Video Shows Alligators Brawling in Florida Backyard Ahead of Mating Season

Two alligators have been caught on film wrestling in a backyard in Lakewood Ranch, Florida.

The reptiles become more active when temperatures rise, and with alligator mating season approaching, encounters between humans and gators are likely to increase in frequency over the coming weeks in the Sunshine State.

The footage was captured by Lakewood Ranch resident Gordon Silver and posted online Monday.

"Didn't have to leave my back yard to capture these 2 gators tossing each other around at the beginning of the 2021 mating season in Lakewood Ranch, Florida," Silver wrote.

The video shows two alligators slowly approach each other on a shoreline.

Deep growls can be heard as the animals get closer, before they clamp their jaws on each other's bodies and roll into the water, tails thrashing.

The smaller of the two alligators then manages to escape, disappearing under the murky water.

"Wow what a show right in my back yard! The 2021 gator mating season is ready to begin here in Lakewood Ranch," Silver added, though it isn't clear from the footage if the alligators were trying to mate or if they were fighting over territory.

Alligators become more active around this time of year.

"When temperatures rise, alligators' metabolism increases and they begin moving around more as they seek food," the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) explains.

Alligators also start courting in early April, ahead of the mating season in May and June.

Increased alligator activity raises the potential for conflict between the reptiles and humans, but FWC says they "seldom bite people and fatalities from such occurrences are rare," despite there being an estimated 1.3 million alligators in Florida.

In 2020 there were 12 recorded alligator bites on people in the state, with eight of those causing wounds that "required medical care, beyond first aid." None of them were fatal.

Between 1948 and 2019, meanwhile, 413 unprovoked bite incidents were recorded in Florida, with 25 of them resulting in fatalities.

"The frequency of these serious bites is variable but there has not been a significant trend in the past 10 years," an FWC fact sheet published in 2019 reads.

"The likelihood of a Florida resident being seriously injured during an unprovoked alligator incident in Florida is roughly only one in 3.1 million."

The FWC's safety recommendations include taking extra precautions near water. It advises keeping children and pets a safe distance from water, and swimming only in designated swimming areas during daylight hours.

Feeding wild alligators is also illegal, because it can cause them to start associating people with food.

An alligator swimming in Florida
An alligator swims near the eighth green at PGA National Champion course on March 21, 2021 in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. The reptiles grow more active as temperatures rise, and human-alligator encounters are expected to grow more frequent over the coming weeks. Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images