At 6.2 Meters, Lolong Was The Largest Crocodile Ever Recorded And Captured

0
1كيلو بايت

At 6.2 Meters, Lolong Was The Largest Crocodile Ever Recorded And Captured

Measuring 6.17 meters (20 feet and 3 inches) from snout to tail, Lolong was the largest crocodile ever caught, measured, and placed in captivity.

The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or subscribe to access the full content.

The male saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) was officially measured in November 2011, according to the Philippines’ Department of Environment and Natural Resources. This was just a few months after the animal was captured from the wild in September 2011. 

The croc was pursued not simply for his size, but because he was considered a threat. Authorities suspected him of involvement in at least two fatal attacks in 2009 – one on a young girl and another on a fisherman – as well as numerous incidents of livestock predation. While it was never conclusively proven that this particular crocodile was responsible for the deaths, Lolong nevertheless bore the blame.

The capture was no small feat: it reportedly took professional hunters and the local government unit three weeks, the efforts of 100 villagers, and even a crane to extract the lumpering reptile from a marsh in Bunawan, on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao.

He was named in honour of a local hunter, Ernesto “Lolong” Conate, who died of a stroke while orchestrating the capture.

Another image of Lolong in captivity.

Another image of Lolong in captivity.

After his capture, Lolong was taken to a nearby town and placed in a specially built pen where it consumed over 17 kilograms (37.5 pounds) of pork every five days. The hungry giant quickly became the town’s star attraction, drawing around 500 visitors a day to the remote community of 27,000 people.

When the measurement was officially logged by the Guinness World Record, Lolong swiped the title of the “world’s largest crocodile” from an Australian croc known as “Cassius Clay”, measuring 5.48 meters (17 feet and 11.75 inches). This colossus, captured in the 1980s and estimated to be over 110 years in age, died in November 2024.

Unfortunately, Lolong did not live long (so to speak) in captivity. He died on February 10, 2013, less than two years after being captured.

Animal rights group PETA Asia claimed the animal’s necropsy suggested the crocodile was forced to live in a concrete pen with a shallow pond, which contributed to his death from late-stage pneumonia, cardiac failure, multiple organ failure, and non-adaptive stress response.

Crocodiles are incredibly tough and hardy animals, but even a mighty giant like Lolong proved vulnerable when removed from their natural habitat.

البحث
الأقسام
إقرأ المزيد
أخرى
Quality Standards and Testing for Recycled Carbon Fiber
According to Market Research Future, the Recycled Carbon Fiber market is gaining...
بواسطة Reuel Lemos 2025-12-12 07:38:53 0 266
أخرى
The Global Personalized Medicine Market Size Was Valued at USD 182.77 Billion in 2024 and is Projected to Reach USD 351.03 Billion by 2032
The Global Personalized Medicine Market Size Was Valued at USD 182.77 Billion in 2024 and is...
بواسطة Priyanka Bhingare 2025-12-09 06:20:51 0 422
Science
We Now Know Why Neanderthal Faces Looked So Different To Our Own
We Now Know Why Neanderthal Faces Looked So Different To Our OwnDespite being almost genetically...
بواسطة test Blogger3 2025-11-11 16:00:30 0 541
Technology
LGs Ultragear 5K2K WUHD OLED curved gaming monitor is over $300 off at Amazon
Best gaming monitor deal: Save $302.99 on LG 45-inch Ultragear 5K2K WUHD OLED monitor...
بواسطة Test Blogger7 2025-09-24 12:00:19 0 1كيلو بايت
القصص
Flowmeters Market Insights: Growth, Share, Value, Size, and Trends
Data Bridge Market Research analyses that the global flowmeters market which was at USD 10,124.34...
بواسطة Aryan Mhatre 2025-10-03 07:56:07 0 2كيلو بايت