Title: Crocodilians:
1Crocodilians
- The Last of the Ruling Reptiles
2(No Transcript)
3Archosauria a review
- Crocs are one of the earliest archosaurian
offshoots (at about 250-240 MYBP). - Truly modern crocodilians first appear in fossil
record for late Cretaceous (at about 80
MYBP). - A wide variety of types
4Taxonomic Confusion Morphology vs. Molecules
- Gharials look a whole lot like tomistomae!
- But all deep-structural morphological taxonomies
(A) set Gavialis at the base of the crocodilian
tree ally Tomistoma with the true crocodiles. - Earliest molecular taxonomies (B) placed
Alligatoridae at the trees base and linked
Gavialis Tomistoma as sister groups. But these
taxonomies were mitochondrial. - More recent nuclear taxonomies support mtDNA work.
5My guess on how it will sort out
- Alligators broad-snouted, temperate-zone
animals. - Caiman Central South American animals
moderately broad snouts. - True crocodiles salt glands circumtropical
small to large mostly slender-snouted animals. - Gharials large tropical Asian animals w/very
slender snouts. - But what about the fossil stuff? ?
6? For example, the terrestrial crocodilians (a
repeated theme) and ?
- Junggarsuchus (above, left) Triassic of China.
Earliest true crocs were probably terrestrial,
supported by I-beam backbone. - Pristichampus (above, right) Eocene of Europe
and N. America 3m serrated teeth, long running
legs. - Numerous other Cenozoic examples existed perhaps
some SEA island terrestrial crocs become extinct
lt 1500 years ago. - Cuban crocs dwarf caiman today.
7and the Terror Crocodilians
- Deinosuchus late Cretaceous of Texas (and
Sarcosuchus, Cretaceous of Niger). - 15m (skull 2m).
- Ecologically like Nile croc except this one
ambushed dinosaurs. - Other giant crocodilians were narrow-snouted,
presumed fish-eaters.
8Some characteristics of living crocodilians
- Adults 1.1m-7m 10kg-1000kg.
- Mostly tropical.
- Aquatic predators.
- Reproduction
- all lay eggs
- some dig hole-nests others construct mound
nests - most give some care to nests and hatchlings
- all have temperature-dependent sex determination.
- Heavy juvenile losses adults almost
invulnerable. - Anatomy (brain, spine, palate, heart, lungs)...
9Internal Anatomy backbone (secondary) hard
palate
- Backbone is built like an I-bream for supporting
great weight. - Throat valves and bony palate allow croc to
breathe while mouth is under water (in aquatic
profile).
10Importance of strong, flexible backbone.(Slide
shows galloping Australian freshwater croc.)
- Perhaps earliest croc specialization within
Archosauria. - Crocodilians are not limited to dragging around.
- When larger animals do high walk, the majority
of weight is suspended between two distant
girdles. - Crocodilians are capable of almost instant
end-switching, so watch out.
11Internal Anatomy the heart
- Unlike other living reptiles, crocs have
4-chambered hearts. - Foramen of Panizza once thought an imperfection.
- But look at the routing of oxygenated blood vs.
deoxygenated blood.
12Reproductive behavior
- The next 6 slides deal with two different themes
- 1. They show various aspects of crocodilian
reproductive biology, which is the main thing I
want to talk about now. - 2. The slides also illustrate different
crocodilian species. - Keep in mind the major steps in crocodilian
reproduction (which are essentially common for
all species) - Pairing
- Mating
- Nest-construction
- Egg-laying
- Nest attendance
- Nest opening
- Hatchling care.
13Pairing
- Differs from species to species some are
territorial some have dominance hierarchies. - In at least some species, courtship is initiated
by either gender. - Courtship is typically extensive in alligators
it can last minutes or months. - Slide shows male alligator bellowing.
14Mating
- Always occurs in water.
- Typically lasts about 5-10 minutes (but can be
protracted). - Probably has to occur within narrow temporal
window (when eggs are in correct ovaducal
region and sperm are mature). - In at least some species, multiple paternity is
possible. - Picture shows courting alligators.
15Nest building(slides show alligator nests)
- Hole nesters usually dig in sand deposit eggs,
stay not far away. - Mound nesters usually construct nests from
available vegetation often they guard nest by
lying upon it. (Alligator tales.) - Nests provide some protection from predators
also help regulate incubation temperature. - Position of nest ( of egg in nest) may affect
temp thereby hatchling gender.
16Attending the nest(slide is Philippine croc)
- Some mothers never leave nest until hatch(c.
65-90 days varies by species) thats one cost
of repro ( one reason most croc females
reproduce biennially at most). - Vigor of nest defense varies by species, size,
individual, and personal history.
17Opening the nest(slide is mugger crocodile)
- Females of most species open nests, probably cued
in by sounds (which also encourage babies to
hatch). - In some instances, young cannot/will not escape
nest unless mother opens it. - In some species mother will open unhatched eggs
to free babies ( will eat bad eggs).
18Caring for young(slide is Nile croc)
- Extent of care varies by species by individual.
- Sometimes care ceases after nest opening.
- Some mothers will carry young to water (more on
Nile croc). - In some species young form a crèche which can
last for gt a year (w/ varying levels of
protection). - Notes on cannibalism.
19Feeding
- In general, crocodilians eat any animal of
appropriate size that they can catch. The list
of alligator foods is very long. - Head shape gives clues about diet.
- Smaller crocs (smaller species smaller
individuals) eat smaller material. - Most hatchling crocs begin life eating mostly
invertebrates, fish, and small amphibians. - The next 4 slides will offer opportunity to
discuss species and diets.
20Small animals, small food items(Slide is
juvenile common caiman.)
- Depending on species, hatchling crocs are about
15-30cm. - Many eat large, aquatic invertebrates or frogs,
but fish are probably most common food. - Small animals usually snap at movement, day or
night. - Larger juveniles sometimes eat smaller juveniles
(or are eaten by still larger crocs).
21Head shape often gives clues about species
diets. (Slide is African slender-snouted
crocodile.)
- Narrow-snouted crocs are usually fish eaters.
- Broad, shovel-shaped snouts are often used for
touch-feeding in murky water bottom muck. - But remember, all crocs are opportunists will
not refuse a food item just because its not on
some books list.
22Big prey!
- Large crocs often take large prey (but seldom
refuse more modest prey if its convenient). - Most prefer prey 5-20 of crocs body weight.
(Few feeding attacks on people by alligators lt 3m
long.) - Most feeding is at night in water (but).
- Saltwater croc biggest.
- But Nile croc is specialized for land hunting.
23Cooperative hunting feeding. (Slide shows Nile
crocs.)
- All crocs hunt alone most of the time.
- Some will defend prey item against conspecifics.
- But many crocs will share very large prey.
(Relate observations in Hwange National Park.) - Sometimes this is useful for dismembering prey.
- There are a few reliable observations of
cooperative hunting among Nile crocs.
24A few species accounts
- Many crocodilians look alike, even to experts, so
why show all? The next 9 photo-slides depict a
selection of crocodilian species. - The taxonomic and geographical coverage is rather
broad. - Remember
- Family Alligatoridae 4 genera, 7 species mostly
neotropical. - Family Gavialidae 2 genera, 2 species tropical
Asian. - Family Crocodylidae 2 genera, about 14 species
mostly circumtropical.
25Alligator
- Southeastern USA, mostly coastal plain.
- Females adult at about 2m males at about 2.5m
age depends on locale food can be 10-20
years. - Courting in spring nesting egg-laying in
June-July. - 30-50 eggs per clutch variation depends on a
number of factors. - Endangered in 40s-70s now well recovered.
- Biggest wild animal in South Carolina.
26Chinese alligator (Alligator sinensis)
- Linked to Alligator mississippiensis by fossils.
- One of the most cold-tolerant crocodilians.
- A confirmed burrower.
- In the wild, this is one of the most endangered
crocodilians. But it is prospering in captivity.
27Common Caiman
- Central America tropical South America.
- Extremely abundant in some areas highly
adaptable to a variety of habitats. - Females to about 1.6m, males to about 2.2m (less
in many populations). - Time to maturity varies but can be as little as 4
years!!! - Probably the worlds most abundant crocodilian.
- Note eyeshines.
28Black Caiman
- A large (to gt 4m) alligator-looking caiman of
South American big rivers. - Not well known in the wild.
- Various reports of disposition.
- Skin valuable highly endangered (people keep
hunting after this animal reaches commercial
extinction).
29Dwarf caiman
- 2 species one in Piedmont-looking creeks and one
in rainforest streams both tropical South
American. - Exceedingly slow to mature probably over 20
years for both sexes. - Probably more terrestrial than other living
crocs. - Apparently territorial.
- Rainforest species never gets as warm as crocs
like to be nesting adaptations.
30Gharial
- Very large (to at least 6m) fish-eating croc of
big south-Asian rivers note long, slender snout. - Family once more widespread (South Carolina
fossils). - Demography unknown.
- Apparent fishing strategy.
- Thermoregulation in snow-melt rivers.
- One of the worlds most endangered crocodilians.
31Tomistoma(false gharial)
- Southeast Asia (mostly Malaysia Indonesia).
- Very large (to 6m).
- Taxonomic status
- appearance like gharial
- internal anatomy like crocodiles
- genetics like gharial??
- Poorly known in the wild
- probably endangered
- breeding biology essentially unobserved
- arguments over food habits.
32Dwarf Crocodle
- African rainforest.
- Two species look almost identical-- but split is
very ancient. - Females to about 1.2m males to almost 2m.
- Natural history is almost entirely unknown
perhaps is similar to dwarf caiman. - Mound-nester and burrower.
- Heavily exploited for food but probably not
endangered.
On nest, at night
33Saltwater crocodile
- Tropical Papua-Aust., Indonesia.
- Most nearly marine of all living crocs big river
estuaries. - Largest living reptile (to 7m, but Bayliss
says...). - Along with Nile croc, the most dangerous
person-eater. - Extensively studied in Australia.
- Some commercial ranches and farms.
34Cuban crocodile
- Swampy areas in Cuba Isla de la Juventud.
- To about 2.5m.
- Probably the most terrestrial of the true
crocodiles (stories from Cuba). - Disposition of a chainsaw.
- Endangered over-hunting in past habitat
destruction and interbreeding today.
35- Today most species of crocs are endangered-- for
a variety of reasons - skins are valuable
- some species are dangerous
- some species live in habitats that people also
like - other habitats are threatened by pollution
- But several species have proved that populations
can recover from low levels. - It would be a shame to lose the last of the
Ruling Reptiles!