For SCA, me and my team catch alligators at night using high powered spotlights and steel snares attached to long poles. Once an alligator has been caught and its mouth taped shut, we bring it up on board our boat, strap it to a long wooden plank so it can't move, place a PVC pipe into its mouth to hold it open, and then thread a tube down its throat and into its stomach. The other end of the hose is attached to a water pump which we use to fill the gator's stomach with water, and then we use a modified Heimlich maneuver to force the water and anything floating in it out of the gator and into a bucket (check out a video of this process here). It may sound like a rough experience for the gator, but it's very similar to how humans get their stomachs pumped at a hospital. Also, in the old days alligator stomach contents could only be gathered by killing the animal and then cutting its stomach out of its body, so our technique is obviously much more preferable.
I've found that alligators eat a wide variety of different foods, including blue crabs, anhingas, rice rats, mink, anchovies, catfish, pond apples, and even non-food items like string and balloons. Alligators are very curious animals and will basically eat anything they can fit their mouths around.
Pieces of blue crab, anhinga, and shrimp pulled out of a gator's stomach. |
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