A massive crocodile has mauled a young man at a tourist hotspot in a horror attack that saw him rushed to hospital by plane.
The man, aged in his 20s, was mauled by the “largecrocodile” onAustralia'swestern coast on Saturday (April 18). The stretch of coast is popular among tourists - both within Australia and the around the world - for its long, untouched, white sandy beaches and beautiful scenery.
Thehorror maulinghappened on a beach in the Kimberley, near Hidden Creek in Western Australia (WA) on the Dampier Peninsula, nearly 1300 miles north of the state's capital of Perth. The spot is well known across Australia and the world for its long, untouched beaches.
The campground where the attack occurred is popular with tourists and is located about 31 miles north of Broome. The WA coast is teeming with tidal creeks, mangroves and rivers, making it a prime habitat for aggressive saltwater crocodiles.
The WA Country Health Service said the man was initially taken to Broome Hospital in a stable condition, before he was flown from Broome to Royal Perth Hospital on Sunday via the Royal Flying Doctor Service. The RFDS provides urgent or emergency medical aid to those in the farthest reaches of the Australian outback.
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A spokesperson for the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions told news.com.au that it was notified of the incident on Monday. The spokesperson added they are investigating the incident and had already been in touch with the man's family.
The horror mauling marks the second crocodile attack reported in the Kimberley in less than five months. In January, a man survived an attack but suffered from severe lacerations across his body after an encounter with a three-metre saltwater crocodile near the remote La Djardarr Bay Community.
Saltwater crocodiles are common along the Kimberley coast and are known to inhabit beaches, creeks and tidal waterways. They are far more aggressive than their freshwater cousins, and can grow up to six metres in length. "Salties", as they are called locally, reside along coast and near river mouths, while freshies prefer inland rivers and billabongs, or inland lakes and dams.
Source: Daily Express :: World Feed