Now 'threatened,' not 'endangered'
The canals are one of three major U.S. habitats for crocodiles, where 25% of the 2,000 American crocodiles live. The FPL team has been credited for moving the classification of crocodiles on the Endangered Species Act to "threatened" from "endangered" in 2007. The team has tagged 7,000 babies since it was established in 1978.
Temperature determines the crocodiles' sex: the hotter it is, the more likely males are hatched. Lloret said this year's hatchlings are male-heavy because of last month's weather — it was the hottest June on record globally.
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Because hatchlings released are at the bottom of the food chain, only a small fraction of them survive to be adults. Lloret said they at least have a fighting chance at Turkey Point, away from humans who hunted them to near-extinction out of greed and fear, even though attacks are rare. Only one crocodile attack has ever been recorded in the U.S. — a couple were both bitten while swimming in a South Florida canal in 2014, but both survived.
"American crocodiles have a bad reputation, when they are just trying to survive," Lloret said. "They are shy and want nothing to do with us. Humans are too big to be on their menu." (VOA)