A platypus that got stuck in a car
engine in Australia has been safely released back into the wild, Australian
conservation officials say. The female platypus wedged itself inside the engine bay of a car driving
through a flooded river crossing south of Canberra late on Wednesday. It was driven more than 15km (9 miles) before the driver realised an animal
was in the car.
Officials described the incident as a "one-in-a-million" event. The driver, Cameron Blaseotto, said he heard scratching from under his car
bonnet when he parked his car. He and his friend "originally thought a possum or something was going to jump
out at both of us", he said. "We had a bit of an argument about who was going to open the engine bay," he
added.
They were surprised to discover a platypus stuck in the engine bay, and
called the territory's Parks and Conservation Service. "Our urban wildlife rangers get calls ranging from snakes in houses to quolls
(a carnivorous marsupial) in trees, but this was definitely one of our most
unusual calls," Regional Operations Manager Brett McNamara said.
"There's obviously many moving parts within an engine bay and given platypus
have claws there is not much to hang onto," he said. "How this animal was able to climb up inside, hang on, and then drive all the
way back into Canberra is a truly remarkable story." Mr McNamara added that the platypus, who was in perfect health, was returned
to her home and released on Thursday morning.
There's a news video here.
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