BOSTON — It wasn't a croc — there really was an alligator on the loose in Boston.

The story of the city's slithering saurian appears to have a happy ending. The small alligator, spotted along the Charles River in Boston multiple times this week, was rescued and delivered to safety, wildlife officials in Massachusetts said Thursday.

The roughly footlong crocodilian startled a few people and became an instant social media star after confused onlookers took videos of it slipping out of sight. The animal is not native to Massachusetts, and couldn't possibly survive the harsh New England winter, so the search for the wayward gator was on.

A wildlife educator captured the critter Wednesday night, and it's awaiting a permanent home, officials said.

Harvard University graduate student Whitney Lieberman was among the residents who caught a glimpse of the exotic visitor. She notified wildlife authorities when she saw the creature while she was jogging to work.

"Yeah, I did a double-take. For a second, I had to check myself — alligators are not native to Boston waterways, right?" Lieberman said. "I texted my co-workers because I had a morning meeting: 'Hey guys, this is a good excuse to be late for work. There is an alligator right in front of me and I don't know what to do.'"

Crew teams prepare to train at dawn Oct. 6 on the Charles River at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology boathouse in Cambridge, Mass.

The animal was in jeopardy due to the chilly temperatures. It was 51 degrees Fahrenheit along the Charles on Thursday. Alligators prefer temperatures above 80 degrees. They are cold-blooded and can't regulate their own temperature, so they enter a dormant, energy-saving state called brumation to survive colder temperatures.

Joe Kenney, who runs a wildlife education business called Joe's Craz-zy Critters, captured the alligator, the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife said in a statement. It said the state temporarily authorized Kenney to keep the gator for now while it evaluates where to find a long-term place for it.

Joe Kenney holds an alligator Thursday in Abington, Mass., that he rescued after it was discovered in Boston's Charles River.

Kenney, of Abington, Massachusetts, said the alligator, being young and just a foot long, is basically harmless to humans.

He said he located it by walking in the area where it was last reported and was "a little shocked" when he found it.

He said fans of the reptile reached out to him and some asked to name it "Charles." Kenney said the animal was probably someone's impulse purchase, but not a good idea for a pet.

"An alligator isn't designed to live in a fish tank. Really, ideally, it should be living out in the swamp in the southern United States," Kenney said. "And they can get pretty big. So even though this guy is still little, by the time he's somewhere around 10, 15 years old, he'll be an adult alligator."

Joe Kenney holds the rescued alligator Thursday in Abington, Mass.

Adult alligators can grow to more than 11 feet long and weigh more than 500 pounds.

The wildlife department said the alligator's appearance is still under investigation, but added it was most likely a pet that escaped or was intentionally released.

"MassWildlife is working in close collaboration with the Environmental Police to find a safe home for this alligator as an educational animal with a permitted facility. This incident serves as an important reminder that it is not legal to keep alligators or any crocodilian species as pets in Massachusetts," state herpetologist Mike Jones said in a statement.

Alligators have a history of occasionally showing up in urban areas far from their native ranges. One, dubbed Chance the Snapper, turned up in Chicago in summer 2019 and eventually was trapped. Another showed up on the Charles River in the Boston area in 2010.


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