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Name That Croc: Navy Base Seeks Nickname For Toothy Base Mascot

An American crocodile, estimated at 8 to 10 feet long, hangs out on Naval Air Station Key West's airfield. The base is seeking nickname suggestions for the new "mascot."
Edward Barham
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Naval Air Station Key West
An American crocodile, estimated at 8 to 10 feet long, hangs out on Naval Air Station Key West's airfield. The base is seeking nickname suggestions for the new "mascot."

Over the last several years, some new arrivals have taken up residence at Naval Air Station Key West's airfield on Boca Chica Key: American crocodiles.

"We don't know exactly how many we have," said Edward Barham, the environmental director for the base. "But we know we have four or five of them pretty much all the time."

Barham shot a picture of a particularly large one, an estimated 8 to 10 feet long, hanging out on the edge of a lagoon on the base, with its mouth open. NAS Key West recently made the image the  cover photo on its Facebook page and has been soliciting nickname suggestions.

Sometimes the crocodiles get stuck on the base because of the fencing. Navy personnel have removed sections of fence to let the crocodiles go where they want.
Credit Ed Barham / Naval Air Station Key West
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Naval Air Station Key West
Sometimes the crocodiles get stuck on the base because of the fencing. Navy personnel have removed sections of fence to let the crocodiles go where they want.

Some of the suggestions so far: Croca Chica. Maverick. Crocky McCrockerson. And Skipper, which is a traditional term for the commanding officer of a Navy ship or Naval base.

Barham said the crocodiles haven't ventured onto the runways during flight operations — yet — but that they have been known to cross the roadways on the base and sometimes get stuck there because of the fencing.

"We've had to basically remove sections of fence to get the crocodile where it wants to go," he said.

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Nancy Klingener covers the Florida Keys for WLRN. Since moving to South Florida in 1989, she has worked for the Miami Herald, Solares Hill newspaper and the Monroe County Public Library.
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