor enclosure at Dvůr Králové safari park on Wednesday under the watchful eye of their parents, Khalila and Bart. That will change soon. As part of an international endangered species programme that coordinates efforts for the lions' survival in captivity, the cubs will be sent to other participating parks, including the Midbarium zoo in Israel. There is a chance that may not be the end of the story. The deputy director of Dvůr Králové, Jaroslav Hyjánek, said preliminary steps had been taken to possibly reintroduce the Barbary lion into its natural habitat – but that was still in the 'far distant future'. The Barbary lion, a majestic member of the northern lion subspecies, once roamed freely in its native north Africa, including the Atlas mountains. A symbol of strength, the Barbary lion was almost wiped out by humans. Many were killed by gladiators in Roman times, while overhunting and the loss of habitat contributed to their later near extinction. The last known photo of a wild lion was taken in 1925. It is believed the last small populations went extinct in the wild in the mid-1960s. Fewer than 200 Barbary lions are now estimated to live in captivity. Hyjánek said that after initial talks with Moroccan authorities, who have not rejected the idea of the lions' reintroduction, a conference of experts has been planned in Morocco for later this year or early 2026 to decide whether to go ahead with such a scheme in one of the national parks in the Atlas mountains. Any reintroduction would face bureaucratic and other obstacles. As the lions have not been present in the environment for so long, the plans would have to ensure the animals' protection, a sufficient prey population, and cooperation and approval from local communities. Hyjánek said reintroduction was still worth trying if it turned out to be sustainable. 'It's important to have such a vision for any animal,' he said. 'Without it, the existence of zoos wouldn't make sense.'

Wild-born chough fledges and thrives in Kent for first time in 200 years
Wild-born chough fledges and thrives in Kent for first time in 200 years

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Wild-born chough fledges and thrives in Kent for first time in 200 years

A young red-billed chough has successfully taken to the skies from a nest in the wild in Kent for the first time for more than two centuries, conservationists said. The successful fledging of the chick from a nest at Dover Castle comes just three years after the launch of a reintroduction programme led by Wildwood Trust, Kent Wildlife Trust and Paradise Park to restore the species into the region. The red-billed chough has strong cultural links with Kent and its history, appearing on pub signs, the coat of arms of Canterbury and in the legend of martyred Thomas Becket, whose blood was said to have stained the bird's red beak and legs. But the bird, a member of the crow family, vanished from the county more than 200 years ago, as a result of habitat loss and persecution, conservationists said. The rare birds, which forage on grassland and heath with short vegetation near their cliffside nests, are found only on the western fringes of Britain, the Isle of Man and the island of Ireland. A reintroduction programme to rear and release chicks aims to introduce up to 50 birds in the South East over five years, with the first cohort of released birds taking to the skies in 2022. And long-term efforts to restore and manage chalk grass land habitat, including through conservation grazing, has created the conditions for choughs to forage and breed, the team behind the project said. Chalk grassland supports a wide array of wildflowers and invertebrates, with the insects and larvae found in dung from grazing animals a crucial food source for choughs during the breeding season. Conservationists say the successful fledging of a wild-born chough is a landmark moment for the bird's return to the county. It follows a breeding attempt last year which ended when the chick went missing at the fledging stage during severe weather, but this year the youngster seems to be thriving, the team said. Liz Corry, chough release supervisor at Wildwood Trust, said: 'This is a moment we've all been hoping for. 'To see a wild chick not only hatch but fledge and take to the skies is a major step forward. 'It confirms that the birds are finding suitable nesting habitat, and pairing up to raise young – exactly what we've been working towards.' Paul Hadaway, director of conservation and engagement at Kent Wildlife Trust, said: 'This project shows what's possible when long-term habitat restoration meets ambitious species recovery. 'A thriving chough population in Kent not only revives a lost species – it also proves the value of restoring rare habitats like chalk grassland, which are vital for a huge range of wildlife.'

Wild-born chick takes to the skies for the first time in two centuries
Wild-born chick takes to the skies for the first time in two centuries

The Independent

time5 hours ago

  • The Independent

Wild-born chick takes to the skies for the first time in two centuries

A young red-billed chough has successfully taken flight from a nest in Kent, marking the first such event in over two centuries, conservationists have announced. The successful fledging of the chick at Dover Castle comes just three years after a reintroduction programme, led by Wildwood Trust, Kent Wildlife Trust and Paradise Park, began to restore the species into the region. The red-billed chough has strong cultural links with Kent and its history, appearing on pub signs, Canterbury 's coat of arms and in the legend of martyred Thomas Becket, whose blood was said to have stained the bird's red beak and legs. But the bird, a member of the crow family, vanished from the county more than 200 years ago, as a result of habitat loss and persecution. The rare birds, which forage on grassland and heath with short vegetation near their cliffside nests, are found only on the western fringes of Britain, the Isle of Man and the island of Ireland. A reintroduction programme to rear and release chicks aims to introduce up to 50 birds in the South East over five years, with the first cohort of released birds taking to the skies in 2022. And long-term efforts to restore and manage chalk grassland habitat, including through conservation grazing, have created the conditions for choughs to forage and breed, the team behind the project said. Chalk grassland supports a wide array of wildflowers and invertebrates, with the insects and larvae found in dung from grazing animals a crucial food source for choughs during the breeding season. Conservationists say the successful fledging of a wild-born chough is a landmark moment for the bird's return to the county. It follows a breeding attempt last year, which ended when the chick went missing at the fledging stage during severe weather, but this year the youngster seems to be thriving, the team said. Liz Corry, chough release supervisor at Wildwood Trust, said: 'This is a moment we've all been hoping for. 'To see a wild chick not only hatch but fledge and take to the skies is a major step forward. 'It confirms that the birds are finding suitable nesting habitat, and pairing up to raise young – exactly what we've been working towards.' Paul Hadaway, director of conservation and engagement at Kent Wildlife Trust, said: 'This project shows what's possible when long-term habitat restoration meets ambitious species recovery. 'A thriving chough population in Kent not only revives a lost species – it also proves the value of restoring rare habitats like chalk grassland, which are vital for a huge range of wildlife.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store