250 Gators Removed From Walt Disney World Since 2016 Attack On Boy


ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Wildlife officials have removed 250 alligators from Disney properties in the five years since a 2-year-old boy was killed by an alligator at the Grand Floridian Resort and Spa, a newspaper reported.

The company has worked with trappers contracted through the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to remove the gators, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

Most of the nuisance gators taken from Disney properties are euthanized and sold for their hide and meat, Tammy Sapp, spokeswoman for the wildlife agency, told the newspaper.

Some are also transferred to alligator farms, animal exhibits and zoos, she said. Those less than 4 feet (1.2 meters) are relocated, she said.
Trappers receive $30 for every captured gator, plus the proceeds from any leather and meat sold, the newspaper reported.
After Lane Thomas Graves was killed in June 2016, Disney installed a wall and put up reptile warning signs along waterways throughout its resorts.

Disney guests said they’re glad the resort is proactively removing gators from its properties. A biology expert agreed, adding that the removals should have a minimal impact on the Florida alligator population.

Gina Parsley, a travel agency owner, told the Sentinel that her family stayed at Disney’s Fort Wilderness Resort last month and her 9-year-old daughter Gabriella spotted an alligator in the water. They told a campground employee and were informed that traps had been placed to trap the gator.

“We did not feel like it was a surprise to them,” Parsley said. “I would have been more concerned if my daughter had brought it to their attention and they were like, ‘Oh my gosh, where?’”
Parsley said she understands how difficult it is to keep the property free of alligators.

“You see neighborhoods where a gator just strolls across someone’s lawn and rings the doorbell,” she said. “It’s Florida: They do that. So, there’s definitely fighting against nature with that one.”
Florida’s alligator population is about 1.3 million, the newspaper reported. To be considered a nuisance within the Statewide Nuisance Alligator Program, an alligator must be least 4 feet (1.2 meters) long and pose a threat to people, pets and property.

The wildlife agency has removed close to 8,000 alligators annually over the past five years throughout the state of Florida.

Removing nuisance gators from Disney doesn’t have much of an impact on the population since they’re already living on developed land there, Deby Cassill, the integrative biology associate campus chair at the University of South Florida, told the Sentinel.

“It’s already been compromised by development,” Cassill said.
 
If there was just some way to weaponize progressives to turn against Disney for colonizing what was originally Gator territory; even going so far as to make money off the gator carcasses. With all the talk of climate change, colonization, eating bugs, etc. I would love to see someone take the step and turn against their Consoomer Mouse God.
 
Better Question, why isnt Disney selling the meat in one of their restaurants?

I'm picturing a restaurant based on "Pirates of the Caribbean" and/or "Princess and the Frog." Big glass tank on one side full of live gators. You pick the one you want to eat. Children crying left and right.

This could be big money.
 
What the fuck! Why not sedate them and relocate them to a swamp or something?
A big alligator can't be relocated. They WILL go back to where they were taken from, even if its miles away. Hell, probably a lot of the ones under 4 feet migrate back too, until they're big enough to be worth killing.

And as @Lord Neeba said, they're not endangered.

I wonder how long until a toddler is eaten by a wild burmese python, I know those are getting pretty common in Florida too.
 
A big alligator can't be relocated. They WILL go back to where they were taken from, even if its miles away. Hell, probably a lot of the ones under 4 feet migrate back too, until they're big enough to be worth killing.

And as @Lord Neeba said, they're not endangered.

I wonder how long until a toddler is eaten by a wild burmese python, I know those are getting pretty common in Florida too.
Only Florida Man could look at all the deadly shit native to his land and decide he needed to import even deadlier animals as pets. Like that one Florida Man who imported some fucking cassowaries, and suffered the inevitable consequences of being around the latest evolution of velociraptors.
 
F my gator homies dindu nothin, weren't the parents of that kid fucking retards that let it swim the pond even though there was a sign that said no swimming (and common sense would dictate knowing gators are in like every body of water in FL)? Mouse shoulda just told them tough shit, here's a Darwin Award
I wonder how long until a toddler is eaten by a wild burmese python, I know those are getting pretty common in Florida too.
The burms arent nearly as bad as people think, especially since they cant resist cold snaps like gators can. Plus afaik they're still limited to the more southern parts of the state, and their natural instinct is to hide in the wilderness.

That said I could easily see a Florida Man or Florida Woman feeding their unwanted crack baby to their badly neglected, stuck shed-having pet snake to get rid of it. Kind of a Floridian twist on the classic chopping it up and feeding it to pigs method.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
F my gator homies dindu nothin, weren't the parents of that kid fucking retards that let it swim the pond even though there was a sign that said no swimming (and common sense would dictate knowing gators are in like every body of water in FL)? Mouse shoulda just told them tough shit, here's a Darwin Award
Weren't they tourists? I know native Floridians like to downplay the threat at times, kinda like how San Franciscans pretend hobos aren't methed-up schizoids.
 
F my gator homies dindu nothin, weren't the parents of that kid fucking retards that let it swim the pond even though there was a sign that said no swimming (and common sense would dictate knowing gators are in like every body of water in FL)? Mouse shoulda just told them tough shit, here's a Darwin Award
I didn't follow that story very much, but I don't ever recall there being a lawsuit, so it's possible that Disney wasn't at fault since there were warning signs which the parents either didn't see or ignored.
 
Weren't they tourists? I know native Floridians like to downplay the threat at times, kinda like how San Franciscans pretend hobos aren't methed-up schizoids.
I think so but IIRC they were from the US and spoke English and should've been able to read all the NO SWIMMING signs.

Plus everyone should know there are gators in FL and to treat any body of water as if it has them living in it.

I get that gators aren't endangered or anything but something doesn't sit right with me that native wildlife isn't allowed to even exist in it's natural habitat because of some retards.

It's like if Disney banned all cars from the parks and shot anyone driving in on the spot because some retards got their kid hit by a car because they allowed it to play in traffic.
I didn't follow that story very much, but I don't ever recall there being a lawsuit, so it's possible that Disney wasn't at fault since there were warning signs which the parents either didn't see or ignored.
Yeah and either way the gators aren't at fault, they're just wild animals doing their thing. I distinctly remember hearing that the pond already had signs saying no swimming before the kid got eaten, plus common sense would dictate not to get too close to any body of water in gator country.

Hell the kid could've easily drowned instead, especially since iirc it was like 2 and accidental drowning is a fairly common cause of death for small kids (and why you keep them away from even shallow water). If it drowned would Disney have drained every single pond on their property, or would they have told the parents tough shit should've not been total fucking retards
 
I think so but IIRC they were from the US and spoke English and should've been able to read all the NO SWIMMING signs
That doesn't help because they weren't swimming. They were walking on the beach/ playing in the water. Like to the knee.

Maybe disney shouldn't advertise walking on a beach/ in the water that's home to giant alligators.
 

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