The warm spring weather begins our annual alligator season. Each spring SIPOA publishes educational articles about alligator safety to keep our residents and guests out of harm’s way. The April edition of Currents contains safety guidelines, and materials are on our website year-round.
SIPOA’s alligator management program seeks to minimize conflict between people and alligators. Ideally, alligators should be able to coexist with people, although sometimes this is not the case.
Human behaviors, such as feeding alligators, conditions alligators to lose their fear of humans. Loss of fear of humans usually results in an alligator associating humans as a food source and behaving aggressively. When this occurs, the alligator must be removed and euthanized as regulations require.
Other human behaviors, such as getting too close to a mother alligator with babies, result in the mother alligator becoming aggressive to protect her young. We have experienced close encounters of this kind in our area.
Each year, SIPOA obtains alligator removal permits and tags from SCDNR that allow us to remove nuisance alligators. Additionally, we utilize contracted SC licensed Alligator Control contractors to provide timely responses to alligator calls. The contractors observe alligators and note specific behaviors that indicate the alligator has become aggressive and/or lost their fear of humans. These evaluation standards are applied consistently for each review. Alligators are captured using required procedures and euthanized off-site. We have decades of alligator removal history. In a typical season (April – November) SIPOA removes between 2 and 5 alligators. All alligators removed are reported by SIPOA to SCDNR with data regarding the date, time, length, weight, and gender of the alligator.
This week many owners contacted SIPOA about an aggressive alligator in the Palmetto Lake area. Staff and contractors observed the 9′ alligator for several days. Its behavior was aggressive. It was captured and removed for safety reasons. Several observers posted photos of the captured alligator online with comments indicating this was a non-aggressive mother alligator who had been photographed recently with her baby. Additional comments indicated SIPOA’s removal of the alligator was uncaring and endangered the viability of her babies.
Let’s set the record straight. The alligator that was removed was a 9′ MALE alligator that had been demonstrating aggressive behavior in one of our most active pedestrian areas. No baby alligators were deprived of their mother.
SIPOA values our native animal population and has always worked for a balance between humans and nature. However, if an animal threatens the safety of our human population, it will be evaluated through a consistent protocol and disposed of if necessary.
We appreciate the dedication of our residents to animal welfare. One of the most important things our you can do is to continue to abide by recommendations so alligators don’t lose their fear of humans. This simple effort can safe an alligator’s life. This is such an important issue to SIPOA that in 2024, SIPOA issued alligator guidelines and safety recommendations. There are violation assessments in place to deter people from feeding or harassing alligators. If you care about alligators, do your part to keep them safe. The more we do to keep them wild, the fewer will need to be removed.
