- A post-mortem is being carried out to determine the cause of death
- Lolong, a saltwater crocodile, was captured in September 2011
- He had been linked to attacks on people and livestock
- A Philippine government official says his death is a big loss for conservation efforts
 -- "So long, Lolong." 
That was the phrase  echoing around social media on Monday after news emerged the night  before that Lolong, the world's largest crocodile in captivity, had died  in the southern Philippines.
The outpouring of online  shock and grief over the demise of the heavyweight reptile, which was  more than 6-meters (20-feet) long, could be considered a little  surprising, given suspicions Lolong may have been involved in at least  two lethal attacks on people before he was captured in 2011.
But his world-beating size earned him an entry in the Guinness World Records and drew tourists to his enclosure at the Davao Crocodile Park in a remote corner of the Philippine island of Mindanao
His death, the cause of which is still to be determined by a post-mortem, prompted tributes from top Philippine officials.
 Environment Secretary  Ramon Paje called it a significant loss to the country's crocodile  conservation program, describing Lolong as an "ambassador," according to CNN affiliate ABS-CBN News.
 But the 1,075-kilo  (2,370-pound) crocodile's legacy will live on, Paje said, since  officials plan to preserve his capacious skin so that it can be stuffed  and mounted.
 Wildlife authorities caught Lolong in September 2011,  the result of a long effort to track him down after a young girl was  reportedly killed in the Agusan Marsh on Mindanao in 2009. The later  disappearance of a fisherman from the nearby village of Bunawan was also  linked to crocodiles. Attacks on livestock were also reported.
 But it was unclear if  Lolong, a saltwater crocodile, was responsible for the attacks, so  authorities made him the star of the show at the crocodile park near  Bunawan.
 He was reportedly named  after local hunter Ernesto "Lolong" Conate, who died of a stroke while  helping plan the capture of the gargantuan creature.
 Before the giant  crocodile died, park attendants had noticed that his right stomach was  bloated, Edwin Elorde, the mayor of Bunawan said, according to ABS-CBN.
 Elorde expressed support for the idea of preserving Lolong, so that villagers "can still see him."
 
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