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alligator |
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alligatorReptile of the genus Alligator, related to the crocodile. There are only two living species: A. mississipiensis, the Mississippi alligator of the southern states of the USA, and A. sinensis from the swamps of the lower Chang Jiang River in China. The former grows to about 4 m/12 ft, but the latter only to 1.5 m/5 ft. Alligators lay their eggs in waterside nests of mud and vegetation and are good mothers. They swim well with lashing movements of the tail and feed on fish and mammals but seldom attack people. Alligator skin is of value for fancy leather, and according to estimates released in December 2001, there are fewer than 130 Chinese alligators remaining in the wild. Numbers have been decreasing by 4–6% a year and alligator farms have been established in the USA. Closely related are the caymans of South America; these belong to the genus Caiman. Alligators ranged across northern Europe from the Upper Cretaceous to the Pliocene period.
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