Crocodile surfaces in Hong Kong’s urban jungle

Crocodile surfaces in Hong Kong’s urban jungle
Updated 10 December 2012
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Crocodile surfaces in Hong Kong’s urban jungle

Crocodile surfaces in Hong Kong’s urban jungle

HONG KONG: A live crocodile has been found dumped in a fish tank at a Hong Kong garbage site, the second time in nine years that a croc has surfaced in the densely populated urban jungle. Media reports yesterday said the 1.2-meter (four foot), five-kilogram (11 pound) croc was thought to have been dumped by a pet owner who found it too hard to handle.
It appeared unharmed and was being cared for at a government animal center, according to The Standard newspaper. Conservation officials were trying to decide where to relocate the reptile, including whether it would join its predecessor Pui Pui at a wetland park. Pui Pui, a saltwater crocodile, made headlines after it was spotted in a Hong Kong river in 2003.
It eluded hunters including Australian experts for months before it was eventually captured. Pet shop owners say some residents in the space-starved Chinese city of seven million keep reptiles like snakes or lizard as pets, it is extremely rare for someone to have a pet crocodile.
“People think it is amusing to keep a crocodile at first,” reptile pet shop owner Dio Chan told The Standard. “But as it grows, they need to buy a larger tank and more food and other equipment and eventually they give up ownership.”