Hunter in Florida shoots monster cattle-eating alligator
A Florida-based professional hunter has shot
and killed a 15ft alligator at his farm, which he suspected was feeding on his
cattle. The carcass of the animal was removed from the farm with the help of a
tractor.
Lee Lightsey and guide Blake Godwin went to
locate the alligator – on the farm the former owns and uses for hunting trips –
on 2 April. They found the beast near the dew ponds and shot it from a distance
of 20ft. The hunter said he is planning to get the alligator stuffed and donate
its meat to charity.
Lightsey told the BBC he was not surprised by
the massive size of the reptile. He said that although the 360kg
"monster" was the biggest he had encountered so far, he "was not
that surprised it existed." The hunter added that 10 to 13ft long
alligators were abundant in the area, but those longer than 13ft were seen only
around once a year.
Lightsey, whose company organises hunts for
alligators, wild boar and turkey on his farm, said that he has come across many
alligators in the past 20 years "that have been only a little
smaller". The previous alligator he hunted was 13ft long.
"But what really drew our attention to
this animal was the fact that it seems to have been feasting on the cattle on
my farm, because mutilated body parts were found in the water. It was a monster
that needed to be removed," the hunter told BBC.
Lightsey began hunting professionally when he
started breeding alligators in 1988. Charges for hunting alligators vary with
the size of the reptile – $10,000 (£7,093) to kill an alligator larger than
13ft and $4,500 for an alligator between 10 and 12ft. He has hunted more than
5,000 alligators larger than 5ft in length. He mostly uses a high-powered rifle
to kill the animals, which according to him kills the creature "with
minimum of suffering without allowing them to be injured before they die".