Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T00:21:21.108Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Synthesizing Nile crocodile Crocodylus niloticus attack data and historical context to inform mitigation efforts in South Africa and eSwatini (Swaziland)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2019

Simon Pooley*
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, Birkbeck University of London, 32 Tavistock Square, London, WC1H 9EZ, UK.
Hannes Botha
Affiliation:
Scientific Services, Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency, Nelspruit, South Africa
Xander Combrink
Affiliation:
Department of Conservation Science, Tshwane University of Technology, Pretoria, South Africa
George Powell
Affiliation:
Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, London, UK
*
(Corresponding author) E-mail [email protected]

Abstract

Conflicts with wildlife are a major challenge for conservation across Africa, and Nile crocodiles Crocodylus niloticus are allegedly responsible for more attacks on people than any other species; however, there is a lack of data regarding such attacks. We analysed reported attacks on people by Nile crocodiles in South Africa and eSwatini (Swaziland) during 1949–2016, identifying spatial and temporal patterns in attack incidence, as well as victim demographics. Through a literature review and archival searches we identified records of 214 attacks. Most attacks occurred in natural water bodies, with attacks in dams increasing since 2000. Most victims were attacked while swimming or bathing, others while fishing, doing domestic chores, and crossing waterways. There was a significant relationship between gender and activity when attacked. Children (< 16 years old) accounted for 51% of all attacks, with a higher fatality rate compared to adults. Most victims were male (65%), with teenage boys being the largest individual category. We make recommendations for conservation policy and management to mitigate attacks by Nile crocodiles.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2019

Introduction

Among the wild animals that attack people and their livestock across Africa, crocodiles (the Nile crocodile Crocodylus niloticus and the West African crocodile Crocodylus suchus) are widely distributed and are claimed to be responsible for most attacks on people (e.g. Lamarque et al., Reference Lamarque, Anderson, Fergusson, Lagrange, Osei-Owusu and Bakker2009; Dunham et al., Reference Dunham, Ghiurghi, Cumbi and Urbano2010). Male Nile crocodiles may exceed 4 m in length, and grow up to 5 m in exceptional cases, taking large prey such as wildebeest Connochaetes spp. and buffalo Syncerus caffer. They are adaptable to local environmental conditions and occur in a wide range of natural and human-made aquatic habitats, such as canals and dams, where they increasingly come into contact with people and their livestock.

Increasing human populations and utilization of rivers, lakes, wetlands and dams (from small farm dams to large irrigation dams), as well as gillnetting (for fish), are resulting in an increasing number of human–crocodile interactions and a perception that adverse encounters between people and crocodiles are increasing (Aust et al., Reference Aust, Boyle, Fergusson and Coulson2009; Lamarque et al., Reference Lamarque, Anderson, Fergusson, Lagrange, Osei-Owusu and Bakker2009; Fergusson, Reference Fergusson, Manolis and Stevenson2010; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Leslie and Coulson2011; Zakayo, Reference Zakayo2014). The online database CrocBITE (2018) contains records of attacks in 29 African countries, and attacks are known to have occurred in one additional country (Kpéra et al., Reference Kpéra, Aarts, Tossou, Mensah, Saïdou and Kossou2014).

Research articles on crocodile attacks are revealing informative spatial and temporal patterns in attacks, and provide useful information about the demographics of attack victims (recent examples include Brien et al., Reference Brien, Gienger, Browne, Read, Joyce and Sullivan2017; Shaney et al., Reference Shaney, Hamidy, Walsh, Arida, Arimbi and Smith2017; Vyas & Stevenson, Reference Vyas and Stevenson2017; Das & Jana, Reference Das and Jana2018), but data for Nile crocodiles are inadequate. Published data of varying quality and quantity (most not peer reviewed) exist for 12 of the 30 African countries where attacks are known to occur (Pooley, Reference Pooley2018). More data, as well as reviews of mitigation efforts, are required urgently (Fergusson, Reference Fergusson, Manolis and Stevenson2010; Pooley, Reference Pooley2015a).

Here we present an analysis of 67 years of data on crocodile attacks on people in South Africa and the Kingdom of Swaziland (now eSwatini) during 1949–2016. We use the resulting generalizations to investigate some of the patterns and challenges identified in specific locations, in the context of the history and management of crocodile attacks in the study region. Drawing on attack data and historical evidence, we suggest ways forward for conservation policy and management of human–crocodile relations in the study region.

Study area

This study focuses on north-eastern South Africa, including the warmer, low-lying (lowveld) region of the interior confined mainly to Limpopo and Mpumalanga Provinces, and northern KwaZulu-Natal Province (KZN), and the lower-lying warmer areas of eSwatini (Fig. 1). Nile crocodile distribution in the region is limited to the warmer, summer rainfall regions of these countries, with the hot and wet season (minimum temperatures > 15 °C) during October–March (November–March in the interior of South Africa). Most of the rivers flow eastwards, from the central plateau and eastern escarpment to the Indian Ocean.

Fig. 1 North-eastern South Africa and eSwatini (Swaziland), with the provinces of South Africa, key protected areas, rivers in which crocodile attacks have occurred, and the locations of fatal and non-fatal attacks. Dams shown on the map are: (1) Makuleke Dam, (2) Middle Letaba Dam, (3) Flag Boshielo Dam, (4) Rust de Winter Dam, (5) Loskop Dam, (6) Driekoppies Dam, (7) Pongolapoort Dam, and (8) Goedertrouw Dam.

During c. 1949–1992 South Africa's black African majority was persecuted under the system of Apartheid, with resettlement in remote rural homelands with poor land and few jobs, and men working in cities as migrant labourers. This system kept two-thirds of the population rural (some of them more likely to encounter crocodiles) until the early 1980s, when Apartheid began to fail. Apartheid influx laws were defied, and urbanization accelerated, especially after an African National Congress-led government came to power in 1994 (Turok, Reference Turok2012). Employment in the agricultural sector is now low (5.6%) and declining, with unemployment much higher in rural areas (Turok, Reference Turok2012; UNDP, 2018).

Census data (decadal, from 1951) are of limited use for investigating relationships between human population densities and crocodile attacks in particular locales. Data from the Apartheid era are considered to be highly questionable (Christopher, Reference Christopher2011), the borders of magisterial districts varied across the study period (Giraut & Vacchiani-Marcuzoo, Reference Giraut and Vacchiani-Marcuzoo2009), and estimates of human population density exist only at a coarse scale (magisterial districts; Table 1).

Table 1 Country statistics for South Africa and eSwatini, 2018 (UNDP, 2018).

eSwatini is a small, stable absolute monarchy with a largely rural population. The population increased sixfold during the study period. eSwatini is categorized as a lower-middle income country, and the majority of Swazis are poor, with an estimated 70% of the population employed in subsistence farming (CIA, 2017; UNDP, 2018). Many Swazis depend on rivers for water, for drinking, cooking and washing.

Crocodile populations and threats

There are naturally occurring wild Nile crocodiles as far south as the Zinkwazi River in South Africa but the major viable populations are restricted to three disjunct protected areas: the eight large seasonal and perennial rivers traversing Kruger National Park in Limpopo and Mpumalanga provinces; and in KwaZulu-Natal Province, in Ndumo Game Reserve and the Lake St Lucia estuarine system (Ferreira & Pienaar, Reference Ferreira and Pienaar2011; Combrink et al., Reference Combrink, Warner, Downs, Perissinotto, Stretch and Taylor2013; Calverley & Downs, Reference Calverley and Downs2014a).

Crocodile abundance in Kruger National Park peaked in the early 1990s and then declined during 1993–2000, but has since increased to an estimated 4,300 individuals > 1 m in length. This is despite die-offs since 2008, caused by the nutritional disease pansteatitis (Ferreira & Pienaar, Reference Ferreira and Pienaar2011). In Limpopo and Mpumalanga provinces, outside the Park just over 600 individuals were counted in the 1980s, most < 3 m in length, with breeding populations in the Olifants, Limpopo, Luvuvhu, Komati and Blyde rivers (Jacobsen, Reference Jacobsen1984). At the time of writing, only the 12.8 km2 Flag Boshielo Dam on the Olifants River retained a viable crocodile population outside Kruger National Park in Mpumalanga Province (Botha, Reference Botha2005). This population declined by 27% following the raising of the dam wall by 5 m in 2006 (Ashton, Reference Ashton2010).

In northern KwaZulu-Natal Province, populations declined after World War II as a result of hunting and snaring, as well as habitat destruction and water shortages caused by the expanding agriculture and forestry sectors. Tony (A.C.) Pooley started a crocodile restocking programme in 1966, which in combination with legal protection (effective from 1969) resulted in a significant recovery by the 1990s (Pooley, Reference Pooley1982; Calverley & Downs, Reference Calverley and Downs2014a; Harvey & Marais, Reference Harvey, Marais, Bates, Branch, Bauer, Burger, Marais and Alexander2014).

However, the Ndumo Game Reserve population decreased by 38% during 1993–2009, possibly because of an increase in illegal killings and disturbance facilitated by the removal of the eastern boundary fence in May 2008 (Calverley & Downs, Reference Calverley and Downs2014b); in 2009 the population comprised 516 crocodiles.

The first aerial survey of Lake St Lucia (1972) recorded 356 crocodiles > 1 m (Pooley, Reference Pooley1982). The lake was restocked with juvenile crocodiles during 1967–1976 (Pooley, Reference Pooley, Bruton and Cooper1980), and 975 individuals were counted in 1993. The population remained stable until 2008 but has since declined, possibly as a result of prolonged drought (Combrink, Reference Combrink2014).

With the exception of the 132 km2 Pongolapoort Dam in KwaZulu-Natal (Champion & Downs, Reference Champion and Downs2017), declines have been reported for all major crocodile populations in South Africa. As a result, Nile crocodiles are categorized as Vulnerable in the country (Harvey & Marais, Reference Harvey, Marais, Bates, Branch, Bauer, Burger, Marais and Alexander2014).

In eSwatini, extensive habitat has been converted for agriculture, and illegal hunting remained rife into the 1980s. In 1992 King Mswati III ordered a new draft of the Game Act (1953, as amended), passed in 1993, which introduced the first legal protection for crocodiles outside protected areas (Big Game Parks, 2017). No crocodile population data are available for eSwatini, but the species is considered to be Vulnerable there (Harvey & Marais, Reference Harvey, Marais, Bates, Branch, Bauer, Burger, Marais and Alexander2014).

Conservation management

Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife is the responsible authority in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. They remove rather than kill crocodiles whenever possible, and do not erect or maintain protective structures, or pay compensation for attacks outside protected areas. The Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency and Limpopo Province's Department of Economic Development, Environment and Tourism deal with attacks in the interior. Crocodiles are protected under provincial conservation legislation.

In Mpumalanga problem crocodiles are trapped and released in either the 24 km2 Loskop Dam or Flag Boshielo Dam (H. Botha, pers. obs.), or sold to commercial farms. The Limpopo authorities have issued tenders licensing trophy hunters to control damage-causing crocodiles but few have been destroyed in this way. Fences have been built at some dams (Anthony et al., Reference Anthony, Scott and Antypas2010).

In eSwatini, Big Game Parks is mandated by the office of the King to manage wildlife in the royal parks and outside protected areas. Their policy is to capture and remove confirmed problem crocodiles. No protective structures are built, and compensation is not paid (Mick Reilly, Big Game Parks, pers. comm., 2014).

Methods

Information on attacks by Nile crocodiles was obtained from the personal archives of Tony (A.C.) Pooley and Ian Player, the St Lucia Crocodile Centre, and the Times of Swaziland archive in Mbabane, eSwatini. We searched newspaper reports (print and online), journals and popular magazines, using the search term ‘crocodile’ paired with ‘attack’, ‘bite’ or ‘victim’, in English and Afrikaans.

Only details of attacks by wild crocodiles that resulted in injury or death were included. Alleged attacks that were not witnessed or that lacked forensic proof were excluded. Fatal attacks include attacks from which victims died later as a result of injuries sustained. Demographic categories for age were child (< 16 years) and adult (≥ 16 years; sometimes exact age data were missing but victims were described as children or adults), and 5-year age categories were used for cases for which exact age data were available.

We excluded crocodile attacks prior to 1949 because of a paucity of reliable data. It is likely that during the study period some attacks involving minor injuries went unreported. In remote regions, particularly areas to which people were relocated by Apartheid authorities, some serious attacks may have gone unreported.

Historical rainfall and temperature data were obtained from NOAA (2017) and NOAA Central Library (2013). All mean values of rainfall and temperature are for 30-year periods.

We tested for temporal trends by constructing Poisson generalized linear models of attack frequency as a function of year. Quasi-Poisson generalized linear models were constructed when the data were overdispersed. We tested for differences between victim demographic categories using χ 2 tests.

Results

Literature searches returned 132 print newspaper stories and six magazine features for South Africa, and 15 print newspaper stories of attacks in eSwatini. Sixteen online stories were retrieved through Google searches and searches of digital archives of five South African newspapers (in English and Afrikaans), and nine stories from the digital archives of two Swazi newspapers. Tony Pooley's archive included personal records of 73 attacks in the study region, and Ian Player's archive included 15 newspaper reports of attacks.

The dataset comprises 214 crocodile attacks for the period 1949–2016: 185 attacks in South Africa and 29 in eSwatini. In South Africa, attacks have been recorded in 13 district municipalities but only five districts have more than five attacks recorded. Fig. 1 shows the spatial distribution of attacks, highlighting the provinces and water bodies with the highest numbers of recorded attacks.

Attack locations

The majority of crocodile attacks occurred in natural water bodies (Table 2), with 69% of attacks in rivers or streams (n = 148), 15% in lakes or pans (n = 33), 3% in the St Lucia estuary (n = 7) and 1% in wetlands (n = 2). Attacks have also been recorded in man-made water bodies, with 8% in dams of various sizes (n = 18) and 2% in canals or drains (n = 5). The exact location of one attack (< 1%) is unknown.

Table 2 Major locations for attacks by Nile crocodiles Crocodylus niloticus in South Africa and eSwatini (1949–2016).

Annual trends

A Poisson generalized linear model indicates no significant trend in annual attack frequency across South Africa (eSwatini attack data for before 2000 are patchy) during 1949–2016 (estimate = 0.002, z = 0.529, P = 0.597). However, the records indicate some temporal trends in particular districts and locality types. For example, there has been a significant decrease in the number of attacks reported in the Umkhanyakude district since 1949 (estimate = −0.026, SE = 0.007, t = −3.996, P < 0.001), with only one attack recorded since 2010. In comparison, there has been a significant increase in the number of attacks reported in Limpopo Province's Mopani district (estimate = 0.072, SE = 0.024, z = 2.997, P = 0.003) and Vhembe district (estimate = 0.047, SE = 0.017, z = 2.756, P = 0.006). During 2006–2016 eight attacks were recorded in Mopani district and six in Vhembe district, accounting for 32% of all attacks recorded during this period (n = 44). Fig. 2 shows the number of attacks recorded by 5-year period for the five municipal districts in South Africa with the highest number of attacks. There have been temporal trends in attack frequency for different water body types. For example, there was a significant increase in the frequency of attacks reported in dams between 1949 and 2016 (estimate = 0.065, SE = 0.018, z = 3.703, P < 0.001), with 64% of all reported attacks in dams occurring post 2000, and a record high of six attacks recorded in dams in 2014.

Fig. 2 Attacks recorded by 5-year period for the five municipal districts in South Africa with the highest number of attacks.

Seasonality of attacks

There seems to be a strong relationship between crocodile attacks and season (Fig. 3a,b), following seasonal fluctuations in mean monthly rainfall and mean monthly minimum temperature.

Fig. 3 Seasonality of crocodile attacks in (a) KwaZulu-Natal Province (KZN) and in (b) the interior provinces of South Africa, tracking seasonal fluctuations in mean monthly rainfall and mean monthly minimum temperature.

Victim demographics

One hundred and ninety records include the activity the victim was engaged in when the attack occurred. Of these, most victims (31%) were attacked while swimming or bathing (n = 59), followed by fishing (n = 41, 22%), doing domestic chores at the water's edge (n = 35, 18%), crossing the water (n = 30, 16%), or other (n = 25, 13%). There was a significant relationship between gender and activity when attacked (χ 2 = 59.363, df = 4, n = 190, P < 0.001). The data indicate a relationship between age (adult ≥ 16 > child) and activity but this was not significant (χ 2 = 8.625, df = 4, n = 124, P = 0.071). Table 3 summarizes the number and per cent of attacks for each activity by age and gender. Of the reports including exact age information (n = 139), 68 attacks (49%) were on adults (≥ 16 years), and 71 attacks (51%) were on children (< 16 years). A greater proportion of the attacks on children were fatal (54%), compared with adults (35%), and this difference is significant (χ 2 = 3.962, df = 1, n = 139, P = 0.047). Fig. 4 shows the distribution of victim ages, subset by fatal and non-fatal attacks.

Fig. 4 Distribution of victims by 5-year age groups, subset by fatal and non-fatal attacks. Note the high proportion of, and higher fatalities in, children aged 6–15 years.

Table 3 Activities in which victims of crocodile attacks were engaged at the time of attack, by age category and gender, for incidents for which all details are known (n = 187).

Discussion

The analysis and interpretation of long-term data on crocodile attacks provide valuable information on the seasonality of attacks, locations of attacks and demographics of attack victims. Outcomes from this research could help focus mitigation efforts, provided that local contexts are taken into account, as outlined below.

Seasonality of attacks

Three possible explanations for the seasonality of crocodile attacks have been offered: increased dispersal and encounter rates resulting from high rainfall and water levels (wet season), temperature (crocodiles are ectothermic and thus more active when it is warmer), and increased aggression during the breeding season (Pooley et al., Reference Pooley, Hines, Shield and Ross1992; Pooley, Reference Pooley2015a). Crocodile attack incidence tracks high mean water levels (where data exist) and high monthly mean rainfall (particularly in the interior of South Africa). However, preliminary studies indicate there is no significant relationship between individual attacks in the study region and high rainfall and water-level conditions recorded for dates of attacks only (Potter, Reference Potter2014; Powell et al., Reference Powell, Versluys, Williams, Tiedt and Pooley2019). In neighbouring Mozambique the short-term data (1997–2003) of Le Bel et al. (Reference Le Bel, Murwira, Mukamuri, Czudek, Taylor, La Grange and Lapez-Pujol2011) indicate that most attacks occur in the dry season.

Monthly mean daily temperature is the strongest environmental predictor, with most attacks occurring at temperatures of ≥ 16 °C (Potter, Reference Potter2014; Powell et al., Reference Powell, Versluys, Williams, Tiedt and Pooley2019; see Lance, Reference Lance2003, on American alligators). This effect of temperature could be explained by crocodiles’ decreased physiological maintenance costs under cooler conditions and, conversely, increased activity levels and food requirements under warmer conditions, as suggested for saltwater crocodiles Crocodylus porosus in Australia (Manolis & Webb, Reference Manolis and Webb2013, p. 100).

The seasonality of crocodile attacks cannot be explained based on biophysical variables and crocodile behaviour alone because of the overlap between human and crocodile activity (e.g. the seasonality of aquatic activity of both crocodiles and people). Nearly half of attacks in the study region occurred on weekends and holidays, suggesting human activity patterns are influential. Although the climate varies slightly between the interior and the coastal regions where crocodiles occur, the peak attack season is the same: December–March (Fig. 3). More data on local behaviour patterns of crocodiles and people in hotspots for crocodile attacks would contribute to more effective mitigation measures. For instance, it is known that crocodiles congregate in lakes in Ndumo Game Reserve and on the eastern shores of Lake St Lucia in winter. Larger individuals disperse outside the protected areas or around the lake system in the summer. Thus in recreational areas around the Lake St Lucia system, notably the estuary, there are seasonal overlaps between the distributions of larger crocodiles and people (Pooley, Reference Pooley1982; Combrink, Reference Combrink2014).

Spatial distribution of attacks

Our data indicate that historically most attacks occurred in waterways linked with major crocodile populations, namely the St Lucia Lake system, Ndumo Game Reserve and Kruger National Park. This situation was exacerbated in South Africa by the Apartheid Homeland or Bantustan system under which Africans were relocated to remote rural regions with little infrastructure (Beinart, Reference Beinart2001). Wildlife conservation areas persisted where land was undesirable for farming and settlement (McCracken, Reference McCracken2008). Most crocodile attacks occurred where so-called native reserves bordered or were crossed by rivers linked with protected areas. In KwaZulu-Natal Province this includes former native reserves on the Hluhluwe, Nyalazi and Umfolozi rivers. In Mpumalanga, attack hotspots persisted where the former homeland of Gazankulu was located on the western border of Kruger National Park. In Limpopo Province, attacks persisted where the former homeland of Venda straddled rivers flowing into the Park.

Crocodile attack incidence does not track fluctuations in crocodile numbers (decline followed by a small recovery during 1957–1972, the period of peak attack incidence, and rapid recovery and stabilization during the period of reduced attacks, in the late 1980s–1990s). Shifts in the distributions of crocodiles as a result of environmental events (e.g. droughts, floods) and anthropogenic interventions (dam building, pollution, habitat transformation, direct persecution), and rapid urbanization of South Africa's human population since the 1980s seem to be of greater consequence (Pooley, Reference Pooley, Beinart, Middleton and Pooley2013).

An upwards trend in attacks in the interior since 2000 may be the result of encounters with crocodiles in unexpected locations, notably dams, where they have moved in response to the drying up of perennial rivers, disturbances along the riverbanks, or pollution in rivers (Botha et al., Reference Botha, van Hoven and Guillette2011). Some have been displaced through habitat loss caused by the widespread raising of the walls of larger dams in South Africa, notably Flag Boshielo Dam, and the 150 km2 Massingir Dam in Mozambique, both on the Olifants River (Harvey & Marais, Reference Harvey, Marais, Bates, Branch, Bauer, Burger, Marais and Alexander2014, p. 88).

Commercial and subsistence fishing on a number of dams inhabited by crocodiles are an ongoing safety concern (Tapela et al., Reference Tapela, Britz and Rouhani2015). The key dams include Flag Boshielo Dam and the 0.75 km2 Makuleke Dam, and possibly Middle Letaba Dam (18.79 km2, in Limpopo Province) and Driekoppies Dam (18.7 km2, in Mpumalanga).

Some of South Africa's historically most problematic rivers for crocodile attacks (including the Usutu, the Pongola and its pans, and the Mkuzi River) have had few attacks since 2000, possibly offering proxy data that few crocodiles survive outside protected areas in these river systems (Table 2). Since 2000 there have continued to be attacks in the rivers listed in Table 4 and in the St Lucia system. Attacks since 2000 are listed separately because they are of more relevance for managers, as they reflect more recent trends in attack incidence. Dams in or near waterways listed in Table 4, and in addition the Limpopo River (where crocodile populations may be recovering), should be regarded as higher-risk areas, as they have more recent records of attacks. Of the 17 attacks recorded in eSwatini during 2000–2016, 65% occurred in the Usutu (or Lusutfu) River, and 29% in the Mbuluzi River.

Table 4 Key areas and water bodies in South Africa where crocodile attacks took place during 2000–2016. For each province only the district municipality with most attacks is included, and only rivers or river or lake systems (key water bodies) with numerous attacks are shown.

1The Nseleni River is linked to the Goedertrouw Dam.

Victim demographics

The finding that it is mostly males (65%) that have been attacked in this region contradicts the assumption that in Africa women and girls are disproportionately at risk because of their domestic tasks at the water's edge (e.g. Lamarque et al., Reference Lamarque, Anderson, Fergusson, Lagrange, Osei-Owusu and Bakker2009, p. 19). The numerous attacks on females, most performing domestic chores, along the Pongola floodplain system in the 1960s and 1970s are atypical. Census data reveal a higher proportion of women than men resident in this region in this period, with men away working as migrant labourers (Smedley & Ribeiro-Tôrres, Reference Smedley and Ribeiro-Tôrres1979). Our data show that domestic chores have been a less important factor in the wider region since c. 2000, reflecting both the crocodile's contracting range and improved water provision in some rural areas.

A key finding is that 51% of victims were aged 0–15 years. That 62% of victims were aged 0–20 and the largest adult category was 21–30 (19%) may simply reflect the demography of the country (median age 26). Nevertheless, the high proportion of children, especially aged 11–15 years, 72.5% of whom were boys, suggests this should be a focus for concern and education.

The overall fatality rate from attacks was 49% (1949–2017), comparable to the findings of Thomas (Reference Thomas2006) for the Okavango Swamps (55%) and Maheritafika et al. (Reference Maheritafika, Robsomanitrandrasana, Rabesihanaka, Rafenomanana, Ravaoarimalala and Andrianjaratina2016) for Madagascar (56%), but notably lower than the 63% estimated by Fergusson (Reference Fergusson2004) for Africa in general. However, 57% of attacks on children (0–15 years) were fatal (n = 65) and 54% of victims aged 0–20 years were killed (n = 79), in comparison with 40% of attacks on those aged ≥ 21 years  (n = 45). Fatality rates were influenced by whether the victim was accompanied or alone, and the size (length) of crocodile involved, as well as the size of the victim. Smaller victims (children) are more vulnerable to fatal attacks, as found in an analysis of factors affecting the survival of victims of attacks by saltwater crocodiles (Fukuda et al., Reference Fukuda, Manolis, Saalfeld and Zuur2015). We found that, of those adults who escaped death, 57% (29) escaped without help and 43% (22) were rescued, whereas only 35% (11) of children escaped unaided and 65% (20) were rescued.

Only 15 crocodiles involved in attacks were measured accurately, and therefore size data could not be used as an accurate variable. Furthermore, most crocodile counts have been made from fixed-wing aircraft (X. Combrink, pers. obs.), so there are no general data on the size of crocodiles to facilitate comparison of the number of fatal attacks with the proportion of large crocodiles in wild populations. Comparing the length of crocodiles with fatality/non-fatality outcomes is complicated by age and size of victim, and whether there were rescuers present. Better data would be required to assess the relationship between size and deliberate attacks on people by crocodiles in this region, although data from alligators and saltwater crocodiles suggest that individuals measuring > 1.8 m can inflict serious injuries, and individuals measuring ≥ 2.4 m  carry out fatal attacks (Caldicott et al., Reference Caldicott, Croser, Manolis, Webb and Britton2005; Fukuda et al., Reference Fukuda, Manolis, Saalfeld and Zuur2015).

Overall, most victims were swimming, bathing or fishing, but disaggregating data on activity of victim when attacked by age and gender reveals distinct profiles (Fig. 5). Thomas (Reference Thomas2006) and Wallace et al. (Reference Wallace, Leslie and Coulson2011) found similar results in the Okavango Swamps (Botswana) and lower Zambezi (Zambia), respectively. Our data show that until the 1980s most victims were performing domestic chores or crossing water when attacked, but since then these activities have been superseded by swimming and fishing.

Fig. 5 Profiles of activities of victim by gender and age group (adult or child).

Management recommendations

For high risk areas there are a number of mostly low-cost actions that can be taken. Local authorities could facilitate safe water crossings, and safe access to water for swimming (particularly near rural schools) or domestic needs, including alternatives such as water tanks, piped water and protective enclosures.

Provincial conservation authorities and district municipalities could create, equip and train teams to capture and remove problem crocodiles. Where such teams already exist, it would be helpful to make them known to the public. If departmental resources are limited, a system of licensing private individuals (as in the USA) could be trialled (Dutton et al., Reference Dutton, Waller, Carbonneau, Hord, Stiegler and Woodward2014; King & Elsey, Reference King and Elsey2014). Some commercial crocodile farmers already provide this service on an ad hoc basis. Removing crocodiles requires the creation of clear protocols for disposing of captured crocodiles.

Educating children should be a priority, particularly in identified high-risk areas. Outreach activities could be supported with existing materials (Pooley, Reference Pooley2015b; Pooley, Reference Pooley2017) that provide information on crocodile biology and behaviour, their ecological and conservation importance, as well as advice on avoiding and responding to attacks.

Provincial conservation authorities should appoint knowledgeable spokespersons to brief the public in the event of a crocodile attack (or alleged attack). The accuracy of reporting would be improved by keeping detailed records of attacks, and building better communication between police, coroners and conservation authorities to ensure accurate information on causes of death are reported. In South Africa, where crocodiles are farmed but not ranched (i.e. captive bred but not sourced from the wild) and there is no link between farming and the country's wild populations of crocodiles, and in a region where taboos against the eating of crocodiles have recently been overturned (Viljoen, Reference Viljoen2014; Zulu, Reference Zulu2015), tolerance for wild crocodiles should not be taken for granted.

Acknowledgements

SP thanks Vince Egan, Tal Fineberg, Mick Reilly and Freek Venter for information on management policies. We are grateful for constructive comments from Martin Fisher and two anonymous referees. Fig. 1 was created by Martin Fisher. SP is funded by the Lambert Bequest at Birkbeck University of London.

Author contributions

Collection and collation of attack data and historical information, writing: SP; contribution of insights on crocodile populations and management: XC, HB; statistical analyses and figures: GP.

Conflicts of interest

None.

Ethical standards

This research abided by the Oryx guidelines on ethical standards.

Footnotes

*

Also at: School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, and WildCRU, University of Oxford, Tubney, UK

Also at: Department of Biodiversity, University of Limpopo, Sovenga, South Africa

References

Anthony, B.P., Scott, P. & Antypas, A. (2010) Sitting on the fence? Policies and practices in managing human–wildlife conflict in Limpopo Province, South Africa. Conservation & Society, 8, 225240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashton, P.J. (2010) The demise of the Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) as a keystone species for aquatic ecosystem conservation in South Africa: the case of the Olifants River. Aquatic Conservation, 20, 489493.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aust, P., Boyle, B., Fergusson, R. & Coulson, T. (2009) The impact of Nile crocodiles on rural livelihoods in northeastern Namibia. South African Journal of Wildlife Research, 39, 5769.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beinart, W.J. (2001) Twentieth-Century South Africa. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK.Google Scholar
Big Game Parks (2017) Conservation. https://biggameparks.org/conservation [accessed 6 June 2018].Google Scholar
Botha, P.J. (2005) The ecology and population dynamics of the Nile crocodile Crocodylus niloticus in the Flag Boshielo Dam, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. MSc thesis. University of Pretoria, South Africa.Google Scholar
Botha, H., van Hoven, W. & Guillette, L.J. Jr (2011) The decline of the Nile crocodile population in Loskop Dam, Olifants River, South Africa. Water SA, 37, 103108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brien, M.L., Gienger, C.M., Browne, C.A., Read, M.A., Joyce, M.J. & Sullivan, S. (2017) Patterns of human–crocodile conflict in Queensland: a review of historical estuarine crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) management. Wildlife Research, 44, 281290.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caldicott, D.G.E., Croser, D., Manolis, C., Webb, G. & Britton, A. (2005) Crocodile attack in Australia: an analysis of its incidence and review of the pathology and management of crocodilian attacks in general. Wilderness & Environmental Medicine, 16, 143159.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Calverley, P.M. & Downs, C.T. (2014a) Population status of Nile crocodiles in Ndumo Game Reserve, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa (1971–2012). Herpetologica, 70, 417425.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calverley, P.M. & Downs, C.T. (2014b) Habitat use by Nile crocodiles in Ndumo Game Reserve, South Africa: a naturally patchy environment. Herpetologica, 70, 426438.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Champion, G. & Downs, C.T. (2017) Status of the Nile crocodile population in Pongolapoort Dam after river impoundment. African Zoology, 52, 5563.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christopher, A.J. (2011) The Union of South Africa censuses 1911–1960: an incomplete record. Historia, 56, 118.Google Scholar
CIA (Central Intelligence Agency) (2017) The World Factbook. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/resources/the-world-factbook/geos/wz.html [accessed 6 June 2018].Google Scholar
Combrink, X. (2014) Spatial and reproductive ecology and population status of the Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) in the Lake St Lucia Estuarine System, South Africa. PhD thesis. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.Google Scholar
Combrink, X., Warner, J.K. & Downs, C.T. (2013) Crocodiles. In Ecology and Conservation of Estuarine Ecosystems: Lake St Lucia as a Global Model. (eds Perissinotto, R., Stretch, D.D. & Taylor, R.H.), pp. 332353. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.Google Scholar
CrocBITE (2018) Worldwide Crocodilian Attack Database. http://www.crocodile-attack.info [accessed 13 September 2018].Google Scholar
Das, C.S. & Jana, R. (2018) Human–crocodile conflict in the Indian Sundarban: an analysis of spatio-temporal incidences in relation to people's livelihood. Oryx, 52, 661668.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunham, K.M., Ghiurghi, A., Cumbi, R. & Urbano, F. (2010) Human–wildlife conflict in Mozambique: a national perspective, with emphasis on wildlife attacks on humans. Oryx, 44, 185193.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dutton, H.J., Waller, J.E., Carbonneau, D.A., Hord, L.J., Stiegler, S.G., Woodward, A.R. et al. (2014) Florida's Alligator Management Program: an update 2002–2014. In Proceedings of the 23rd Working Group Meeting of the IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group, pp. 6071. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.Google Scholar
Fergusson, R.A. (2004) Preliminary analysis of data in the African human–crocodile conflict database. Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter, 23, 21.Google Scholar
Fergusson, R.A. (2010) Nile crocodile Crocodylus niloticus. In Crocodiles: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan, 3rd edition. (eds Manolis, S.C. & Stevenson, C.), pp. 8489. Crocodile Specialist Group, Darwin, Australia.Google Scholar
Ferreira, S.M. & Pienaar, D. (2011) Degradation of the crocodile population in the Olifants River Gorge of Kruger National Park, South Africa. Aquatic Conservation, 21, 155164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fukuda, Y., Manolis, S.C., Saalfeld, K. & Zuur, A. (2015) Dead or alive? Factors affecting the survival of victims during attacks by saltwater crocodiles (Crocodylus porosus) in Australia. PLOS ONE, 10, e0126778.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Giraut, F. & Vacchiani-Marcuzoo, C. (2009) Territories and Urbanisation in South Africa. Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement, Marseille, France.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harvey, J. & Marais, J. (2014) Family Crocodylidae. In Atlas and Red List of the Reptiles and Amphibians of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland. (eds Bates, M.F., Branch, W.R., Bauer, A.M., Burger, M., Marais, J., Alexander, G.J. et al. ), pp. 8688. SANBI, Pretoria, South Africa.Google Scholar
Jacobsen, N.H.G. (1984) The distribution and status of crocodile populations in the Transvaal outside the Kruger National Park. Biological Conservation, 29, 191200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, R. & Elsey, R. (2014) Louisiana's nuisance alligator program. In Proceedings of the 23rd Working Group Meeting of the IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group, pp. 163181. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.Google Scholar
Kpéra, G.N., Aarts, N., Tossou, R.C., Mensah, G.A., Saïdou, A., Kossou, D.K. et al. (2014) ‘A pond with crocodiles never dries up’: a frame analysis of human–crocodile relationships in agro-pastoral dams in Northern Benin. International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, 12, 316333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamarque, F., Anderson, J., Fergusson, R., Lagrange, M., Osei-Owusu, Y. & Bakker, L. (2009) Human–Wildlife Conflict in Africa: Causes, Consequences and Management Strategies. Food and Agriculture Organization, Rome, Italy.Google Scholar
Lance, V.A. (2003) Alligator physiology and life history: the importance of temperature. Experimental Gerontology, 38, 801805.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le Bel, S., Murwira, A., Mukamuri, B., Czudek, R., Taylor, R. & La Grange, M. (2011) Human wildlife conflicts in southern Africa: riding the whirl wind in Mozambique and in Zimbabwe. In The Importance of Biological Interactions in the Study of Biodiversity (ed. Lapez-Pujol, J.), pp. 283322. InTech, Rijeka, Croatia.Google Scholar
Maheritafika, H.M.R., Robsomanitrandrasana, E., Rabesihanaka, S., Rafenomanana, F., Ravaoarimalala, A., Andrianjaratina, L. et al. (2016) Preliminary assessment of human–crocodile conflict in Madagascar. Newsletter of the Crocodile Specialist Group, 35, 1921.Google Scholar
Manolis, S.C. & Webb, G.J. (2013) Assessment of saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) attacks in Australia (1971–2013), implications for management. In Proceedings of the 22nd Working Meeting of the IUCN-SSC Crocodile Specialist Group, 21–23 May 2013, pp. 97104. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.Google Scholar
McCracken, D. (2008) Saving the Zululand Wilderness: an Early Struggle for Nature Conservation. Jacana, Johannesburg, South Africa.Google Scholar
NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) (2017) NOAA National Climate Data Center. http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cdo-web/search [accessed 13 September 2018].Google Scholar
NOAA Central Library (2013) South Africa Climatological Data. https://library.noaa.gov/Collections/Digital-Docs/Foreign-Climate-Data/South-Africa-Climate-DataH [accessed 13 September 2018].Google Scholar
Pooley, A.C. (1980) Crocodile research in Maputaland. In Studies on the Ecology of Maputaland (eds Bruton, M.N. & Cooper, K.H.), pp. 293299. Rhodes University Press, Grahamstown, South Africa.Google Scholar
Pooley, A.C. (1982) The ecology of the Nile crocodile, Crocodylus niloticus, in Zululand, South Africa. MSc thesis. University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.Google Scholar
Pooley, S. (2013) No tears for the crocodile: investigating calls for the extermination of the Nile crocodile in Zululand, South Africa, to c. 1958. In Wild Things: Nature and the Social Imagination (eds Beinart, W., Middleton, K. & Pooley, S.), pp. 142162. White Horse Press, Cambridge, UK.Google Scholar
Pooley, S. (2015a) Using predator attack data to save lives, human and crocodilian. Oryx, 49, 581583.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pooley, S. (2015b) Don't Get Eaten by a Crocodile in South Africa or Swaziland. Simon Pooley, London, UK.Google Scholar
Pooley, S. (2017) Don't get eaten by a croc. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/320383558_Don%27t_Get_Eaten_by_a_Croc [accessed 13 September 2018].Google Scholar
Pooley, S. (2018) Croc Digest: a Bibliography of Human–Crocodile Conflict Research and Reports, 2nd ed.Simon Pooley, London, UK.Google Scholar
Pooley, A.C., Hines, T. & Shield, J. (1992) Attacks on humans. In Crocodiles and Alligators. 2nd edition. (ed. Ross, C.A.), pp. 172187. Blitz Editions, London, UK.Google Scholar
Potter, J. (2014) Analysis of human–crocodile conflict with envelope modelling. MSc thesis. Imperial College London, London, UK.Google Scholar
Powell, G., Versluys, T.M.M., Williams, J., Tiedt, S. & Pooley, S. (2019) Using environmental niche modelling to investigate the importance of ambient temperature in human–crocodilian attack occurrence for two species of crocodilian. Oryx, in press.Google Scholar
Shaney, K.J., Hamidy, A., Walsh, M., Arida, E., Arimbi, A. & Smith, E.N. (2017) Impacts of anthropogenic pressures on the contemporary biogeography of threatened crocodilians in Indonesia. Oryx, published online 10 November 2017.Google Scholar
Smedley, L.N., & Ribeiro-Tôrres, J.L. (1979) Man and the Pongolo Floodplain: a Preliminary Study. Report No.S-62. South African Human Sciences Research Council, Pretoria, South Africa.Google Scholar
Tapela, B.N., Britz, P.J. & Rouhani, Q.A. (2015) Scoping Study on the Development and Sustainable Utilisation of Inland Fisheries in South Africa. Vol. 2 Case Studies, Report No. TT 615/2/14. Water Research Commission, Gezina, South Africa.Google Scholar
Thomas, G.D. (2006) Human–crocodile conflict (Nile crocodile: Crocodylus niloticus) in the Okavango Delta, Botswana. MSc thesis. University of Stellenbosch, South Africa.Google Scholar
Turok, I. (2012) Urbanisation and Development in South Africa. Urbanisation and Emerging Population Issues. Working paper 8. IIED, London, UK.Google Scholar
UNDP (United Nations Development Programme) (2018) Human Development Reports. http://hdr.undp.org/en/countries/profiles [accessed 3 October 2018].Google Scholar
Viljoen, A. (2014) Soweto next for Dan's croc braai. The Witness, 13 March 2014.Google Scholar
Vyas, R. & Stevenson, C. (2017) Review and analysis of human and Mugger crocodile conflict in Gujarat, India from 1960 to 2013. Journal of Threatened Taxa, 9, 11,01611,024.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wallace, K.M., Leslie, A.J. & Coulson, T. (2011) Living with predators: a focus on the issues of human–crocodile conflict within the lower Zambezi valley. Wildlife Research, 38, 747755.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zakayo, F. (2014) Human–crocodile conflicts in areas adjacent to Lake Rukwa and Momba River, Momba District, Tanzania. MSc thesis. Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro, Tanzania.Google Scholar
Zulu, J. (2015) Tail most eaten. Times of Swaziland, 5 February 2015.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1 North-eastern South Africa and eSwatini (Swaziland), with the provinces of South Africa, key protected areas, rivers in which crocodile attacks have occurred, and the locations of fatal and non-fatal attacks. Dams shown on the map are: (1) Makuleke Dam, (2) Middle Letaba Dam, (3) Flag Boshielo Dam, (4) Rust de Winter Dam, (5) Loskop Dam, (6) Driekoppies Dam, (7) Pongolapoort Dam, and (8) Goedertrouw Dam.

Figure 1

Table 1 Country statistics for South Africa and eSwatini, 2018 (UNDP, 2018).

Figure 2

Table 2 Major locations for attacks by Nile crocodiles Crocodylus niloticus in South Africa and eSwatini (1949–2016).

Figure 3

Fig. 2 Attacks recorded by 5-year period for the five municipal districts in South Africa with the highest number of attacks.

Figure 4

Fig. 3 Seasonality of crocodile attacks in (a) KwaZulu-Natal Province (KZN) and in (b) the interior provinces of South Africa, tracking seasonal fluctuations in mean monthly rainfall and mean monthly minimum temperature.

Figure 5

Fig. 4 Distribution of victims by 5-year age groups, subset by fatal and non-fatal attacks. Note the high proportion of, and higher fatalities in, children aged 6–15 years.

Figure 6

Table 3 Activities in which victims of crocodile attacks were engaged at the time of attack, by age category and gender, for incidents for which all details are known (n = 187).

Figure 7

Table 4 Key areas and water bodies in South Africa where crocodile attacks took place during 2000–2016. For each province only the district municipality with most attacks is included, and only rivers or river or lake systems (key water bodies) with numerous attacks are shown.

Figure 8

Fig. 5 Profiles of activities of victim by gender and age group (adult or child).