The Study By Manikant Singh
Search

Species in News: Crocodiles

  • 0
  • 3033
Font size:
Print

Species in News: Crocodiles

Context:

on June 17th, India celebrated the 50th anniversary of its Crocodile Conservation Project, coinciding with World Crocodile Day.

 

Crocodiles: Living Fossils of the Reptilian World

  • Order and Classification: Belong to the order Crocodylia (or Crocodilia).
    • Include about 27 species of large, amphibious reptiles.
    • Characterised by a lizard-like appearance and carnivorous diet.
  • Physical Characteristics:Possess powerful jaws with many conical teeth.
    • Have short legs with clawed webbed toes.
    • Unique body structure allows eyes, ears, and nostrils to remain above water.
  • Distinctive Features: Long and massive tail.
    • Thick, plated skin for protection.

 

Crocodile Species in India:

  • Estuarine or Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus).
    • Largest crocodile species on the planet.
    • Relatively large head with ridges running down from the eye along the snout.
    • Highly aquatic species compared to other crocodiles.
    • Found along the northeast coast of India and in the Andaman Island, Bhitarkanika Wildlife Sanctuary, Sunderbans.
  • Conservation Status:
    • IUCN :   Least Concern
      IWPAA : Schedule I
      CITES :   Appendix I
  • Estuarine or Saltwater CrocodileMugger or Marsh Crocodile (Crocodylus palustris).
    • Broad head and snout, robust body, resembling the American alligator.
    • Broadest snout of any crocodile.
    • Semi-aquatic, basks in the sun to raise body temperature.
    • First evidence of reptiles using tools: observed using sticks and twigs as hunting lures.
    • Significant populations occur in middle Ganga (Bihar and Jharkhand), Chambal River (Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh) and in Gujarat.
    • Conservation status:
      • IUCN :   Vulnerable
        IWPAA : Schedule I
        CITES :   Appendix I
  • Mugger or Marsh Crocodile (Crocodylus palustris)
  • Gharial (Gavialis gangeticus).
    • Name derived from “ghara,” an Indian word meaning pot, referencing the bulbous knob (narial excrescence) at the end of its snout.
    • Gharials are the only visibly sexually dimorphic crocodilian species, distinguished by the presence of the ghara on males.
    • Possesses a strongly attenuated (narrowed) snout, which aids in efficient fish-catching.
    • Has a relatively long and well-muscled neck, enhancing its ability to swiftly catch fish.
  • Widely found in the Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra and the Mahanadi-Brahmani-Baitarani river systems of India, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Pakistan.
  • The Gharial reserves of India are located in three States – Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan.
  • Conservation status:
    • IUCN :   Critically Endangered
      IWPA : Schedule I
      CITES :   Appendix I

Gharial (Gavialis gangeticus)

India’s Crocodile Conservation Project:

  • Initiated in 1975 by the United Nations and Government of India to protect natural habitats and boost crocodile populations through captive breeding due to low survival rates in the wild.
  • Led by Australian herpetologist HR Bustard.
  • Sudhakar Kar, mentored by HR Bustard, began crocodile conservation work in Bhitarkanika in 1975 as a research fellow.
    • He is known as Odisha’s ‘Crocodile Man’.

Bhitarkanika National Park, Odisha

  • Second largest mangrove ecosystem in India, spread over 672 sq km in Orissa.
  • Located in the estuarial region of Brahmani-Baitarani, adjacent to the Bay of Bengal.
  • Home to endangered saltwater crocodiles and the largest colony of Olive Ridley sea turtles at Gahirmatha Beach.

 

Print
Apply What You've Learned.
Prev Post Ambitious Targets Could Slash CO2 Emissions from Transport Sector 
Next Post Face of Neanderthal woman revealed