Alligator

6-Foot Alligator Wanders Onto Elementary School In Cocoa Beach

COCOA BEACH, Florida – An alligator measuring approximately 6 feet long wandered onto the campus of Freedom 7 Elementary School of International Studies in Cocoa Beach, Florida on Thursday.

Students participating in mileage club were walking around a track that neighbors a retention pond on the south side of campus when they discovered the gator around 8:15 a.m.

Brevard Public School officials then called Cocoa Beach police who cleared the area until a trapper arrived and removed the nuisance alligator.

It is Spring in Florida, which means that lovesick alligators are on the move during mating season.

Statewide, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission receives an average of nearly 16,000 alligator-related complaints per year.

Most of these complaints deal with alligators occurring in places such as backyard ponds, canals, ditches and streams, but other conflicts occur when alligators wander into garages, swimming pools and golf course ponds.

FWC recommends the following 10 tips on how to live with alligators:

1. Never feed alligators because it is dangerous and illegal. When fed, alligators can overcome their natural wariness and learn to associate people with food. When this happens, some of these alligators have to be removed and killed.

2. Dispose of fish scraps in garbage cans at boat ramps and fish camps. Do not throw them into the water. Although you are not intentionally feeding alligators when you do this, the result can be the same.

3. Seek immediate medical attention if you are bitten by an alligator. Alligator bites can result in serious infections.

4. Observe and photograph alligators only from a distance.

5. Be aware of the possibility of alligators when you are in or near fresh or brackish water. Bites may occur when people do not pay close enough attention to their surroundings when working or recreating near water.

6. Do not swim outside of posted swimming areas or in waters that might be inhabited by large alligators.

7. Alligators are most active between dusk and dawn. So, avoid swimming at night.

8. Dogs and cats are similar in size to the natural prey of alligators. Don’t allow pets to swim, exercise or drink in or near waters that may contain alligators. Keep pets on a leash.

9. Do not swim with your dog. Dogs often attract an alligator’s interest.

10. Leave alligators alone. State law prohibits killing, harassing or possessing alligators. Handling even small alligators can result in injury.

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