Difference between revisions of "Crocodile" - New World Encyclopedia

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A '''crocodile''' is any  [[species]] belonging to the [[family (biology)|family]] '''Crocodylidae''' (sometimes classified instead as the [[subfamily]] '''Crocodylinae'''). The term can also be used more loosely to include all members of the [[order (biology)|order]] [[Crocodilia]]: i.e. the true crocodiles, the [[alligator]]s and [[caiman]]s (family [[Alligatoridae]]) and the [[gharial]]s (family [[Gavialidae]]), or even the [[Crocodylomorpha]] which includes prehistoric crocodile relatives and ancestors. Crocodiles are large aquatic [[reptile]]s that live throughout the [[Tropics]] in [[Africa]], [[Asia]], the [[Americas]] and [[Australia]]. Crocodiles tend to congregate in freshwater habitats like [[river]]s, [[lake]]s, [[wetland]]s and sometimes in [[brackish]] water. Some species, notably the [[Saltwater Crocodile]] of Australia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific islands often live along the [[coastal]] areas. It is also known to venture far out to sea. They mostly feed on [[vertebrate]]s like [[fish]], [[reptile]]s, and [[mammal]]s, sometimes with [[invertebrate]]s like [[mollusk]]s and [[crustacean]]s, depending on species. They are an ancient lineage, and are believed to have changed little since the time of the dinosaurs.
 
A '''crocodile''' is any  [[species]] belonging to the [[family (biology)|family]] '''Crocodylidae''' (sometimes classified instead as the [[subfamily]] '''Crocodylinae'''). The term can also be used more loosely to include all members of the [[order (biology)|order]] [[Crocodilia]]: i.e. the true crocodiles, the [[alligator]]s and [[caiman]]s (family [[Alligatoridae]]) and the [[gharial]]s (family [[Gavialidae]]), or even the [[Crocodylomorpha]] which includes prehistoric crocodile relatives and ancestors. Crocodiles are large aquatic [[reptile]]s that live throughout the [[Tropics]] in [[Africa]], [[Asia]], the [[Americas]] and [[Australia]]. Crocodiles tend to congregate in freshwater habitats like [[river]]s, [[lake]]s, [[wetland]]s and sometimes in [[brackish]] water. Some species, notably the [[Saltwater Crocodile]] of Australia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific islands often live along the [[coastal]] areas. It is also known to venture far out to sea. They mostly feed on [[vertebrate]]s like [[fish]], [[reptile]]s, and [[mammal]]s, sometimes with [[invertebrate]]s like [[mollusk]]s and [[crustacean]]s, depending on species. They are an ancient lineage, and are believed to have changed little since the time of the dinosaurs.
  
==Description==
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'''Crocodilia''' is an order of large [[reptile]]s that appeared about 84 million years ago in the late [[Cretaceous]] Period ([[Campanian]] stage). They are the closest living relatives of [[birds]], as the two groups are the only survivors of the [[Archosauria]].[http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Crocodilia.html] Members of the crocodilian [[stem group]], the [[clade]] [[Crurotarsi]], appeared about 220 million years ago in the [[Triassic]] Period and exhibited a wide diversity of forms during the [[Mesozoic]] Era.
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The correct vernacular term for this group is "'''crocodilians'''", not "crocodiles," although the latter term is sometimes used incorrectly to refer to [[alligator]]s and [[Alligatoridae|caiman]], or even their distant prehistoric relatives, "[[Thalattosuchia|marine crocodiles]]".
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The group is often spelled 'Crocodylia' for consistency with the genus ''[[Crocodylus]]'' [[Joseph Nicolai Laurenti|Laurenti]], 1768. However, [[Richard Owen]] used the -i- spelling when he published the name in 1842, so it is generally preferred in the scientific literature. The -i- spelling is also a more accurate [[Latin]]ization of the [[Greek language|Greek]] κροκόδειλος (''krokodeilos'', literally "pebble-worm", referring to the shape and texture of the animal).
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===Description===
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The basic crocodilian [[body plan]] is a very successful one; modern species closely resemble their [[Cretaceous]] ancestors of 84 million years ago. Mammals, too, have adapted to this body plan at least once in history. One ancestral whale family, the [[Ambulocetidae]], were aquatic predators living in rivers and lakes, and they filled an ecological niche similar to the crocodilians.
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Crocodilians have a flexible semi-erect (semi-sprawled) posture.  They can walk in low, sprawled "belly walk," or hold their legs more directly underneath them to perform the "high walk."<ref name="locomotion"> {{citeweb |url=http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/cnhc/cbd-gb3.htm |title=Crocodilian Biology Database-Locomotion |accessdate=2007-4-20 |first=Adam |last=Britton}}</ref>  Most other reptiles can only walk in a sprawled position, and [[chameleon]]s are the only modern reptiles with a more erect posture than crocodilians.{{Fact|date=April 2007}} The semi-erect posture makes it possible for some species to gallop on land if necessary.<ref name="locomotion"/> An Australian species can reach a speed of over 16 km/h while galloping on an irregular forest floor.{{Fact|date=April 2007}} Crocodilian ancestors, fast-moving terrestrial predators like the [[rauisuchia]]ns, actually had a fully erect posture, indicating that the sprawling and semi-erect posture of crocodilians evolved after they adapted to as semi-aquatic ambush predators. Their the ankle bones, or [[Tarsus (skeleton)|tarsi]] are highly modified.  Modern crocodilian locomotion is not a primitive trait, but a specialization for their semi-aquatic lifestyle.
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All crocodilians have, like ''Homo sapiens'' (humans), thecodont dentition (teeth set in bony sockets) but unlike mammals, they replace their teeth throughout life (though not in 'extreme' old-age).  Juvenile crocodilians replace teeth with larger ones at a rate as high as 1 new tooth per socket every month.  After reaching adult size in a few years, however, tooth replacement rates can slow to two years and even longer.  Very old members of some species have been seen in an almost "edentulous" (toothless) state, after teeth have been broken and replacement slowed or ceased.  The result of this is that a single crocodile can go through at least 3,000 teeth in its lifetime. Each tooth is hollow, and the new one is growing inside the old. In this way, a new tooth is ready once the old is lost.
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[[Image:Crocodylidae-drawing.jpg|thumb|200px|right|From the top: Head of an [[American alligator]] (''Alligator mississippiensis''), a [[Nile crocodile]] (''Crocodylus niloticus''), and an [[Indian gharial]] (''Gavialis gangeticus'').]]
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Crocodilians have a secondary bony palate that enables them to breathe when partially submerged, even if the mouth is full of water. Their internal nostrils open in the back of their throat, where a special part of the tongue called the "palatal valve" closes off their respiratory system when they are underwater. This way they can open their mouths underwater without choking. Most reptiles lack a [[secondary palate]], but some skinks (family Scincidae) have evolved a bony secondary palate too, to varying degrees.
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[[Crocodile]]s and [[gharial]]s have modified salivary glands on their tongue ([[salt gland]]s), which are used for excreting excess salt [[ion]]s from their body. [[Alligator]]s and [[caiman]]s have them too, but here they are non-functioning. This indicates that at some point the common origin of the Crocodylia were adapted to saline/marine environments. This also explains their wide disribution across the continents (i.e. marine dispersal). Species like the saltwater crocodile (''C. porosus'') can survive protracted periods of time in the sea, and can hunt prey within this environment.
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Crocodilians are often seen lying with their mouths open, a behavior called gaping. One of its functions is probably to cool them down, but since they also do this at night and when it is raining, it is possible that gaping has a social function too.
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====Internal organs====
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Crocodilians lack a [[vomeronasal organ]] (yet it is detectable in the embryo) and a urinary bladder.
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Like mammals and birds and unlike reptiles, crocodiles have a four-chambered heart; however, unlike mammals, oxygenated and deoxygenated blood can be mixed because of the presence of the left aortic arch.  The right ventricle has two arteries leaving it; a pulmonary artery, which goes to the lungs, and the left aortic arch, which goes to the body, or systemic circulation.  There is also a hole, the [[foramen of Panizza]], between the left and right aortic arches.<ref> {{cite journal |last=Hicks |first=James |year=2002 |title=The Physiological and Evolutionary Significance of
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Cardiovascular Shunting Patterns in Reptiles  |journal=News in Physiological Sciences |volume=17 |pages=241-245}}</ref>  Because the left aortic arch goes directly to the gut, the shunting of oxygen depleted blood which is high in CO<sub>2</sub> may serve to aid in creating stomach acid to assist in digesting bones from its prey.<ref>{{cite conference | author=Farmer, C. | title=The role of left aortic blood flow in digestion in American alligators | booktitle=American Physiological Society Conference | year=2006 | pages=Abstract 21.5}}</ref> Their blood has been shown to have strong antibacterial properties.{{Fact|date=April 2007}}
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They have alveoli in their lungs and a unique muscular attachment to the liver and viscera that acts as a piston to breathing, separating the thoracic and abdominal cavities (similar to the [[diaphragm (anatomy)|diaphragm]] of mammals). Although tegu lizards have a primitive proto-diaphragm, separating the pulmonary cavity from the visceral cavity and allowing greater lung inflation, this has a different evolutionary history.
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Crocodylians are known to swallow stones, gastroliths ("stomach-stones"), which act as a ballast in addition to aiding post-digestion processing of their prey. The crocodiylian stomach is divided into two chambers, the first one is described as being powerful and muscular, like a bird gizzard. This is where the gastroliths are found. The other stomach has the most acidic digestive system of any animal, and it can digest mostly everything from their prey; bones, feathers and horns.
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The gender of the juvenile is determined by the incubation temperature. This means crocodilians do not have [[Genetics|genetic]] sex determination (like us), but a form of environmental sex determination which is based upon temperature embryos undergo early in their development.
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====Sensory organs====
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Like all reptiles, crocodilians have a relatively small brain, but it is more advanced than in other reptiles. Among other things it has a true cerebral cortex.
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As in many other aquatic or amphibian tetrapods, the eyes, ears, and nostrils are all located on the same plane. They see well during the day and may even have colour vision, plus the eyes have a vertical, cat-like pupil which also gives them excellent night vision. The iris is silvery (light reflecting layer of tapetum behind the retina greatly increases their ability to see in weak light) also makes their eyes glow in the dark. A third transparent eyelid, the [[nictitating membrane]], protects their eyes underwater. However, they cannot focus under water, meaning other senses are more important when submerged under water.
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While birds and most reptiles have a ring of bones around each eye which supports the eyeball (the [[sclerotic ring]]), the crocodiles lack these bones, just like mammals and snakes. The eardrums are located behind the eyes and are covered by a movable flap of skin. This flap closes, along with the nostrils and eyes, when they dive, preventing water from entering their external head openings. The middle ear cavity has a complex of bony air-filled passages and a branching [[eustachian tube]]. There is also a small muscle (which is also seen in [[geckos|gecko]]) next to or upon the stapes, the stapedius, which probably functions in the same way as the mammalian stapedius muscle does, dampening strong vibrations.
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The upper and lower jaws are covered with sensory pits, seen as small, black speckles on the skin, the crocodile version of the lateral organ we see in fish and many amphibians. But they have a completely different origin. These pigmented nodules encase bundles of nerve fibers that respond to the slightest disturbance in surface water, detecting vibrations and small pressure changes in water, making it possible for them to detect prey, danger and intruders even in total darkness. These sense organs are known as DPRs (Dermal Pressure Receptors). While [[alligator]]s and [[caiman]]s only have them on their jaws, [[crocodile]]s have similar organs on almost every scale on their body. The function of the DPRs on the jaws are clear, but it is still not quite clear what the organs on the rest of the body in crocodiles actually do. They are probably doing the same as the organs on their jaws, but it seems like they can do more than that, like assisting in chemical reception or even salinity detection.
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====Skin and skeleton====
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[[Image:Bristol.zoo.westafrican.dwarf.croc.arp.jpg|thumb|right|250px|West African dwarf crocodile from the forests of West and West Central Africa]]
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The skin is covered with non-overlapping scales composed of the protein [[keratin]] (the same protein that forms hoofs, skin, horns, feathers, hair, claws and nails in other tetrapods), which are shed individually. On the head the skin is actually fused to the bones of the skull. There are small plates of bone, called [[osteoderms]] or scutes, under the scales. Just like a tree, crocodile osteoderms have annual growth rings, and by counting them it is possible to tell their age. Osteoderms are found especially on the back, and in some species also on the belly. The overlapping rows of scutes cover the crocodile's body from head to tail, forming a tough protective armor. Beneath the scales and osteoderms is another layer of armor, both strong and flexible and built of rows of bony overlapping shingles called [[osteoscutes]], which are embedded in the animal's back tissue. The blood-rich bumpy scales seen on their backs act as solar panels.
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Their spool-shaped vertebrae in their ancestors went from being biconcave to having a concave front and a convex back in the modern forms. This made the vertebral column more flexible and strong, a useful adaptation if you are hunting in water.
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They possess ribs of dermal origin restricted to the sides of the ventral body wall. The collar bone (clavicle) is absent.
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==Family Croco???, true crocodiles==
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[[Image:Crocodilelyd5.png|thumb|250px|Crocodiles, like dinosaurs, have the abdominal ribs modified into ''gastralia'']]
 
[[Image:Crocodilelyd5.png|thumb|250px|Crocodiles, like dinosaurs, have the abdominal ribs modified into ''gastralia'']]
 
Crocodiles are the most advanced of all reptiles despite their prehistoric look. Unlike other reptiles they have a four-chambered [[heart]], [[diaphragm]] and [[cerebral cortex]]. Their external morphology on the other hand is a sign of their aquatic and predatory lifestyle. A crocodile’s physical traits allow it to be a successful [[predator]]. They have a streamlined body that enables them to swim faster. They also tuck their feet to their sides while swimming, which makes the animal even faster, by decreasing the water resistance. They have webbed feet which, although not used to propel the animal through the water, allow it to make fast turns and sudden moves in the water or initiate swimming. Webbed feet are an advantage in shallower water where the animals sometimes move around by walking.  
 
Crocodiles are the most advanced of all reptiles despite their prehistoric look. Unlike other reptiles they have a four-chambered [[heart]], [[diaphragm]] and [[cerebral cortex]]. Their external morphology on the other hand is a sign of their aquatic and predatory lifestyle. A crocodile’s physical traits allow it to be a successful [[predator]]. They have a streamlined body that enables them to swim faster. They also tuck their feet to their sides while swimming, which makes the animal even faster, by decreasing the water resistance. They have webbed feet which, although not used to propel the animal through the water, allow it to make fast turns and sudden moves in the water or initiate swimming. Webbed feet are an advantage in shallower water where the animals sometimes move around by walking.  
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While often confused with each other, [[alligator]]s and crocodiles belong to two quite separate taxonomic families, and are as distinct from one another as humans are from gorillas. As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped - which can be remembered by noting that "A" in alligator comes before "C" in crocodile, and "U" comes before "V".
  
 
Crocodiles are very fast over short distances, even out of water. They have extremely powerful jaws capable of biting down with 3,000 pounds of pressure per square inch, and sharp teeth for tearing flesh, but cannot open their mouth if it is held closed. There are stories of people escaping from the long-snouted [[Nile Crocodile]] by holding its jaws shut. [[zoology|Zoologists]] will often subdue crocodiles for study or transport by [[duct tape|taping]] their jaws or holding their jaws shut with large [[rubber band]]s cut from automobile [[tire|inner tube]]s.  All large crocodiles also have sharp and powerful claws.  They have limited lateral movement in their neck, so on land protection can be found by getting even a small tree between the crocodile's jaws and oneself.
 
Crocodiles are very fast over short distances, even out of water. They have extremely powerful jaws capable of biting down with 3,000 pounds of pressure per square inch, and sharp teeth for tearing flesh, but cannot open their mouth if it is held closed. There are stories of people escaping from the long-snouted [[Nile Crocodile]] by holding its jaws shut. [[zoology|Zoologists]] will often subdue crocodiles for study or transport by [[duct tape|taping]] their jaws or holding their jaws shut with large [[rubber band]]s cut from automobile [[tire|inner tube]]s.  All large crocodiles also have sharp and powerful claws.  They have limited lateral movement in their neck, so on land protection can be found by getting even a small tree between the crocodile's jaws and oneself.
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Wildlife experts, however, argue that the largest crocodile so far found in the Bhitarkanika was almost 7.62 m which could be traced from the skull preserved by the Kanika Royal Family. The crocodile, probably was shot dead near Dhamara during 1926 and later its skull was preserved by the then Kanika King. The crocodile experts said the crocodile would be about 7.62 m since the size of the skull was measured one seventh of the total length of the body.
 
Wildlife experts, however, argue that the largest crocodile so far found in the Bhitarkanika was almost 7.62 m which could be traced from the skull preserved by the Kanika Royal Family. The crocodile, probably was shot dead near Dhamara during 1926 and later its skull was preserved by the then Kanika King. The crocodile experts said the crocodile would be about 7.62 m since the size of the skull was measured one seventh of the total length of the body.
  
==Biology and behaviour==
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===Biology and behaviour===
  
 
Crocodiles are ambush hunters, waiting for fish or land animals to come close, then rushing out to attack. As cold-blooded predators, they can survive long periods without food, and rarely need to actively go hunting. The crocodile's bite strength is up to 3,000 pounds per square inch, comparing to just 100 psi for a labrador retriever, 350 psi for a large shark, or 800 psi for a hyena. Despite their slow appearance, crocodiles are top predators in their environment, and various species have been observed attacking and killing [[shark]]s.<ref>[http://swimatyourownrisk.blogspot.com/2005_08_01_swimatyourownrisk_archive.html Blogspot: ''Swim a your own risk'']</ref>  A famous exception is the [[Egyptian Plover]] which is said to enjoy a [[symbiotic]] relationship with the crocodile. According to unauthenticated reports, the plover feeds on parasites that infest the crocodile's mouth and the reptile will open its jaws and allow the bird to enter to clean out the mouth.
 
Crocodiles are ambush hunters, waiting for fish or land animals to come close, then rushing out to attack. As cold-blooded predators, they can survive long periods without food, and rarely need to actively go hunting. The crocodile's bite strength is up to 3,000 pounds per square inch, comparing to just 100 psi for a labrador retriever, 350 psi for a large shark, or 800 psi for a hyena. Despite their slow appearance, crocodiles are top predators in their environment, and various species have been observed attacking and killing [[shark]]s.<ref>[http://swimatyourownrisk.blogspot.com/2005_08_01_swimatyourownrisk_archive.html Blogspot: ''Swim a your own risk'']</ref>  A famous exception is the [[Egyptian Plover]] which is said to enjoy a [[symbiotic]] relationship with the crocodile. According to unauthenticated reports, the plover feeds on parasites that infest the crocodile's mouth and the reptile will open its jaws and allow the bird to enter to clean out the mouth.
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Crocodiles are more closely related to birds and dinosaurs than to most animals classified as reptiles, the three being included in the group [[Archosauria]] ('ruling reptiles'). See [[Crocodilia]] for more information.
 
Crocodiles are more closely related to birds and dinosaurs than to most animals classified as reptiles, the three being included in the group [[Archosauria]] ('ruling reptiles'). See [[Crocodilia]] for more information.
  
===Danger to humans===
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====Danger to humans====
 
{{Main|Crocodile attacks}}
 
{{Main|Crocodile attacks}}
 
The larger species of crocodiles can be very dangerous to humans.  The [[Saltwater Crocodile|Saltwater]] and [[Nile Crocodile]]s are the most dangerous, killing hundreds of people each year in parts of South-East Asia and Africa.  [[Mugger crocodile]]s and possibly the endangered [[Black Caiman]], are also very dangerous to humans.  [[American alligator]]s are less aggressive and rarely assault humans without provocation. The most deaths in a single crocodile attack incident may have occurred during the Battle of Ramree Island, on February 19, 1945, in what is now Myanmar. Nine hundred soldiers of an Imperial Japanese Army unit, in an attempt to retreat from the Royal Navy and rejoin a larger battalion of the Japanese infantry, crossed through ten miles of mangrove swamps which contained Saltwater Crocodiles. Twenty Japanese soldiers were captured alive by the British, and almost five hundred are known to have escaped Ramree. Many of the remainder may have been eaten by the crocodiles, although gunfire from the British troops was undoubtedly a contributory factor.  Crocodiles are the leading cause of animal related deaths as of 2001.
 
The larger species of crocodiles can be very dangerous to humans.  The [[Saltwater Crocodile|Saltwater]] and [[Nile Crocodile]]s are the most dangerous, killing hundreds of people each year in parts of South-East Asia and Africa.  [[Mugger crocodile]]s and possibly the endangered [[Black Caiman]], are also very dangerous to humans.  [[American alligator]]s are less aggressive and rarely assault humans without provocation. The most deaths in a single crocodile attack incident may have occurred during the Battle of Ramree Island, on February 19, 1945, in what is now Myanmar. Nine hundred soldiers of an Imperial Japanese Army unit, in an attempt to retreat from the Royal Navy and rejoin a larger battalion of the Japanese infantry, crossed through ten miles of mangrove swamps which contained Saltwater Crocodiles. Twenty Japanese soldiers were captured alive by the British, and almost five hundred are known to have escaped Ramree. Many of the remainder may have been eaten by the crocodiles, although gunfire from the British troops was undoubtedly a contributory factor.  Crocodiles are the leading cause of animal related deaths as of 2001.
  
== Crocodile blood ==
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=== Crocodile blood ===
 
[[crocodillin]]<ref> [http://www.open2.net/bluesky/crocodile.htm "Crocodile Cure"]. ''Blue Sky''. The Open University and the BBC. Retrieved 4 January 2007.</ref>
 
[[crocodillin]]<ref> [http://www.open2.net/bluesky/crocodile.htm "Crocodile Cure"]. ''Blue Sky''. The Open University and the BBC. Retrieved 4 January 2007.</ref>
  
==Crocodile leather==
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===Crocodile leather===
 
[[Image:Crocrodile wallets.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Crocodile leather wallets from Bangkok Crocodile Farm]]
 
[[Image:Crocrodile wallets.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Crocodile leather wallets from Bangkok Crocodile Farm]]
  
 
Crocodile leather can be made into a variety of goods, such as wallets, briefcases, purses, belts and hats.
 
Crocodile leather can be made into a variety of goods, such as wallets, briefcases, purses, belts and hats.
  
==Crocodile as food==
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===Crocodile as food===
 
Crocodile is consumed in some countries such as Australia, Ethiopia, Thailand, South Africa and also Cuba (in pickled form). It can also be found in specialty restaurants in some parts of the United States. The meat is white and its nutritional composition compares favourably with that of more traditional meats. It does tend to have a slightly higher cholesterol level than other meats. Crocodile meat has a delicate flavour and its taste can be complemented by the use of  marinades. Choice cuts of meat include backstrap and tail fillet.
 
Crocodile is consumed in some countries such as Australia, Ethiopia, Thailand, South Africa and also Cuba (in pickled form). It can also be found in specialty restaurants in some parts of the United States. The meat is white and its nutritional composition compares favourably with that of more traditional meats. It does tend to have a slightly higher cholesterol level than other meats. Crocodile meat has a delicate flavour and its taste can be complemented by the use of  marinades. Choice cuts of meat include backstrap and tail fillet.
  
==Differentiation from alligators==
 
While often confused with each other, [[alligator]]s and crocodiles belong to two quite separate taxonomic families, and are as distinct from one another as humans are from gorillas. As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped - which can be remembered by noting that "A" in alligator comes before "C" in crocodile, and "U" comes before "V".
 
  
 
==Trivia==
 
==Trivia==
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*Five live baby crocodiles are seen in 1967 [[television]] series [[Thunderbirds (TV series)|Thunderbirds]], of the episode [[Attack of the Alligators]].
 
*Five live baby crocodiles are seen in 1967 [[television]] series [[Thunderbirds (TV series)|Thunderbirds]], of the episode [[Attack of the Alligators]].
  
== Taxonomy of the Crocodylidae ==
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== Taxonomy==
 
[[Image:Crocfarm.jpg|thumb|right|150px|Crocodile farming in [[Australia]].]]
 
[[Image:Crocfarm.jpg|thumb|right|150px|Crocodile farming in [[Australia]].]]
 
[[Image:Crocodylus cataphractus.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Slender-snouted Crocodile]], ''Crocodylus cataphractus'']]
 
[[Image:Crocodylus cataphractus.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Slender-snouted Crocodile]], ''Crocodylus cataphractus'']]
 
[[Image:Crocadiles.jpg|right|thumb|right|150px|A bask of crocodiles]]
 
[[Image:Crocadiles.jpg|right|thumb|right|150px|A bask of crocodiles]]
 
[[Image:Crocodylus acutus mexico 01.jpg|right|thumb|right|150px|American Crocodlile. Photo taken at La Manzanilla, Jalisco, Mexico]]
 
[[Image:Crocodylus acutus mexico 01.jpg|right|thumb|right|150px|American Crocodlile. Photo taken at La Manzanilla, Jalisco, Mexico]]
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===Classification===
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* Superorder [[Crocodylomorpha]]
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** '''Order Crocodilia'''
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*** Superfamily [[Gavialoidea]]
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**** Family [[Gavialidae]] - Gharials & False Gharials
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*** Superfamily [[Alligatoroidea]]
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**** Family [[Alligatoridae]]
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***** Subfamily [[Diplocynodontinae]] (extinct)
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***** Subfamily [[Alligatorinae]] - Alligators
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***** Subfamily [[Caiman]]inae - Caimans
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*** Superfamily [[Crocodyloidea]]
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**** Family [[Crocodylidae]]
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***** Subfamily [[Mekosuchinae]] (extinct)
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***** Subfamily [[Crocodile|Crocodylinae]] - Crocodiles
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===Phylogeny===
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[[Cladogram]] after Brochu (1997).
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[[Eusuchia]]
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  ├──''[[Hylaeochampsa]]''
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  └──┬──''[[Allodaposuchus]]''
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      └──'''Crocodilia'''
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          ├──[[Gavialoidea]]
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          │    ├──''[[Eothoracosaurus]]''
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          │    └──┬──''[[Thoracosaurus]]''
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          │        └──┬──''[[Argochampsa]]''
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          │          ├──''[[Eosuchus]]''
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          │          └──[[Gavialidae]]
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          └──┬──''[[Borealosuchus]]''
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              └──┬──''[[Pristichampsus]]''
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                └──[[Brevirostres]]
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                    ├──[[Alligatoroidea]]
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                    │  ├──''[[Leidyosuchus]]''
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                    │  ├─?''[[Deinosuchus]]''
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                    │  └──[[Globidonta]]
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                    │      ├──''[[Stangerochampsa]]''
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                    │      ├──''[[Brachychampsa]]''
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                    │      └──[[Alligatoridae]]
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                    └──[[Crocodyloidea]]
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                        ├──''[[Prodiplocynodon]]''
 +
                        └──┬──''[[Asiatosuchus]]''
 +
                            └──┬──''[[Brachyuranochampsa]]''
 +
                              └──┬──''[[Harpacochampsa]]''
 +
                                  └──[[Crocodylidae]]
 +
 +
 +
 +
===Taxonomy of the family Crocodylidae==
 +
 +
 +
 +
 
Most species are grouped into the [[genus]] ''Crocodylus''. The two other living genera of this family are both [[monotypic]]: ''[[Osteolaemus]]'' and ''[[Tomistoma]]''.
 
Most species are grouped into the [[genus]] ''Crocodylus''. The two other living genera of this family are both [[monotypic]]: ''[[Osteolaemus]]'' and ''[[Tomistoma]]''.
 
* Family Crocodylidae
 
* Family Crocodylidae
Line 137: Line 245:
 
**** ''[[Sarcosuchus]]'' (extinct, also known as ''Super Croc'').
 
**** ''[[Sarcosuchus]]'' (extinct, also known as ''Super Croc'').
  
==In popular culture==
+
 
* In the fictional [[Peter Pan]] series by [[J.M Barrie]], a large crocodile had bitten off [[Captain Hook]]'s hand, leaving him with his hook. It pursued him ever after. As it had also eaten a clock, its ticking let Hook know whenever the crocodile was approaching. It eventually caught up with and consumed him. In [[Steven Spielberg]]'s sequel film, ''[[Hook (film)|Hook]]'', it was shown that despite this, the Captain had gained the upper hand – the crocodile, dead and stuffed, had been transformed into a town-square clock tower – which eventually fell forwards onto him, 'eating' the villain once again.
 
*There are many horror films featuring rampaging giant crocodiles in the manner of the [[shark]] in Spielberg's ''[[Jaws (film)|Jaws]]''. While some follow the [[urban legend]] of unwanted pets being flushed down the toilet and growing to huge and deadly size in the sewers, one recent entry, ''[[Lake Placid (film)|Lake Placid]]'', instead has an isolated variety of giant croc discovered in the wild.
 
*In the ''[[Crocodile Hunter]]'' series, starring [[Steve Irwin]], crocodiles are seen in most episodes. Steve Irwin himself personally admired crocodiles, and one of the activities he was known for is feeding crocodiles at his [[Australia Zoo]].
 
*The [[Stephan Pastis]] [[comic strip]] ''[[Pearls Before Swine (comic strip)|Pearls Before Swine]]'' features [[The Fraternity of Crocodiles]] as the usually unsuccessful antagonists of their neighbor, Zebra, and who mostly speak in grade school-like [[phonetics]].
 
*In the Disney movie ''[[The Wild]]'', two abandoned pet crocodiles that dwell in the sewer guide the protagonists to the harbour rather than eating them.
 
*In the Disney movie ''[[The Rescuers]]'', villain [[Madame Medusa]] has a pair of crocodiles as henchmen; they menace her kidnap victims at her command.
 
*In the Disney movie ''[[The Emperor's New Groove]]'' and spin-off TV shows and sequels, the villain, [[Yzma]], has a pet crocodile that lives in a chamber accessed by a lever next to another lever that accesses her secret lab. Often, she comically pulls the wrong lever, falling into the pit only to return with the croc latched onto her, proclaiming, "Why do we even have that lever?!"
 
*The ''[[Cheburashka]]'' series of books (by [[Eduard Uspensky]]) and animated films feature [[Crocodile Gena]] as one of the main characters. He works in a zoo, as a crocodile (naturally).
 
*In the anime series ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh! GX]]'', a transfer student from Australia named [[Jim Crocodile Cook]] has a pet crocodile named Karen. He also has a special backpack for her that he carries her around in.
 
*In the anime series ''[[One Piece]]'', there is a fictional species of crocodile called the Bananawani, named for the banana-shaped growth on its head.
 
*In the [[Batman]] universe, one member of the Dark Knight's rogues gallery is [[Killer Croc]] (Waylon Jones), a fighter of immense strength but variable intelligence who, due to his suffering a skin deformity and having filed his teeth to points, resembles a humanoid crocodile.
 
*In the 1990s animated [[Batman]] series, one episode features the Sewer King, who rules over a community of orphaned children beneath [[Gotham City]] and controls the crocodiles that live there, setting them on the Batman.
 
*In the [[James Bond]] film ''[[Live and Let Die (film)|Live and Let Die]]'', Dr Kananga alias [[Mister Big (James Bond)|Mr Big]] maintains a crocodile farm in the [[Louisiana]] Bayou with the legend, 'Trespassers Will Be Eaten' on its gate. It is actually a front for the processing stage of his heroin racket. Bond is taken here to be killed by henchman [[Tee Hee Johnson]], who explains that one of the farm's crocs, 'Old Albert', is responsible for his using a prosthetic arm. Abandoned on an island in the midst of the lake full of hungry crocs, Bond escapes by running across the reptiles' backs. A croc features prominently on the film's poster.
 
*In the [[James Bond]] film ''[[Octopussy (film)|Octopussy]]'', 007 crosses a croc-infested lake in India in a mini-sub disguised as a crocodile, to confront the eponymous shady character on her [[private island]]. Later after a fight, he and an assailant fall into the water and he is believed by Octopussy to be killed by a large croc that then attacks (he actually escapes in his sub).
 
*In [[Pokémon]], the starter for the [[Pokémon Gold and Silver|second generation]] of Pokémon, [[Totodile]], is a crocodile-like creature that alludes to this.
 
*In the [[Animorphs series]] by K.A. Applegate, [[The Reaction (Animorphs)]] (#12) focuses on [[Rachel (Animorphs)]] acquiring a crocodile morph and becoming allergic to it.
 
*In the videogame [[Viva Piñata]] there is a species called Cocodile. It resembles a crocodile, but has been made to look a lot less fearsome than its real life counterpart. This also creates a small running joke in the [[Viva Piñata (TV series)|Viva Piñata TV series]], for when a character refers to a Cocodile as fearsome or terrifying etc, the referenced Cocodile will respond "I'm/We're not very scary."
 
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 22:01, 10 July 2007


For other uses, see Crocodile (disambiguation).
Crocodiles
Fossil range: Late Cretaceous - Recent
Nile Crocodile
Nile Crocodile
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
(unranked) Archosauria
Class: Sauropsida
Order: Crocodilia
Family: Crocodylidae
Cuvier, 1807
Genera
  • Mecistops
  • Crocodylus
  • Osteolaemus

See full taxonomy.

A crocodile is any species belonging to the family Crocodylidae (sometimes classified instead as the subfamily Crocodylinae). The term can also be used more loosely to include all members of the order Crocodilia: i.e. the true crocodiles, the alligators and caimans (family Alligatoridae) and the gharials (family Gavialidae), or even the Crocodylomorpha which includes prehistoric crocodile relatives and ancestors. Crocodiles are large aquatic reptiles that live throughout the Tropics in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australia. Crocodiles tend to congregate in freshwater habitats like rivers, lakes, wetlands and sometimes in brackish water. Some species, notably the Saltwater Crocodile of Australia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific islands often live along the coastal areas. It is also known to venture far out to sea. They mostly feed on vertebrates like fish, reptiles, and mammals, sometimes with invertebrates like mollusks and crustaceans, depending on species. They are an ancient lineage, and are believed to have changed little since the time of the dinosaurs.

Crocodilia is an order of large reptiles that appeared about 84 million years ago in the late Cretaceous Period (Campanian stage). They are the closest living relatives of birds, as the two groups are the only survivors of the Archosauria.[1] Members of the crocodilian stem group, the clade Crurotarsi, appeared about 220 million years ago in the Triassic Period and exhibited a wide diversity of forms during the Mesozoic Era.

The correct vernacular term for this group is "crocodilians", not "crocodiles," although the latter term is sometimes used incorrectly to refer to alligators and caiman, or even their distant prehistoric relatives, "marine crocodiles".

The group is often spelled 'Crocodylia' for consistency with the genus Crocodylus Laurenti, 1768. However, Richard Owen used the -i- spelling when he published the name in 1842, so it is generally preferred in the scientific literature. The -i- spelling is also a more accurate Latinization of the Greek κροκόδειλος (krokodeilos, literally "pebble-worm", referring to the shape and texture of the animal).

Description

The basic crocodilian body plan is a very successful one; modern species closely resemble their Cretaceous ancestors of 84 million years ago. Mammals, too, have adapted to this body plan at least once in history. One ancestral whale family, the Ambulocetidae, were aquatic predators living in rivers and lakes, and they filled an ecological niche similar to the crocodilians.

Crocodilians have a flexible semi-erect (semi-sprawled) posture. They can walk in low, sprawled "belly walk," or hold their legs more directly underneath them to perform the "high walk."[1] Most other reptiles can only walk in a sprawled position, and chameleons are the only modern reptiles with a more erect posture than crocodilians.[citation needed] The semi-erect posture makes it possible for some species to gallop on land if necessary.[1] An Australian species can reach a speed of over 16 km/h while galloping on an irregular forest floor.[citation needed] Crocodilian ancestors, fast-moving terrestrial predators like the rauisuchians, actually had a fully erect posture, indicating that the sprawling and semi-erect posture of crocodilians evolved after they adapted to as semi-aquatic ambush predators. Their the ankle bones, or tarsi are highly modified. Modern crocodilian locomotion is not a primitive trait, but a specialization for their semi-aquatic lifestyle.

All crocodilians have, like Homo sapiens (humans), thecodont dentition (teeth set in bony sockets) but unlike mammals, they replace their teeth throughout life (though not in 'extreme' old-age). Juvenile crocodilians replace teeth with larger ones at a rate as high as 1 new tooth per socket every month. After reaching adult size in a few years, however, tooth replacement rates can slow to two years and even longer. Very old members of some species have been seen in an almost "edentulous" (toothless) state, after teeth have been broken and replacement slowed or ceased. The result of this is that a single crocodile can go through at least 3,000 teeth in its lifetime. Each tooth is hollow, and the new one is growing inside the old. In this way, a new tooth is ready once the old is lost.

From the top: Head of an American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis), a Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus), and an Indian gharial (Gavialis gangeticus).

Crocodilians have a secondary bony palate that enables them to breathe when partially submerged, even if the mouth is full of water. Their internal nostrils open in the back of their throat, where a special part of the tongue called the "palatal valve" closes off their respiratory system when they are underwater. This way they can open their mouths underwater without choking. Most reptiles lack a secondary palate, but some skinks (family Scincidae) have evolved a bony secondary palate too, to varying degrees.

Crocodiles and gharials have modified salivary glands on their tongue (salt glands), which are used for excreting excess salt ions from their body. Alligators and caimans have them too, but here they are non-functioning. This indicates that at some point the common origin of the Crocodylia were adapted to saline/marine environments. This also explains their wide disribution across the continents (i.e. marine dispersal). Species like the saltwater crocodile (C. porosus) can survive protracted periods of time in the sea, and can hunt prey within this environment.

Crocodilians are often seen lying with their mouths open, a behavior called gaping. One of its functions is probably to cool them down, but since they also do this at night and when it is raining, it is possible that gaping has a social function too.

Internal organs

Crocodilians lack a vomeronasal organ (yet it is detectable in the embryo) and a urinary bladder.

Like mammals and birds and unlike reptiles, crocodiles have a four-chambered heart; however, unlike mammals, oxygenated and deoxygenated blood can be mixed because of the presence of the left aortic arch. The right ventricle has two arteries leaving it; a pulmonary artery, which goes to the lungs, and the left aortic arch, which goes to the body, or systemic circulation. There is also a hole, the foramen of Panizza, between the left and right aortic arches.[2] Because the left aortic arch goes directly to the gut, the shunting of oxygen depleted blood which is high in CO2 may serve to aid in creating stomach acid to assist in digesting bones from its prey.[3] Their blood has been shown to have strong antibacterial properties.[citation needed]

They have alveoli in their lungs and a unique muscular attachment to the liver and viscera that acts as a piston to breathing, separating the thoracic and abdominal cavities (similar to the diaphragm of mammals). Although tegu lizards have a primitive proto-diaphragm, separating the pulmonary cavity from the visceral cavity and allowing greater lung inflation, this has a different evolutionary history.

Crocodylians are known to swallow stones, gastroliths ("stomach-stones"), which act as a ballast in addition to aiding post-digestion processing of their prey. The crocodiylian stomach is divided into two chambers, the first one is described as being powerful and muscular, like a bird gizzard. This is where the gastroliths are found. The other stomach has the most acidic digestive system of any animal, and it can digest mostly everything from their prey; bones, feathers and horns.

The gender of the juvenile is determined by the incubation temperature. This means crocodilians do not have genetic sex determination (like us), but a form of environmental sex determination which is based upon temperature embryos undergo early in their development.

Sensory organs

Like all reptiles, crocodilians have a relatively small brain, but it is more advanced than in other reptiles. Among other things it has a true cerebral cortex.

As in many other aquatic or amphibian tetrapods, the eyes, ears, and nostrils are all located on the same plane. They see well during the day and may even have colour vision, plus the eyes have a vertical, cat-like pupil which also gives them excellent night vision. The iris is silvery (light reflecting layer of tapetum behind the retina greatly increases their ability to see in weak light) also makes their eyes glow in the dark. A third transparent eyelid, the nictitating membrane, protects their eyes underwater. However, they cannot focus under water, meaning other senses are more important when submerged under water.

While birds and most reptiles have a ring of bones around each eye which supports the eyeball (the sclerotic ring), the crocodiles lack these bones, just like mammals and snakes. The eardrums are located behind the eyes and are covered by a movable flap of skin. This flap closes, along with the nostrils and eyes, when they dive, preventing water from entering their external head openings. The middle ear cavity has a complex of bony air-filled passages and a branching eustachian tube. There is also a small muscle (which is also seen in gecko) next to or upon the stapes, the stapedius, which probably functions in the same way as the mammalian stapedius muscle does, dampening strong vibrations.

The upper and lower jaws are covered with sensory pits, seen as small, black speckles on the skin, the crocodile version of the lateral organ we see in fish and many amphibians. But they have a completely different origin. These pigmented nodules encase bundles of nerve fibers that respond to the slightest disturbance in surface water, detecting vibrations and small pressure changes in water, making it possible for them to detect prey, danger and intruders even in total darkness. These sense organs are known as DPRs (Dermal Pressure Receptors). While alligators and caimans only have them on their jaws, crocodiles have similar organs on almost every scale on their body. The function of the DPRs on the jaws are clear, but it is still not quite clear what the organs on the rest of the body in crocodiles actually do. They are probably doing the same as the organs on their jaws, but it seems like they can do more than that, like assisting in chemical reception or even salinity detection.

Skin and skeleton

West African dwarf crocodile from the forests of West and West Central Africa

The skin is covered with non-overlapping scales composed of the protein keratin (the same protein that forms hoofs, skin, horns, feathers, hair, claws and nails in other tetrapods), which are shed individually. On the head the skin is actually fused to the bones of the skull. There are small plates of bone, called osteoderms or scutes, under the scales. Just like a tree, crocodile osteoderms have annual growth rings, and by counting them it is possible to tell their age. Osteoderms are found especially on the back, and in some species also on the belly. The overlapping rows of scutes cover the crocodile's body from head to tail, forming a tough protective armor. Beneath the scales and osteoderms is another layer of armor, both strong and flexible and built of rows of bony overlapping shingles called osteoscutes, which are embedded in the animal's back tissue. The blood-rich bumpy scales seen on their backs act as solar panels.

Their spool-shaped vertebrae in their ancestors went from being biconcave to having a concave front and a convex back in the modern forms. This made the vertebral column more flexible and strong, a useful adaptation if you are hunting in water.

They possess ribs of dermal origin restricted to the sides of the ventral body wall. The collar bone (clavicle) is absent.

Family Croco???, true crocodiles

Crocodiles, like dinosaurs, have the abdominal ribs modified into gastralia

Crocodiles are the most advanced of all reptiles despite their prehistoric look. Unlike other reptiles they have a four-chambered heart, diaphragm and cerebral cortex. Their external morphology on the other hand is a sign of their aquatic and predatory lifestyle. A crocodile’s physical traits allow it to be a successful predator. They have a streamlined body that enables them to swim faster. They also tuck their feet to their sides while swimming, which makes the animal even faster, by decreasing the water resistance. They have webbed feet which, although not used to propel the animal through the water, allow it to make fast turns and sudden moves in the water or initiate swimming. Webbed feet are an advantage in shallower water where the animals sometimes move around by walking.

While often confused with each other, alligators and crocodiles belong to two quite separate taxonomic families, and are as distinct from one another as humans are from gorillas. As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped - which can be remembered by noting that "A" in alligator comes before "C" in crocodile, and "U" comes before "V".

Crocodiles are very fast over short distances, even out of water. They have extremely powerful jaws capable of biting down with 3,000 pounds of pressure per square inch, and sharp teeth for tearing flesh, but cannot open their mouth if it is held closed. There are stories of people escaping from the long-snouted Nile Crocodile by holding its jaws shut. Zoologists will often subdue crocodiles for study or transport by taping their jaws or holding their jaws shut with large rubber bands cut from automobile inner tubes. All large crocodiles also have sharp and powerful claws. They have limited lateral movement in their neck, so on land protection can be found by getting even a small tree between the crocodile's jaws and oneself.

Age

There is no reliable way of measuring crocodile age, although several techniques could be used to derive a reasonable guess. The most common method is to measure lamellar growth rings in bones and teeth - each ring corresponds to a change in growth rate which typically occurs once a year between dry and wet seasons.[4] Bearing these inaccuracies in mind, the oldest crocodilians appear to be the largest species. C. porosus is estimated to live around 70 years on average, and there is limited evidence that some individuals may exceed 100 years. One of the oldest crocodiles recorded died in a zoo in Russia apparently aged 115 years old.[5]

West African dwarf crocodile from the forests of West and West Central Africa

A male freshwater crocodile at the Australia Zoo is estimated to be 130 years old. He was rescued from the wild by Bob Irwin and Steve Irwin after being shot twice by hunters. As a result of the shootings, this crocodile (known affectionately as "Mr. Freshy") has lost his right eye.[6]

Size

File:LargeCroc.jpg
Large Crocodile in captivity in Australia

Size greatly varies between species, from the dwarf crocodile to the enormous saltwater crocodile. Large species can reach over 5 or 6 meters long and weigh well over 1200 kg (2,640 lb.). Despite their large adult size, crocodiles start their life at around 20 cm long. The largest species of crocodile is the Saltwater Crocodile, found in northern Australia and throughout South-east Asia. According to some scientists,[attribution needed] there are no truly reliable records of any non-prehistoric crocodiles over 8.64 m.

In the town of Normanton, Queensland, Australia, there is an 8.63 meter fibreglass mould of a crocodile called "Krys the Croc.," shot in 1958 by Krystina Pawloski, who found the animal on a sandbank on the Norman River.[7]

The other two larger certifiable records of complete crocodile are both of 6.2 m crocodiles. The first crocodile was shot in the Mary River in the Northern Territory of Australia in 1974 by poachers and measured by wildlife rangers. The second crocodile was killed in 1983 in the Fly River, Papua New Guinea. In this latter crocodile it was actually the skin that was measured by zoologist Jerome Montague, and as skins are known to underestimate the size of the actual animal, it is possible this crocodile was at least another 10 cm longer.

File:Sweetheart.gif
Sweetheart, a large saltwater crocodile that attacked boats
File:Crocrodile Farm Thailand.jpg
Samutprakarn Crocodile Farm and Zoo, Bangkok

The largest crocodile ever held in captivity is an Estuarine/Siamese hybrid named Yai (Thai: ใหญ่, meaning big) (born 10 June, 1972) at the famous Samutprakarn Crocodile Farm and Zoo, Thailand. This animal measured 6 m in length and weighs 1,114.27 kg (2,450 lb.).

Another huge captive crocodile was a saltie named Gomek. Gomek was captured by George Craig in Papua New Guinea and sold to St. Augustine Alligator Farm in Florida. Gomek died of heart disease in February 1997. By this stage, he was a very old crocodile. When he died, he was 5.5 m long - as confirmed by St. Augustine Alligator Farm - and probably between 70 and 80 years old.

On June 16, 2006, a 7.1 m giant saltwater crocodile in Orissa, India was crowned the world's largest living crocodile. It lives in Bhitarkanika Wildlife Sanctuary and in June 2006, was entered in the Guinness Book of World Records.[8]

Wildlife experts, however, argue that the largest crocodile so far found in the Bhitarkanika was almost 7.62 m which could be traced from the skull preserved by the Kanika Royal Family. The crocodile, probably was shot dead near Dhamara during 1926 and later its skull was preserved by the then Kanika King. The crocodile experts said the crocodile would be about 7.62 m since the size of the skull was measured one seventh of the total length of the body.

Biology and behaviour

Crocodiles are ambush hunters, waiting for fish or land animals to come close, then rushing out to attack. As cold-blooded predators, they can survive long periods without food, and rarely need to actively go hunting. The crocodile's bite strength is up to 3,000 pounds per square inch, comparing to just 100 psi for a labrador retriever, 350 psi for a large shark, or 800 psi for a hyena. Despite their slow appearance, crocodiles are top predators in their environment, and various species have been observed attacking and killing sharks.[9] A famous exception is the Egyptian Plover which is said to enjoy a symbiotic relationship with the crocodile. According to unauthenticated reports, the plover feeds on parasites that infest the crocodile's mouth and the reptile will open its jaws and allow the bird to enter to clean out the mouth.

Crocodiles eat fish, birds, mammals and occasionally smaller crocodiles. Wild crocodiles are protected in many parts of the world, but they also are farmed commercially. Their hide is tanned and used to make leather goods such as shoes and handbags, whilst crocodile meat is also considered a delicacy in many parts of the world. The most commonly farmed species are the Saltwater and Nile crocodiles, while a hybrid of the Saltwater and the rare Siamese Crocodile is also bred in Asian farms. Farming has resulted in an increase in the Saltwater Crocodile population in Australia, as eggs are usually harvested from the wild, so landowners have an incentive to conserve crocodile habitat. Crocodiles are more closely related to birds and dinosaurs than to most animals classified as reptiles, the three being included in the group Archosauria ('ruling reptiles'). See Crocodilia for more information.

Danger to humans

The larger species of crocodiles can be very dangerous to humans. The Saltwater and Nile Crocodiles are the most dangerous, killing hundreds of people each year in parts of South-East Asia and Africa. Mugger crocodiles and possibly the endangered Black Caiman, are also very dangerous to humans. American alligators are less aggressive and rarely assault humans without provocation. The most deaths in a single crocodile attack incident may have occurred during the Battle of Ramree Island, on February 19, 1945, in what is now Myanmar. Nine hundred soldiers of an Imperial Japanese Army unit, in an attempt to retreat from the Royal Navy and rejoin a larger battalion of the Japanese infantry, crossed through ten miles of mangrove swamps which contained Saltwater Crocodiles. Twenty Japanese soldiers were captured alive by the British, and almost five hundred are known to have escaped Ramree. Many of the remainder may have been eaten by the crocodiles, although gunfire from the British troops was undoubtedly a contributory factor. Crocodiles are the leading cause of animal related deaths as of 2001.

Crocodile blood

crocodillin[10]

Crocodile leather

Crocodile leather wallets from Bangkok Crocodile Farm

Crocodile leather can be made into a variety of goods, such as wallets, briefcases, purses, belts and hats.

Crocodile as food

Crocodile is consumed in some countries such as Australia, Ethiopia, Thailand, South Africa and also Cuba (in pickled form). It can also be found in specialty restaurants in some parts of the United States. The meat is white and its nutritional composition compares favourably with that of more traditional meats. It does tend to have a slightly higher cholesterol level than other meats. Crocodile meat has a delicate flavour and its taste can be complemented by the use of marinades. Choice cuts of meat include backstrap and tail fillet.


Trivia

  • The crocodile gets its name from the Greeks who observed them in the Nile river. The Greeks called them krokodilos, a compound word from kroke, which means "pebbles" and drilos, which means "worm". To the Greeks, this "worm of the stones" was so named because of the crocodiles habit of basking in the sun on gravel-covered river banks.
  • Petsuchos was the name given by the Greeks to the live crocodile at Crocodilopolis in Ancient Egypt, which was worshipped as a manifestation of the Egyptian god Sobek; the deification of crocodiles.
  • Crocodile embryos do not have sex chromosomes, and unlike humans sex is not determined genetically. Sex is determined by temperature, with males produced at around 31.6 degrees celsius, and females produced at slightly lower and higher temperatures. The average incubation period is around 80 days, and also is dependent upon temperature.[11]
  • Some of the extinct relatives of true crocodiles, members of the larger group Crocodylomorpha, were herbivorous.
  • During a voyage in 1585-1586, Sir Francis Drake named the Cayman Islands after the islands' 10-foot crocodiles, called "Caymanas" by the native Caribs.[12]
  • Five live baby crocodiles are seen in 1967 television series Thunderbirds, of the episode Attack of the Alligators.

Taxonomy

Crocodile farming in Australia.
Slender-snouted Crocodile, Crocodylus cataphractus
A bask of crocodiles
American Crocodlile. Photo taken at La Manzanilla, Jalisco, Mexico

Classification

  • Superorder Crocodylomorpha
    • Order Crocodilia
      • Superfamily Gavialoidea
        • Family Gavialidae - Gharials & False Gharials
      • Superfamily Alligatoroidea
        • Family Alligatoridae
          • Subfamily Diplocynodontinae (extinct)
          • Subfamily Alligatorinae - Alligators
          • Subfamily Caimaninae - Caimans
      • Superfamily Crocodyloidea

Phylogeny

Cladogram after Brochu (1997).

Eusuchia
  ├──Hylaeochampsa
  └──┬──Allodaposuchus
     └──Crocodilia
          ├──Gavialoidea
          │     ├──Eothoracosaurus
          │     └──┬──Thoracosaurus
          │        └──┬──Argochampsa
          │           ├──Eosuchus
          │           └──Gavialidae
          └──┬──Borealosuchus
             └──┬──Pristichampsus
                └──Brevirostres
                    ├──Alligatoroidea
                    │   ├──Leidyosuchus
                    │   ├─?Deinosuchus
                    │   └──Globidonta
                    │       ├──Stangerochampsa
                    │       ├──Brachychampsa
                    │       └──Alligatoridae
                    └──Crocodyloidea
                        ├──Prodiplocynodon
                        └──┬──Asiatosuchus
                           └──┬──Brachyuranochampsa
                              └──┬──Harpacochampsa
                                 └──Crocodylidae


=Taxonomy of the family Crocodylidae

Most species are grouped into the genus Crocodylus. The two other living genera of this family are both monotypic: Osteolaemus and Tomistoma.

  • Family Crocodylidae
    • Subfamily Mekosuchinae (extinct)
    • Subfamily Crocodylinae
      • Genus Euthecodon (extinct)
      • Genus Rimasuchus (extinct, formerly Crocodylus lloydi)
      • Genus Osteolaemus
        • Dwarf Crocodile, Osteolaemus tetraspis (there has been controversy whether or not this is actually two species; current thinking is that there is one species with 2 subspecies: O. tetraspis tetraspis & O. t. osborni)
      • Genus Crocodylus
        • Crocodylus acutus , American Crocodile
        • Crocodylus cataphractus , Slender-snouted Crocodile (Recent DNA studies suggest that this species may actually be more basal than Crocodylus, and belong in its own genus, Mecistops)
        • Crocodylus intermedius , Orinoco Crocodile
        • Crocodylus johnstoni, Freshwater Crocodile
        • Crocodylus mindorensis, Philippine Crocodile
        • Crocodylus moreletii , Morelet's Crocodile or Mexican Crocodile
        • Crocodylus niloticus, Nile Crocodile or African Crocodile (the subspecies found in Madagascar is sometimes called the Black Crocodile)
        • Crocodylus novaeguineae, New Guinea Crocodile
        • Crocodylus palustris, Mugger Crocodile, Marsh Crocodile, or Indian Crocodile
        • Crocodylus porosus , Saltwater Crocodile or Estuarine Crocodile
        • Crocodylus rhombifer , Cuban Crocodile
        • Crocodylus siamensis, Siamese Crocodile
    • Subfamily Tomistominae (recent studies may show that this group is actually more closely related to the Gavialidae)
      • Genus Kentisuchus (extinct)
      • Genus Gavialosuchus (extinct)
      • Genus Paratomistoma (extinct)
      • Genus Thecachampsa (extinct)
      • Genus Kentisuchus (extinct)
      • Genus Rhamphosuchus (extinct)
      • Genus Tomistoma
        • Tomistoma schlegelii, False gharial or Malayan gharial
        • Tomistoma lusitanica (extinct)
        • Tomistoma cairense (extinct)
        • Tomistoma machikanense (extinct, pleistocene species from Japan)
        • Sarcosuchus (extinct, also known as Super Croc).


See also

Wikispecies-logo.svg
Wikispecies has information related to:
Crocodilia
  • Crocodile attacks
  • crocodile exoskeleton
  • Mekosuchine crocodiles
  • Crocodiles in sewers
  • The Crocodile Hunter
  • Steve Irwin
  • Gustave (crocodile)

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  1. 1.0 1.1 Britton, Adam. Crocodilian Biology Database-Locomotion. Retrieved on 2007-4-20.
  2. Hicks, James (2002). The Physiological and Evolutionary Significance of Cardiovascular Shunting Patterns in Reptiles. News in Physiological Sciences 17: 241-245.
  3. Farmer, C. (2006). "The role of left aortic blood flow in digestion in American alligators". American Physiological Society Conference, Abstract 21.5.
  4. Britton, Adam. Crocodilian Biology Database, FAQ. "How long do crocodiles live for?". Retrieved 9/11/2006.
  5. Britton, Adam. Crocodilian Biology Database, FAQ. "How long do crocodiles live for?". Retrieved 9/11/2006.
  6. profile of Mr Freshy at Australia Zoo website, accessed 1 February 2007
  7. AAP. "Steve Irwin's nothing on One Shot Krys". The Age Melbourne, 24 September 2002. Retrieved 8 January 2007.
  8. "Orissa crocodile recognised as world's largest", Reuters, 2006-06-16. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
  9. Blogspot: Swim a your own risk
  10. "Crocodile Cure". Blue Sky. The Open University and the BBC. Retrieved 4 January 2007.
  11. Britton, Adam. Estuarine Crocodile: Crocodylus porosus. Crocodilians: Natural History Conservation: Crocodiles, Caimans, Alligators, Gharials. Retrieved 4 January 2007.
  12. Cayman Islands Government (2005). Cayman Islands History. Retrieved 4 January 2007.

Further reading

  • Iskandar, DT (2000). Turtles and Crocodiles of Insular Southeast Asia and New Guinea. ITB, Bandung.
  • Crocodilian Biology Database, FAQ. "How long do crocodiles live for?" Adam Britton. [2]

External links

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