• A newly identified prehistoric marine predator has shed light on the origins of the distant relatives of modern crocodiles. (crystalinks.com)
  • Around 95 million years ago, a giant relative of modern crocodiles ruled the coastlines and waterways of what would one day become north central Texas. (crystalinks.com)
  • They are the first footprint evidence that some ancient ancestors of modern crocodiles walked on two legs. (snexplores.org)
  • This group includes modern crocodiles, alligators and their ancestors. (snexplores.org)
  • They are from the back feet of the genus Batrachopus , an ancient relative of modern crocodiles. (snexplores.org)
  • To test the model, they turned to modern crocodiles - close relatives of dinosaurs, who probably inherited a similar metabolism from the ancestor that they share with dinosaurs. (berkeley.edu)
  • Crocodiles are actually these incredibly dynamic creatures that have experienced incredible evolutionary histories, have lived in places that modern crocodiles don't live, done things that modern crocodiles don't do and have grown to sizes that modern crocodiles never achieve. (wglt.org)
  • Alligators are reptiles that belong to the order Crocodilia. (diffbtw.com)
  • Alligators are reptiles that have been around for over 200 million years. (diffbtw.com)
  • Crocodiles are reptiles that have been on Earth for about 250 million years. (diffbtw.com)
  • Now called Carnufex carolinensis , the crocodile ancestor likely walked on its hind legs, preying on armored reptiles and early mammal relatives in its ecosystem, the researchers say. (livescience.com)
  • Millions of years ago, when dinosaurs ruled over this earth, Alligators were also one of the reptiles present! (visualstories.com)
  • Alligators are among the largest reptiles in the world, and as such, they produce a lot of waste. (reptilesblog.com)
  • It was huge and utterly evil looking, clearly a watery death machine that was 6.4 m (21 feet) long, and lived in the rivers and swamps of Triassic North America some 252-201 million years ago. (umd.edu)
  • That is, there were other kinds of Redondosaurus (collectively called the Phytosaurs ) that filled the ecological niche that crocs and alligators fill in todays swamps. (umd.edu)
  • Everyone had a big cat tale, full of whiskers and sinister looks and a bent hook and a towed boat, sometimes a missing appendage on a coon or deer, making out as if they were some kind of Mississippi crocodile, trading swamps and straits for locks and sloughs. (scarletleafreview.com)
  • They live in swamps, rivers, and lakes, and can grow up to 14 feet long. (reptilesblog.com)
  • They are cold-blooded animals while crocodiles are warm-blooded. (diffbtw.com)
  • Alligators are cold-blooded animals. (visualstories.com)
  • Being cold-blooded animals, alligators can stay satiated by eating once in a week. (visualstories.com)
  • A photograph shows the skull of a Purussaurus, an extinct species regarded as the largest crocodile to ever live. (snopes.com)
  • This is a replica model of a skull belonging to a different extinct crocodile species: Deinosuchus. (snopes.com)
  • Furthermore, the skull in this picture was modeled off of a different extinct crocodile species, Deinosuchus, not Purussaurus. (snopes.com)
  • Both species inhabit fresh water and estuaries, although the saltwater crocodile prefers brackish waters. (diffbtw.com)
  • The new species was a 10-foot-long animal that lived in the warm, shallow seas that covered much of what is now Europe. (crystalinks.com)
  • The new study provides a long-sought insight about the extremely long and slender-snouted gavialoids - one of the three major types of crocodilians, along with alligators and crocodiles - that are represented today by just one living species, the Indian gharial. (crystalinks.com)
  • Found on the fringes of the Sahara - in the area that served as Star Wars' Tatooine - fossils suggest Machimosaurus rex was the largest marine crocodile ever found and represents a new species of teleosaurid a type of extinct crocodylomorph, or a group that includes crocodiles and their ancestors. (crystalinks.com)
  • Facts about an alligator tell us that there are only two living species on the earth, namely the American and the Chinese alligator. (visualstories.com)
  • American alligator is no more an endangered species. (visualstories.com)
  • Those who love reading facts about alligators should also take part in protecting these species. (visualstories.com)
  • The Chinese Alligator is one of the two living species of the genus Alligator, the other being the American Alligator ( Alligator mississippiensis ). (gonefroggin.com)
  • The Saltwater Crocodile is the largest living crocodile species in the world. (gonefroggin.com)
  • In a research study by Stephanie Drumheller-Horton from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, all 25 species of crocodile were studied at the St. Augustine Alligator Farm in Florida. (a-z-animals.com)
  • The only species that did not was the Cuvier's dwarf caiman, a small crocodile species from South America. (a-z-animals.com)
  • The American alligator clamped his jaws around the device exerting an average of 2,980 psi and ranked fifth overall in terms of bite strength among the species tested. (mom.com)
  • Erickson performed bite tests on all 23 species of crocodiles including numerous 17-foot-long saltwater crocs, Nile crocs, caimans, gharials and alligators. (mom.com)
  • The American Crocodile ( Crocodylus acutus ) is a native species found in coastal waters of south Florida, the northern reach of its range. (ufl.edu)
  • Alligators are top predators and feed on a variety of species. (ufl.edu)
  • The alligator is the largest of the seven known species of gar and can grow up to 10 feet and weigh up to 300 pounds. (explore.com)
  • Also land and fresh water snails, several species of snakes, and one bone from a large bird. (onlinehome.us)
  • Rouse found that the gator had been broken down to shackles of bone by a new species of bone-eating worms in the Osedax genus. (hspo.info)
  • Despite the surprising discovery of a new Osedax species, it was the third alligator that left the scientists the most baffled. (hspo.info)
  • The only obvious difference between crocodiles and phytosaurs is that crocodiles have their nostrils at the ends of their snouts, and phytosaurs had them on raised hump in front of their eyes. (umd.edu)
  • TBA TBA Wags teaches kids about the difference between crocodiles and alligators. (mediacollective.nl)
  • There are two types of crocodiles: true crocodiles and caimans. (diffbtw.com)
  • Caimans include gavials, muggers, and dwarf crocodiles. (diffbtw.com)
  • In fact, all of the alligators, crocodiles, gharials, and caimans in the Crocodylidae family can death roll except one. (a-z-animals.com)
  • But first they studied how growth lines are related to age at death in modern dinosaur relatives - crocodiles and lizards. (berkeley.edu)
  • While anacondas and pythons, the largest known snakes alive today, can reach over 30 feet long and swallow antelope whole, they are dwarfed in size by the newly discovered Titanoboa cerrejonensis , a serpent that lived during the Paleocene epoch whose bones were unearthed recenty in a Colombia coal mine. (scienceblogs.com)
  • This makes hunting for predators, such as snakes, bears, and alligators, much easier - and they will take advantage of this. (ufl.edu)
  • the saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) and the American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis). (diffbtw.com)
  • Saltwater crocodiles live in tropical regions, while American alligators prefer temperate climates. (diffbtw.com)
  • Saltwater crocodiles actively attack boats and humans when their territory is intruded upon. (animalsaroundtheglobe.com)
  • The winners of the bite force challenge -- saltwater crocodiles -- clamped their jaws around the bite sensor with an astonishing 3,700 psi of force, the strongest bite of any living animal. (mom.com)
  • A female Nile crocodile sits on the warm sand guarding her nest of eggs. (cseicluj.ro)
  • Alligators are native to North America and South America. (diffbtw.com)
  • Crocodiles live in freshwater habitats throughout Africa, Asia, Australia, and parts of Central and South America. (diffbtw.com)
  • Alligators have long tails, while crocodiles do not. (diffbtw.com)
  • The powerful tails of alligators help them jump up to 5 feet out of water. (visualstories.com)
  • Alligators and their cousins crocodiles, both are horrifying creatures. (visualstories.com)
  • While testing the bite strength of alligators and crocodiles might not be for the faint of heart, one of the scientists involved in the study said the most difficult part was getting the creatures to give the bite bar back. (mom.com)
  • Alligators are fascinating creatures that have been around for millions of years. (reptilesblog.com)
  • The researchers sank a buffet for mysterious seafloor creatures which included three dead alligators, with weights tied to them. (hspo.info)
  • Crocodiles can live in fresh water and brackish water. (diffbtw.com)
  • It is believed that stones which alligators swallow, help them dive deep into the waters. (visualstories.com)
  • When alligators eat, they swallow their food whole, and their digestive system breaks down the food over a period of several days. (reptilesblog.com)
  • A monster of a reptile, a 30-foot-long crocodile ancestor, once navigated the lagoons of the Tataouine region of southern Tunisia 130 million years ago. (crystalinks.com)
  • It shows what the crocodile ancestor might have looked like. (snexplores.org)
  • But 106 million years ago, a crocodile ancestor had another trick: It walked on two legs. (snexplores.org)
  • The alligator is a carnivorous reptile that has been around since the Jurassic period. (diffbtw.com)
  • Tchoiria is a genus of simoedosaurid choristodere, a type of crocodile-like aquatic reptile. (crystalinks.com)
  • The saltwater crocodile, also known as the estuarine crocodile, holds the distinction of being the largest living reptile on Earth, capable of reaching lengths of up to 23 feet and weighing over 2,200 pounds. (animalsaroundtheglobe.com)
  • Crocodile ancestors would have been pushed into secondary predator roles, the researchers noted. (livescience.com)
  • This study shows that the ancestors of today's American alligator didn't look anything like them. (wglt.org)
  • Tzaganosuchus is an extinct genus of fossil crocodile from the Gobi Desert of southern/southeastern Mongolia. (crystalinks.com)
  • Dzungarisuchus is an extinct genus of crocodile. (crystalinks.com)
  • Is This the Largest Crocodile Skull Ever Found? (snopes.com)
  • Do Alligators Attack Humans And Use The Death Roll? (a-z-animals.com)
  • Yes, alligators treat humans like any other prey. (a-z-animals.com)
  • Alligators have a natural fear of humans and do not typically seek us out looking for easy prey. (ufl.edu)
  • In fact, some researchers believe that alligator poop may even help to reduce the levels of harmful bacteria in the water, making it safer for other animals and humans to swim in. (reptilesblog.com)
  • Males and females swim in circles, touch snouts, cough, and males sometimes fight, but are not as violent as their cousins, the crocodiles. (ciesimurro.com)
  • Alligator feet wholesale and individually measuring up to 10 inches long for taxidermy crafts. (atlanticcoralenterprise.com)
  • For taxidermy crafts, we also import mounted giraffe feet in sizes 19 inches up to 24 inches and mounted zebra foot in sizes 8 inches up to 13 inches high. (worldwidewildlifeproducts.com)
  • They named it Carnufex , meaning "butcher" in Latin, because of its long skull, which resembles a knife, and its bladelike teeth, which it likely used to slice flesh off the bones of prey, said lead study author Lindsay Zanno, of NC State University and the NC Museum of Natural Sciences. (livescience.com)
  • But a mass migration of potential prey will give these ambush predators a chance to… more For crocodiles, sneaking up on a meal is a slippery business. (healthierquaileggs.com)
  • You must have heard about the 'death roll', spinning action of a prey done by an alligator! (visualstories.com)
  • Alligators death roll to kill their prey. (a-z-animals.com)
  • Alligators use the death roll to dismember their prey and break it down. (a-z-animals.com)
  • Alligators death roll to disorient their prey, making it difficult for the prey to fight back or escape. (a-z-animals.com)
  • They have the bite force of 1200 pounds per square inch, which is enough to crush the bones of its prey. (ultimatetopics.com)
  • Interesting facts about American alligator inform us that females can lay 25 to 60 eggs at a time. (visualstories.com)
  • The surprising fact about alligators is that the babies are males if the eggs are hatched at temperatures between 90 to 93 degree Fahrenheit, while the babies turn out to be females, if the eggs are hatched between 82 to 86 degree Fahrenheit. (visualstories.com)
  • Like all animals, alligators need to eliminate waste from their bodies, and they do so through their cloaca, which is the opening where they also lay their eggs. (reptilesblog.com)
  • In a surprising act of maternalism, the mother alligator might hold one foot beneath her body to break the fall of any eggs. (ciesimurro.com)
  • When baby alligators are ready to be born, they begin making noises inside thick, leathery eggs. (ciesimurro.com)
  • They have sharp teeth, while crocodiles have blunt teeth. (diffbtw.com)
  • A 9-foot-tall beast with bladelike teeth once stalked the warm and wet environs of what is now North Carolina some 230 million years ago, before dinosaurs came onto the scene there, scientists have found. (livescience.com)
  • According to the bones and teeth - it is not a fish. (perhapanauts.com)
  • In a study led by professor Greg Erickson of Florida State University, the bite force of crocodiles and alligators was tested by placing a measuring device similar to a tuning fork between their teeth. (mom.com)
  • This prehistoric-looking animal is a fish with a crocodile head and rows of razor sharp teeth . (explore.com)
  • This fierce predator has protruding, daggerlike teeth and can grow up to 5 feet long and weigh 154 pounds. (explore.com)
  • They have powerful jaws that can crush bones. (diffbtw.com)
  • In seconds, it is dragged into the water by a 500lb alligator with its jaws clamped tight around its neck. (a-z-animals.com)
  • Alligators and crocodiles have formidable jaws that snap closed with enough force to break the bones of even the largest animals. (mom.com)
  • The size and spacing of the tracks suggest the reptile's length spanned 2 to 3 meters (6 to 12 feet). (snexplores.org)
  • The length ranges from 69 meters only, the Titanoboa was 42 feet long which is 13 meters. (cseicluj.ro)
  • The longest recordedreticulated python wasdiscovered in 1912 and measured10 meters, or about 32.8 feet, long. (cseicluj.ro)
  • However, they did find the weight attached to the gator, which lay about 10 meters away from the site. (hspo.info)
  • What can you say about a 50-foot-long, 50-ton prehistoric shark that preyed on equally sized prehistoric whales like Leviathan? (portanywhere.com)
  • The prehistoric fish was 33 feet long and weighed up to four tons. (portanywhere.com)
  • Zanno and her colleagues discovered parts of the skull, spine and arm bone of the creature while digging in the Pekin Formation in Chatham County, North Carolina. (livescience.com)
  • They had a dome-like development on the skull made of solid bone, most likely used in combat as a battering ram. (ereferencedesk.com)
  • WATCH: Sharks biting alligators, the most epic lion battles, and MUCH more. (a-z-animals.com)
  • Bridget Fonda, Beverly Garland, Lon Chaney Jr., The crocodile eventually managed to bite the snake's neck, but was unable to seriously hurt it Once the fight was over, Mr Dooley said the anaconda - which he estimated to be 28ft long - … Matthew Rauch, Not sure if Frankenfish was fish/gator/reptilian/dinosaur. (healthierquaileggs.com)
  • One farmer swore that a cat had the same type of eyeball as an alligator, but I'd dissected a cat eye and can tell you it's closer to any old fish than an alligator, that third clear lens that slides over keeping them from looking like an aquatic goat more than a catfish. (scarletleafreview.com)
  • Relative to body size, this is the strongest bite ever recorded for a fish, and three times stronger than for an alligator of the same size. (portanywhere.com)
  • Animal Planet reports that locals say it's the only fish that doesn't fear crocodiles and actually eats smaller ones. (explore.com)
  • These freshwater fish can grow as long as three feet. (explore.com)
  • He pointed out that bones from two rhinoceros individuals have been found at the Site and that a small collection of fish bones from the sunfish family (includes bream and bluegill) were found. (onlinehome.us)
  • The large creature reveals not only one of the earliest crocodylomorphs, a group that includes today's crocodiles and their close relatives, but also highlights the diversity of top predators of the time. (livescience.com)
  • Deinosuchus riograndenis, an extinct giant relative of alligators, was the undisputed top predator in the rivers and estuaries along the east coast of southern Laramidia - a huge island that formed when the rising sea divided North America into several continental islands. (snopes.com)
  • He also studied the vision of a few of T. rex 's modern relatives - the alligator, ostrich, and eagle (see diagram) - and used scaled-up versions of these animals' eyes to estimate T. rex 's ability to see fine detail. (berkeley.edu)
  • In India crocodile worship is practiced, including the annual Mannge Thapnee ceremony. (crystalinks.com)
  • These animals are closely related to T. rex but have eyes with different abilities - alligators have eyes adapted for night vision, the eagle has eyes adapted for extreme daytime acuity, and the ostrich has eyes with some night vision and some daytime acuity. (berkeley.edu)
  • Despite the nickname "terror crocodiles," Brochu said Deinosuchus were more closely related to alligators than to crocodiles but "didn't look like either one of them. (wglt.org)
  • Despite the strong similarities between phytosaurs and crocodiles, the two groups are not closely related. (umd.edu)
  • The researchers collected information on crocodile growth rate, body mass, and body temperature - and found that their mathematical model was quite good at predicting the body temperatures of crocodiles based on their growth rates and body masses. (berkeley.edu)
  • Some researchers believe that alligator poop may contain compounds that could be used to treat a variety of medical conditions, including cancer and heart disease. (reptilesblog.com)
  • With this new therapy, the researchers engineered the protein so that it makes its way to the bones "where it really needs to be," Whyte said. (livescience.com)
  • Interesting fact: alligator babies don't have sex chromosomes. (ciesimurro.com)
  • Alligator babies have one large tooth to help them get out of their shell, but if a hatchling needs help, the mother will delicately pick the egg up in her mouth, and oh, so gently crack the shell with amazing control to free the hatchling. (ciesimurro.com)
  • Most mother alligators stay with their babies for months, and sometimes years. (ciesimurro.com)
  • Similarly the goddess personifications of the Ganga and Yamuna rivers are often depicted as riding crocodiles. (crystalinks.com)
  • These crocodiles can reach 23 feet and over 2,200 pounds! (gonefroggin.com)
  • The Chinese Alligator is smaller than the American, has more of an upturn snout, and bone-stomach plates called osteoderms. (gonefroggin.com)
  • To learn more about extinct dinosaurs' body temperatures, James Gillooly at the University of Florida and colleagues first collected information about the animals' growth rate and mass, which is recorded in the microscopic structure of fossilized bone. (berkeley.edu)
  • To learn more about how tyrannosaurs lived and died, Gregory Erickson from Florida State University and colleagues studied annual growth lines (which are a bit like tree rings) preserved in fossils of dinosaur leg and foot bones. (berkeley.edu)
  • In a similar study conducted at the University of Florida in 2003, the reigning bite champion was an American alligator named Hercules. (mom.com)
  • I have never received a call for an alligator but no doubt, my colleagues in central and south Florida have. (ufl.edu)
  • Though not as common as they are in central and south Florida, alligators do live here and they are found on our barrier islands. (ufl.edu)
  • Giant crocodile fossils have been discovered in Kenya dating from the Mesozoic Era, over 200 million years ago. (crystalinks.com)
  • In Latin America, Cipactli was the giant earth crocodile of the Aztec and other Nahua peoples. (crystalinks.com)
  • Stars: Matt Borlenghi, TV-14 Dax Miller, John Harper, A group of college friends are attacked by a giant, man-eating crocodile while on spring break. (healthierquaileggs.com)
  • China Chow, Matt Blashaw, A giant crocodile goes head to head with a giant anaconda. (healthierquaileggs.com)
  • However the water also hides a giant crocodile. (healthierquaileggs.com)
  • 90 min Peter Tuinstra, Director: Our helicopter take down was due to a crocodile throwing a giant snake up in the air and hitting the chopper. (healthierquaileggs.com)
  • Biggest Python vs Crocodile Giant anaconda - World s biggest python snake found in Amazon river_HD. (healthierquaileggs.com)
  • Every boy has to fight his giant snake, his killer bees, and when they called me to fight giant alligators, I signed up. (mediamikes.com)
  • By analyzing the snake's vertebrae, paleontologists were able to determine that Titanoboa measured over 42 feet long and weighed more than 1.3 tons-nearly 30 times the mass of an anaconda. (scienceblogs.com)
  • The late Cretaceous Deinosuchus, by contrast, measured over 30 feet long and weighed as much as 10 tons. (portanywhere.com)
  • According to its skeleton - it's not a crocodile or alligator. (perhapanauts.com)
  • In the study, which included 11 infants and children with severe hypophosphatasia, the drug healed bones, reduced deformities of the skeleton and improved children's strength and breathing abilities. (livescience.com)
  • The evidence that this Appalachian population commonly preyed on turtles include bite marks preserved on fossil turtle bones. (snopes.com)
  • They also don't have sharp front canines like lions, so they can't rip chunks of meat off the bone. (a-z-animals.com)
  • From fossil remains it has been estimated to have grown to about 11 metres in length and weigh 6-7 tonnes, by far exceeding any modern alligator or crocodile. (snopes.com)
  • It was twice as heavy as the largest tyrannosaurs of its time and, as bite marks preserved on dinosaur fossil bones suggest, it preyed on dinosaurs. (snopes.com)
  • Time and again I have stressed that every fossil bone tells a story, and, in a different way, so do coprolites. (scienceblogs.com)
  • American alligators prefer to live in fresh waters. (visualstories.com)
  • In the wild, alligators live up to 50 years but in the zoos, with proper care, they can live up to 75 years. (visualstories.com)
  • As we continue to develop in areas where alligators live, it will be harder to avoid encountering them. (ufl.edu)
  • Doctors suspected the child had a bone disorder, and would not live long after birth. (livescience.com)
  • That could be a sampling artifact or because scientists just haven't found those dinosaur bones, "but as far as we know they weren't there," she added. (livescience.com)
  • As soon as they saw the bones of the newfound creature in the rocks, the scientists knew it was something new. (livescience.com)
  • If you want to picture these animals, just think of a modern-day fox, but with alligator skin instead of fur. (livescience.com)
  • Some animals are warm and welcoming, but others possess awe-inspiring and bone-chilling traits that can send shivers down your spine. (animalsaroundtheglobe.com)
  • Alligators are timid animals and they run away when they see human beings. (visualstories.com)
  • What Kinds Of Animals Do Alligators Attack? (a-z-animals.com)
  • 10 Unique Animals of the Amazon River Basin, Dinosaur Fight: Tyrannosaurus Rex vs. Triceratops, Who Would Win a Fight Between Megalodon and Leviathan, 10 Facts About Carnotaurus, the "Meat-Eating Bull", 10 Facts About Sarcosuchus, the World's Biggest Crocodile. (portanywhere.com)
  • Alligators, like all animals, need to eliminate waste from their bodies. (reptilesblog.com)
  • Alligators poop in much the same way as other animals. (reptilesblog.com)
  • Alligator poop is an important part of the ecosystem, as it provides nutrients for other animals and helps to fertilize plant life. (reptilesblog.com)
  • H3: Do Alligators Poop More Than Other Animals? (reptilesblog.com)
  • While alligators don't poop any more or less than other animals, the size of their poop can be quite impressive. (reptilesblog.com)
  • Alligators, like all animals, need to eliminate waste in order to stay healthy and maintain their bodily functions. (reptilesblog.com)
  • Past studies on cranial remains and bite marks on dinosaur bones led paleontologists to believe the massive Deinosuchus were an opportunistic predator, according to the press release . (wglt.org)
  • Enormous "terror crocodiles" once roamed the earth and preyed on dinosaurs, according to a new study revisiting fossils from the gigantic Late Cretaceous crocodylian, Deinosuchus . (wglt.org)
  • Based upon the results of Erickson's tests, he explained that if you scale the results from the tests on the 17-foot crocs up to a 20-foot croc, his bite would generate a whopping 7,700 psi of force. (mom.com)
  • In July 1872, Wilson found a large salt water crocodile known as Big Ben dying in Alligator Creek (it had been shot). (wikipedia.org)
  • The team found the bones in a place one normally doesn't think to look for ancient fossils - in the heart of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. (crystalinks.com)
  • Though we do not get many calls on alligators, the feeling a homeowner would have if they found one in their driveway would be the same. (ufl.edu)
  • I cannot verify it, but I did receive a call earlier this summer when an American alligator was found swimming and basking on a Gulf beach in Navarre and later near Ft. Pickens. (ufl.edu)
  • The team then searched the surrounding area but they found no trace of the alligator. (hspo.info)
  • Andrew Traucki R Lion vs python snake Wild Animal attacks Animal fight#2 Brooke Langton, Hard to say whether this is the best Alligator movie of all time. (healthierquaileggs.com)
  • Destruction of alligator habitat by human beings is responsible for increased attacks of alligators. (visualstories.com)
  • While alligator attacks are rare, they do happen and are sometimes deadly. (a-z-animals.com)
  • The Wheel, actually an arrangement of white stones forming a 70-foot diameter wheel with spokes, has been dated by archaeologists as being about 7,000 years old. (ereferencedesk.com)
  • Wags digs for bones, Murray plays his guitar and Anthony cooks and eats. (mediacollective.nl)
  • An American journalist on assignment in the Australian outback encounters a man-eating crocodile while trapped on a rapidly flooding mud island. (healthierquaileggs.com)
  • The American Crocodile has the most widespread range of any crocodile in the Americas. (gonefroggin.com)
  • The American Crocodile breeds during the dry season. (gonefroggin.com)
  • The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List classifies the American Crocodile as Vulnerable to Extinction. (gonefroggin.com)
  • Both the American alligator and Chinese alligator can death roll. (a-z-animals.com)
  • It wasn't until the following study was conducted in 2012 that the saltwater crocodile was able to dethrone Hercules and the American alligator as bite force champion. (mom.com)
  • The American Alligator: a new nuisance for the panhandle? (ufl.edu)
  • Home » UF/IFAS Extension Escambia County » The American Alligator: A New Nuisance For The Panhandle? (ufl.edu)
  • I recently saw a photograph of an American Alligator ( Alligator mississppiensis ) crossing Perdido Key Drive on a heavy rain day. (ufl.edu)
  • Deinosuchus, which translates to "terrible crocodile," lived during the late Cretaceous period about 80 million years ago. (snopes.com)
  • A new study of Deinosuchus or "terror crocodiles," led by Adam Cosette, offers a fuller picture of the ancient creature from head to tail. (wglt.org)
  • The research, published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology , reiterates that Deinosuchus were among the largest crocodylians ever in existence, reaching up to 33 feet in length. (wglt.org)
  • Alligators are seen busy making nesting mounds in the vegetation, near the freshwater. (visualstories.com)
  • These bone-crushing bites help them keep satiated for longer time. (visualstories.com)
  • While this might make you think it spends its summer days floating in the water, and soaking up the sun, the gator spends a lot of its time in its underground burrows. (gonefroggin.com)
  • Alligators are semi-aquatic and spend most of their time in the water. (a-z-animals.com)
  • This is because crocodiles are more terrestrial than alligators and spend more time on land. (reptilesblog.com)
  • The second alligator was eaten during a longer period of time. (hspo.info)
  • Leaf through the interesting Alligator facts and information presented here and know about their eating and breeding habits. (visualstories.com)
  • Many people are curious about alligators and their habits, including one question that often comes up: Do alligators poop? (reptilesblog.com)