Alligators & Crocodiles
Latest about Alligators & Crocodiles
'They mated like mad': Low-flying helicopter sparks massive crocodile orgy in Australia
By Jacklin Kwan published
A Chinook helicopter flying above a crocodile farm in Queensland appears to have set off a huge sexy frenzy, with the crocs mistaking the noise and vibrations as a signal it was time to make babies.
Indian crocodiles seen saving dog from feral pack attack, but scientists divided over what it means
By Richard Pallardy published
Crocodiles appeared to rescue a dog that had been chased into a river, and scientists said this unusual behavior could indicate empathy — but others are skeptical.
Florida alligator weighing over 900 pounds could have been 90 years old when caught
By Hannah Osborne published
The enormous alligator was over 13 feet long and weighed 920 pounds — the second heaviest ever to be caught in Florida.
800-pound alligator is the longest ever caught in Mississippi
By Sascha Pare published
The gigantic animal measured 14 feet and 3 inches long, beating the previous record for the longest alligator caught by permitted hunters by more than 2 inches.
Cassius, the world's largest captive crocodile, could be even bigger than we thought
By Sascha Pare published
No one has measured Cassius since 2011, which is when the saltwater giant was awarded the Guinness World Record for the world's largest living crocodile in captivity.
Crocodiles are drawn to the wails of crying human babies and infant primates
By Ethan Freedman published
Nile crocodiles seemed to respond more strongly to intense crying from human and ape infants, compared to calmer, quiet cries.
120-year-old Cassius is pushing limit of crocodile longevity — and he's got 'years to come,' expert says
By Sascha Pare published
The ancient, 18-foot-long crocodile — the world's largest living in captivity — is healthy but occasionally displays signs of trauma from his troubled youth in the wild.
World's largest captive croc turns 120, giving scientists 'serious knowledge on longevity'
By Sascha Pare published
Researchers captured Cassius in 1984 because the "big old gnarly crocodile" was causing trouble on a cattle farm, and ferried him to Green Island, Australia, where he still lives today.
Crocodile murder mystery deepens following discovery of 2nd corpse with 'fileted' head
By Sascha Pare published
An anonymous person allegedly told a wildlife tour operator who was very fond of the crocodile "Lizzie" that the killing was a way of proving that humans, not crocodiles, are the apex predator.
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