A change in diet has seen a population explosion among the Top End's much feared saltwater crocodiles.
Crocs have quickly learned to get some pork on their fork, scientists have discovered.
It is a surprising upshot to the feral pig scourge, but the solution might be worse than the problem.
New research has found the estuarine crocodiles have switched from a fishy diet to make a meal of feral pigs - even buffalo.
Since being shot out and almost made extinct in the early 1970s, crocs were protected in the Territory and also in Queensland.
Their numbers have boomed since, so much so many believe the hunting should begin again.
Katherine's former mayor Fay Miller famously once called for a crocodile cull, saying they were scaring off tourists, and locals feared going for a swim.
The Queensland government estimates its the estuarine crocodile population at between 20,000-30,000.
There are a lot more in the Northern Territory, no-one know for sure exactly how many, but they are thought to number more than 100,000.
New research from Charles Darwin University in Darwin revealed estuarine crocodiles in the NT were making new meal choices.
These salties use the Top End's many rivers as highways to travel inland.
Research Associate Dr Mariana Campbell said this change in diet could be contributing to their increased movement into northern Australia floodplains, where feral pigs are concentrated.
"We were surprised to observe such a significant shift in the diet of estuarine crocodiles across the Top-End over the past 50 years," Dr Campbell said.
"Our results show that they have shifted from a marine-estuarine based diet, such as fish, marine turtles, to a more terrestrial based diet of feral pigs, and buffalo."
The study, scientists say, could explain why crocodiles across the north have successfully recovered so quickly from previously very low numbers.
The researchers compared stable isotopes from museum bone specimens collected when crocodile populations were low, to the isotopes in bones of crocodiles from today.
MORE READING: Don't let crocs scare you away from the Territory.
It was discovered that the isotopes prominent in predators with a mainly marine diet, such as in the crocodile from five decades ago, were lacking in the apex predators now.
The historical crocodile samples that were included in the study were from museum collections. Crocodile numbers were reduced to a few thousand in the 1970s due to hunting, but since then have recovered in the Northern Territory.
Dr Campbell said the estuarine crocodile was Australia's large carnivore success story, and increased availability of feral pigs in freshwater floodplains likely contributed to that success.
"A reduction in estuarine prey may have also contributed to the crocodiles' diet change," she said.
"It is likely a combination of a change in available prey, and a general ingress of crocodiles from the estuaries into the freshwater flood plains."
According to CDU Professor of Environment Hamish Campbell, who is a co-author of the new paper, this latest research adds a piece to a bigger puzzle about the crocodile's impact on the ecosystem.
"The research shows that crocodile recovery is having a significant impact on both freshwater and terrestrial food webs in northern Australia," Prof. Campbell said.
"Figuring out wider ecological impact from the growing crocodile population is what the research team are currently working upon under the Australian Research Council Discovery scheme."
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