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Home -> Kingdom Animalia -> Phylum Chordata -> Subphylum Vertebrata -> Class Reptilia -> Order Crocodilia -> Family Crocodylidae -> Subfamily Alligatorinae -> Species Alligator mississippiensis

Alligator mississippiensis
American alligator



2008/08/02 19:50:36.701 GMT-4

By Lauren Pajerski

Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Crocodilia
Family: Crocodylidae
Subfamily: Alligatorinae
Genus: Alligator
Species: Alligator mississippiensis

Geographic Range

American alligators are found from the southern Virginia-North Carolina border, along the Atlantic coast to Florida and along the Gulf of Mexico as far west as the Rio Grande in Texas. ()

Biogeographic Regions:
nearctic (native ).

Habitat

American alligators are usually found in freshwater swamps, marshes, rivers, lakes, and occasionally, smaller bodies of water. It is believed that this preference for calm waters has to do with their swimming and breathing. In areas of protected water, an American alligator has only to keep its nasal disk above water to breath, whereas in rough water the snout must be at a steeper angle, making it more difficult to swim. They can also tolerate reasonable amounts of salinity, but only for short amounts of time due to their lack of buccal glands. ()

American alligators are also known to modify their enivironment by creating burrows. These are created using both snout and tail and are used for shelter and hibernation during freezing temperatures. If the water they live in dries out, alligators will swim or walk to other bodies of water, sometimes even taking shelter in swimming pools. ()

These animals are found in the following types of habitat:
temperate ; tropical ; freshwater .

Aquatic Biomes:
lakes and ponds; rivers and streams; coastal ; brackish water .

Wetlands: marsh , swamp .

Physical Description

Mass
150000 g (average)
(5280 oz)
[External Source: AnAge]


Length
3 to 4.50 m
(9.84 to 14.76 ft)


Basal Metabolic Rate


The average size for an adult female is just under 3 meters (9.8 feet), while the adult male usually falls between 4 and 4.5 meters (13 to 14.7 feet). American alligators reaching lengths of 5-6 meters (16 to 20 feet) have been reported in the past, but there have been no recent recordings equaling those lengths. ()

Legs of American alligators are characteristically short, though capable of carrying the animal at a gallop. The front legs have five toes while the back legs have only four. The snout of this alligator species is also distinct, being significantly broader for those in captive, mainly due to a difference in diet. ()

Nostrils at the end of the snout allow for breathing while the alligator is otherwise fully submerged beneath the water's surface. During times of hibernation, alligators keep these nostrils just above the water's surface, allowing the top part of the body to freeze in ice. The large fourth tooth in the lower jaw fits into a socket in the upper jaw and is not visible when the mouth is closed. ()

Both males and females have an "armored" body with a muscular flat tail, used in propelling the animal forward while swimming. The skin on their back is armored with embedded bony plates called osteoderms or scutes. Adult males and females have an olive brown or black color with a creamy white underside. The young can be distinguished from adults because they have bright yellow stripes on their tails. Eye color of American alligators is generally silverish. ()

Some key physical features:
ectothermic ; heterothermic ; bilateral symmetry .

Development

The temperature at which American alligator eggs develop determines their sex. Those eggs which are hatched in temperatures ranging from 90 to 93 degrees Fahrenheit turn out to be male, while those in temperatures from 82 to 86 degrees Fehrenheit end up being female. Intermediate temperature ranges have proven to yield a mix of both male and females. After hatching, alligators can grow rapidly, espectially during the first four years of life, averaging over 1 foot of growth for each year of life. Both sexes reach sexual maturity at around 6 feet in length, however, this occurs earlier in males because they reach this length sooner than females. ()

Special features of growth:
temperature sex determination.

Reproduction

Breeding interval
American alligators breed once yearly.

Breeding season
Breeding occurs in early May, with egg laying occuring in late June and early July.

Number of offspring
35 to 88

Age at sexual or reproductive maturity (female)
10 to 12 years

Age at sexual or reproductive maturity (male)
10 to 12 years

Breeding takes place during the night, in shallow waters. Females usually initiate courtship during peak activity. When males (bulls) wish to attract females, they often roar or bellow, emmitting subaudible vibrations which can be seen by the bubbles and ripples they produce. Other courtship rituals include rubbing, touching, blowing bubbles, and vocalizing. It is also common for males to raise their heads out of the water, exposing their vulnerable necks as an expression of "good intentions". It is also quite common for both partners to try and push one another underwater in an attempt to judge eachothers strength. ()

Alligators are not monogamous, but rather, polygynous, which means one male may service up to ten or more females in his territory. This maximizes chances for successful breeding. Male alligators are territorial animals during the breeding season, and will defend their area against other male intruders, often displaying acts of headramming and sparring with open jaws. ()

Mating systems:
polygynous .

Both males and females reach sexual maturity when they are about six feet long, a length attained at about 10 to 12 years, earlier for males than females. Courtship starts in April, with mating occuring in early May. After mating has taken place, the female builds a nest of vegetation. Then, around late June and early July, the female lays 35 to 50 eggs. Some females have been reported as laying up to 88 eggs. The eggs are then covered with the vegetation nest through the 65-day incubation period. ()

Towards the end of August, the young alligators begin to make high-pitched noises from inside of the egg. This lets the mother know that it is time to remove the nesting material, and the six to eight inch alligator is hatched. Newly hatched alligators live in small groups, call "pods." Eighty percent of young alligators fall victim to birds and raccoons. Other predators include bobcats, otters, snakes, large bass and larger alligators. Females have been known to aggressively defend their young during these first few months and, in some cases, years. Maturity is generally reached during the sixth year. ()

Key reproductive features:
gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); oviparous .

Males provide no parental care, and parental care by the female is limited to the first year of life. She is responsible for removing any vegetation covering the nest when her young are ready to hatch, and she will often bring them to water after hatching. During the first year or so she will defend her hatchlings from predators. After the first year, the female leaves her young to tend to new hatchlings of the next breeding season. ()

Parental investment:
pre-weaning/fledging (protecting: female).

Lifespan/Longevity

Extreme lifespan (captivity)
73.10 years (high)
[External Source: AnAge]


Typical lifespan (wild)


Typical lifespan (captivity)


While there are currently no methods for determining the age of an alligator while still alive, it is known that those in the wild tend to live to between 35 and 50 year, while those in captive generally live longer, around 65-80 years. Factors which can lead to earlier mortality include successful predation early in life and hunting by humans. ()

Behavior

Young alligators remain in the area where they are hatched and are generally a social species when young. This method of group living is associated with greater protection from predators. Adults do not display such close knit bonds, however, they do tend to associate loosly in social groups. When forced to live in tighter areas as a result of drought, though, these animals tend to ignore each other. ()

One interesting aspect of alligator biology is that even though they don't hibernate, they undergo periods of dormancy when the weather becomes cold. They may excavate a cave in a waterway and leave a portion of it above water during this time. In areas where water level fluctuates, alligators dig themselves into hollows in the mud, which fill with water. These tunnels are often as long as 65 feet and provide protection during extreme hot or cold weather. ()

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of alligator behavior is its means of locomotion. Besides swimming, American alligators walk, run, and crawl. Most often they will use a "high walk". In this walk alligators keep their legs almost directly beneath them, as opposed to most reptiles which keep their legs to the sides at a diagonal. This "high walk" results in greater elevation, allowing alligators to almost entirely lift their tales up off of the ground. ()

When alligators wish to increase speed they diagonally opposite limbs move forward almost simultaneously. This allows for faster movement, but it also decreases the animal's stability. When the eqilibrium is lost an alligator begins moving in a new way, moving its limbs out to the sides and crashing onto its chest. In this manner an alligator quickly crawls along. This method of movement is most useful when going down steep shorelines into the water. ()

Home Range

Female alligators usually remain in a small area. The males occupy areas greater than two square miles. Both males and females extend their ranges during the courting and breeding season. ()

Key behaviors:
natatorial ; motile ; social .

Communication and Perception

American alligators are the most vocal of all crocodilians, and communication begins early in life, while alligators are still in eggs. When they are ready to hatch, the young will make high pitched whining noises. Alligators commonly bellow and roar at one another. The bellow is loud and throaty, and can be heard from up to 165 yards away. Alligators also emit sounds called chumpfs. These are cough like purrs made during courting. ()

Other communication during mating season includes non-verbal forms such as lifting the head out of the water to show honorable intentions, headslapping by males as a sign of aggression to ward off intruders, and perhaps most notably, the virbrations, bubbles, and ripples seen in the water as a result of subaudible noises.

Communicates with:
tactile ; acoustic .

Perception channels:
visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; vibrations .

Food Habits

Alligators are basically carnivores, but they eat more than just meat, feeding on anything from sticks to fishing lures to aluminum cans. Mostly, they consume fish, turtles, snakes, and small mammals. When they are young they feed on insects, snails, and small fish. ()

Alligators hunt primarily in the water at night, snapping up small prey and swallowing it whole. Large prey are dragged under water, drowned and then devoured in pieces. Alligators have also been known to hold food in their mouth until it deteriorates enough to swallow. They also have a specialized valve in the throat called a glottis, which allows them to capture prey underwater. ()

With regards to hunting animals on land, alligators are usually considered idle hunters, waiting offshore for unsuspecting prey to drink at the water's edge. With this approach an alligator is likely to grab the drinking animal's head, slowly pulling it underwater until it drowns. In this way alligators exert minimal energy in capturing prey.

Primary Diet:
carnivore (eats terrestrial vertebrates, piscivore ).

Animal Foods:
birds; mammals; amphibians; reptiles; fish; eggs; insects; mollusks.

Plant Foods:
wood, bark, or stems.

Predation

Known predators

The first few years of a hatchlings life are the most dangerous, as anything that can eat a small alligator will. Snakes, wading birds, osprey, raccoons, otters, large bass, garfish, even larger alligators will feed upon young alligators. Once the alligator reaches about 4 feet, its only real predator is man. Extremely thick skin protected by bony plates called scutes prevent harm from most attacks. It is this skin, though, which attracts man to alligators. It is commercially used for the creation of wallets, purses, boots, and other textiles. ()

Ecosystem Roles

American alligators have proven to be an important part of the environment, and therefor, are considered by many to be a "keystone" species. Not only do they control populations of prey species, they also create peat and "alligator holes" which are invaluable to other species. Red-bellied turtles, for example, incubates its own eggs in old alligator nests. Alligators also are good indicators of environmental factors, such as toxin levels. Increased levels of mercury have been found in recent blood samples. ()

Key ways these animals impact their ecosystem:
creates habitat; keystone species .

Economic Importance for Humans: Negative

Since the alligator will feed on almost anything, they pose a threat to humans. In Florida, where there is the greatest alligator population, there were five deaths to alligator attacks from 1973 to 1990. Dogs and other pets are also sometimes killed. (University of Florida)

Economic Importance for Humans: Positive

Alligators are hunted mostly for their skin, but also they are hunted for their meat. Today, there is a multimillion dollar industry in which alligators are raised in captivity for the production of their meat and skin. Also, alligators are a tourist attraction, especially in Florida.

Ways that people benefit from these animals:
food ; body parts are source of valuable material; ecotourism .

Conservation Status

IUCN Red List: [link]:
Lower Risk - Least Concern.

US Federal List: [link]:
Threatened .

CITES: [link]:
No special status.

American alligators are listed as threatened by the federal government because they are similar in appearance to American crocodiles (Crocodylus acutus). American crocodiles are endangered and the government does not want hunters to confuse the two species. Hunting is allowed in some states, but is is heavily controlled.

Contributors

Lauren Pajerski (author), University of Michigan, Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program.

Benjamin Schechter (author), University of Michigan. Robin Street (author), University of Michigan.

References

Levy, Charles K. 1991. Crocodiles and Alligators. The Apple Press. London. Pages 8-22, 59.

University of Florida, Gainesville. The American Alligator. Available: http://www.ifas.ufl.edu/AgriGator/gators/ . Accessed 19 June 2000.

Wildlife Fact File: packet one. 1991.

National Audobon Society Field Guide to North American Reptiles and Amphibians; 1994.

Britton, A. 1999. "Alligator mississippiensis in the Crocodilians, Natural History and Conservation" (On-line). Accessed 31 March 2000 at http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/cnhc/csp_amis.htm.

Godwin, M. 1999. "The Gator Hole" (On-line). Accessed January 03, 2004 at http://home.cfl.rr.com/gatorhole/.

Levy, C. 1991. Crocodiles and Alligators.. London: The Apple Press.

Ross, C. 1989. Crocodiles and Alligators. New York, New York: Facts on File, Inc..

2008/08/02 19:50:44.173 GMT-4

To cite this page: Pajerski, L., B. Schechter and R. Street. 2000. "Alligator mississippiensis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed August 29, 2008 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Alligator_mississippiensis.html.

Disclaimer: The Animal Diversity Web is an educational resource written largely by and for college students. ADW doesn't cover all species in the world, nor does it include all the latest scientific information about organisms we describe. Though we edit our accounts for accuracy, we cannot guarantee all information in those accounts. While ADW staff and contributors provide references to books and websites that we believe are reputable, we cannot necessarily endorse the contents of references beyond our control.

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