DUNNELLON, Fla. – The capture of an 8-foot alligator has allowed Marion County officials to reopen a Dunnellon park.
The Marion County Parks and Recreation Department closed access last week to swimming, tubing, diving and paddle boarding at K.P. Hole on SW 190th Avenue Road.
"Due to a large, aggressive alligator reported upriver, Marion County is taking the precaution to protect the public by stopping the above listed activities until further notice," officials said last week in a Facebook post.
Officials said Tuesday, however, that the park was reopened after a trapper caught an 8-foot-5-inch female alligator near the Rainbow River.
"This was the largest of several alligators captured by the contracted Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission nuisance trapper," officials said.
County officials said guests should always use caution as alligators are present in Florida's fresh or brackish water.
ALLIGATOR INFORMATION
The frequency of serious, unprovoked alligator bites has grown in Florida along with the state's population, but fatal attacks remain rare. Some things to know about alligators from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission:
ENDANGERED STATUS
More than 1 million alligators live throughout Florida, though the species remains listed as a protected species because it closely resembles the endangered American crocodile.
WATER HAZARD
Alligators can be found in fresh and brackish bodies of water, including lakes, rivers, canals and golf course ponds, and there are an estimated 6.7 million acres of suitable habitat statewide. Alligator bites are most likely to occur in or around water, because gators aren't well-equipped to capture prey on dry land.
FEEDING HABITS
Alligators are opportunistic feeders that will eat what is readily available and easily overpowered. It's illegal to feed wild alligators, which causes them to lose their fear of humans. While gators can lunge at prey along a shoreline, there's no evidence of alligators running after people or other animals on land.
GATOR PRODUCTS
Hides, meat and other parts can be sold from legally harvested alligators. The hides and meat from harvested gators were worth $6.8 million in 2014.
RARE ATTACKS
There have been 23 fatalities caused by wild alligators in Florida since 1973, among 383 unprovoked bites not caused by someone handling or intentionally harassing an alligator. Florida averages about seven serious unprovoked bites a year, and officials put the odds of someone being seriously injured by an unprovoked alligator in Florida at roughly one in 2.4 million.
GATOR VICTIMS
Most of the eight children and 15 adults who were killed by alligators were in freshwater bodies of water. Other victims include a 2-year-old girl, who wandered 700 feet from her fenced backyard, a 3-year-old boy, who left a roped-off swimming area in a county park to pick lily pads, a 36-year-old man swimming across a pond while trying to elude police, a 54-year-old woman seized by an alligator while landscaping near a pond, and an 82-year-old man killed while walking his dog on a path between two wetland areas.
FIGHT BACK
If an alligator bites someone, he or she should make a commotion. Hit or kick the alligator or poke it in its eyes, because alligators will retreat from prey that they can't easily overwhelm.