Binghamton Zoo Animals

 

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American Alligator

(Alligator mississippiensis)
Order: Crocodylia
Family: Alligatoridae
Genus: Alligator
Species: Alligator mississippiensis

HABITAT AND RANGE: Alligators are found in fresh and brackish marshes, ponds, lakes, rivers and swamps throughout the southeastern United States.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS: Adult Alligators are the largest reptiles in North America reaching lengths of 6-19 feet and weights of up to 500 lbs. Young alligators are usually black with yellow stripes and adults are a uniform dark color. Alligators are distinguished from crocodiles because they have rounded snouts and their bottom teeth are not visible when their mouths are closed; the crocodile has a long, pointed snout and the large 4th tooth on the bottom jaw is visible when their mouths are closed. The alligator’s eyes and nostrils are located at the top of their snouts to allow them to lie unnoticed with their body totally submerged in water.

ADAPTATIONS: They are ecologically important because they create “gator holes”, which are deep holes that hold water during drought seasons. These holes allow alligators to avoid extreme heat and cold temperatures as well as provide water to other animals.

DIET: Alligators eat a wide variety of food. Hatchlings feed on insects, shrimp, tadpoles and frogs. As they mature, they begin to eat small fish and snakes. When they are almost full-grown, fish is the major portion of their diet. However, they will eat anything they can catch, such as raccoons, muskrats, birds, turtles and other small mammals that wander into the water.

REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT: Alligators reach sexual maturity when they reach about 6 feet in length. They mate in late April or May after emerging from hibernation. The female will build a nest of rotting vegetation and deposit 25-60 eggs. The eggs will hatch after approximately 60-65 days. The sex of the young is determined by the temperature of the nest during incubation. The female will remain near the nest to protect it and to assist the hatchlings when they emerge from their eggs.

STATUS IN WILD: Alligators no longer appear on the Endangered Species List, but they are still listed as Threatened due to the similarity in appearance to the endangered American Crocodile.

 


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