Two aggressive alligators were captured on video transforming a Southwest Florida mother’s enclosed front porch into a gruesome arena, just steps away from where her child was peacefully sleeping indoors.
Kayla Burress initially believed she was hearing a burglar attempting to break into her home in Ave Maria, approximately 36 miles from Naples. However, to her astonishment, she discovered two massive reptiles locked in a fierce battle on her screened-in porch—a place where her children often play, according to WINK.
“I never imagined the gators would make their way onto my porch,” she shared with the news outlet.
Burress documented the intense clash, capturing footage of the reptiles exchanging brutal blows while leaving her porch in tatters.
As the gators tussled, they crashed through the screen enclosure, leaving a path of destruction with blood stains, torn mesh, and bent metal scattered everywhere.
“It seemed like they were fighting over territory or something,” the worried mother speculated.
“It definitely looked like they were fighting over territory or something,” the concerned mother said.
“It wasn’t like a mating ritual that I had seen, because there was blood, and it had some hind quarters, like in its jaws, through the door.”
Burress said her baby was sound asleep just feet away behind the wall as the two massive gators tore her porch apart — and that she feels lucky the nightmare didn’t take a turn for the worse.
“It was scary,” she told the outlet, adding that since the incident she has been warning her neighbors to keep a closer eye on what might be creeping on their property.
“I just warned everybody else in the neighborhood, like, watch your kids. Watch the dogs. Because it was, it was fast and they were powerful.”
Wildlife experts told WINK that while two gators brawling on a front porch may seem alarming, during mating season — which is in full swing right now — it is far from unheard of.
“Big males are chasing out younger males in competition, and younger males are looking for new habitats,” naturalist and environmental educator Rob Howell said.
Howell warned that anyone who spots aggressive alligator behavior should keep their distance and never attempt to intervene.
“They’re going to be on edge because they think their life is at stake — they’re going to do everything they can,” Howell said. “When you trap them, corner them, they’re going to show defensive behaviors and aggressive behaviors.”
The wildlife expert said that because alligators tend to be more territorial and aggressive during mating season, the public should maintain a safe distance from bodies of water in areas with large alligator populations.
Florida is home to an estimated 1.3 million alligators, with a significant chunk of them lurking in Southwest Florida’s lakes, canals and wetlands, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.
Female alligators can weigh over 200 pounds and grow up to 9 feet, while males can stretch to 13 feet and weigh more than 500 pounds.
Since 1948, Florida has recorded between 450 and 500 documented alligator bites, with only around 30 proving fatal.
Florida’s worst year for gator attacks in the last three decades came in 2023, with 23 documented incidents.
