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[[File:NileCrocodile.jpg|thumb|Nile crocodiles]]
[[File:NileCrocodile.jpg|thumb|Nile crocodiles]]


The '''Nile crocodile''' (''Crocodylus niloticus'') is an African [[crocodile]], the largest freshwater predator in Africa, and may be considered the second largest [[extant taxon|extant]] [[reptile]] in the world, after the [[saltwater crocodile]] (''Crocodylus porosus'').<ref name="Wood 1983">Wood, Gerald (1983). ''The Guinness Book of Animal Facts and Feats.'' Sterling Pub Co Inc. {{ISBN|978-0-85112-235-9}}</ref> The Nile crocodile is quite widespread throughout [[Sub-Saharan Africa]], occurring mostly in the central, eastern, and southern regions of the continent and lives in different types of aquatic environments such as [[lake]]s, [[river]]s and [[marshland]]s.<ref name= Status>Pooley, A. C. (1982). "The status of African crocodiles in 1980", pp. 174–228 in ''Crocodiles''. Proceedings of the 5th Working Meeting of the IUCN/SSC Crocodile Specialist Group, Gainesville, Florida. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.</ref> Although capable of living in saline environments, this species is rarely found in saltwater, but occasionally inhabits deltas and brackish lakes. The range of this species once stretched northward throughout the Nile, as far north as the [[Nile delta]]. On average, the adult male Nile crocodile is between {{convert|3.5|and|5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length and weighs {{convert|225|to|750|kg|lb|-1|abbr=on}}.<ref name="NatGeo16">{{cite web|url=http://animalstime.com/nile-crocodile-facts-for-kids-nile-crocodile-diet-habitat/ |title=Nile Crocodile Facts For Kids |publisher=National Geographic |accessdate=2016-05-08}}</ref><ref name=usgs>{{cite web|url=https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/factsheet.aspx?SpeciesID=2273 |title=Nile Crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') – FactSheet |publisher=Nas.er.usgs.gov |date= |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref><ref name= Cott>{{cite journal|author=Cott, H.B. |title=Scientific results of an inquiry into the ecology and economic status of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodilus niloticus'') in Uganda and Northern Rhodesia|journal=The Transactions of the Zoological Society of London|volume=29|issue=4|pages=211|doi=10.1111/j.1096-3642.1961.tb00220.x|year=2010}}</ref><ref name="Alexander, G. 2007">Alexander, G., Marais, J. (2007). ''A guide to the reptiles of southern Africa''. Cape Town, Struik Publishers.</ref><ref name= deBoer>{{cite journal|author=de Boer, W. F., Vis, M. J., de Knegt, H. J., Rowles, C., Kohi, E. M., van Langevelde, F., Peel, M., Pretorius, Y., Skidmore, A.K., Slotow, R., van Wieren, S.E. & Prins, H. H. |title=Spatial distribution of lion kills determined by the water dependency of prey species|journal=Journal of Mammalogy|volume=91|issue=5|pages=1280|doi=10.1644/09-MAMM-A-392.1|year=2010}}</ref> However, specimens exceeding {{convert|6|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} in length and weighing up to {{convert|1100|kg|lb|abbr=on}} have been recorded.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name="NatGeo16"/><ref name= Graham/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.philadelphiazoo.org/Animals/Reptiles/Crocodiles-Alligators/Nile-Crocodile.htm |title=Nile crocodile |publisher=Philadelphia Zoo |date=2003-07-25 |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref><ref name= Guggisberg>{{cite book | author = Guggisberg, C.A.W. |url = | title = Crocodiles: Their Natural History, Folklore, and Conservation| year = 1972 | isbn = 0-7153-5272-5 | page = 195}}</ref> [[Sexual dimorphism]] is prevalent, and females are usually about 30% smaller than males.<ref name="NatGeo16"/> They have thick scaly skin that is heavily armored.
The '''Nile crocodile''' (''Crocodylus niloticus'') is an African [[crocodile]], the largest freshwater predator in Africa, and may be considered the second largest [[extant taxon|extant]] [[reptile]] in the world, after the [[saltwater crocodile]] (''Crocodylus porosus'').<ref name="Wood 1983">Wood, Gerald (1983). ''The Guinness Book of Animal Facts and Feats.'' Sterling Pub Co Inc. {{ISBN|978-0-85112-235-9}}</ref> The Nile crocodile is quite widespread throughout [[Sub-Saharan Africa]], occurring mostly in the central, eastern, and southern regions of the continent and lives in different types of aquatic environments such as [[lake]]s, [[river]]s and [[marshland]]s.<ref name= Status>Pooley, A. C. (1982). "The status of African crocodiles in 1980", pp. 174–228 in ''Crocodiles''. Proceedings of the 5th Working Meeting of the IUCN/SSC Crocodile Specialist Group, Gainesville, Florida. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.</ref> Although capable of living in saline environments, this species is rarely found in saltwater, but occasionally inhabits deltas and brackish lakes. The range of this species once stretched northward throughout the Nile, as far north as the [[Nile delta]]. On average, the adult male Nile crocodile is between {{convert|3.5|and|5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length and weighs {{convert|225|to|750|kg|lb|-1|abbr=on}}.<ref name="NatGeo16">{{cite web|url=http://animalstime.com/nile-crocodile-facts-for-kids-nile-crocodile-diet-habitat/ |title=Nile Crocodile Facts For Kids |publisher=National Geographic |accessdate=2016-05-08}}</ref><ref name=usgs>{{cite web|url=https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/factsheet.aspx?SpeciesID=2273 |title=Nile Crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') – FactSheet |publisher=Nas.er.usgs.gov |date= |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref><ref name= Cott>{{cite journal|author=Cott, H.B. |title=Scientific results of an inquiry into the ecology and economic status of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodilus niloticus'') in Uganda and Northern Rhodesia|journal=The Transactions of the Zoological Society of London|volume=29|issue=4|pages=211|doi=10.1111/j.1096-3642.1961.tb00220.x|year=2010}}</ref><ref name="Alexander, G. 2007">Alexander, G., Marais, J. (2007). ''A guide to the reptiles of southern Africa''. Cape Town, Struik Publishers.</ref><ref name= deBoer>{{cite journal|author=de Boer, W. F.Vis, M. J.de Knegt, H. J.Rowles, C.Kohi, E. M.van Langevelde, F.Peel, M.Pretorius, Y.Skidmore, A.K.Slotow, R.van Wieren, S.E.Prins, H. H. |title=Spatial distribution of lion kills determined by the water dependency of prey species|journal=Journal of Mammalogy|volume=91|issue=5|pages=1280|doi=10.1644/09-MAMM-A-392.1|year=2010}}</ref> However, specimens exceeding {{convert|6|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} in length and weighing up to {{convert|1100|kg|lb|abbr=on}} have been recorded.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name="NatGeo16"/><ref name= Graham/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.philadelphiazoo.org/Animals/Reptiles/Crocodiles-Alligators/Nile-Crocodile.htm |title=Nile crocodile |publisher=Philadelphia Zoo |date=2003-07-25 |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref><ref name= Guggisberg>{{cite book | author = Guggisberg, C.A.W. |url = | title = Crocodiles: Their Natural History, Folklore, and Conservation| year = 1972 | isbn = 0-7153-5272-5 | page = 195}}</ref> [[Sexual dimorphism]] is prevalent, and females are usually about 30% smaller than males.<ref name="NatGeo16"/> They have thick scaly skin that is heavily armored.


The Nile crocodile is an opportunistic [[apex predator]] and a very aggressive species of crocodile that is capable of taking almost any animal within its range. They are [[generalist and specialist species|generalists]], taking a variety of prey.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> Their diet consists mostly of different species of [[fish]], [[reptile]]s, [[bird]]s and [[mammal]]s. The Nile crocodile is an [[ambush predator]] that can wait for hours, days and even weeks for the suitable moment to attack. They are agile [[predator]]s and wait for the opportunity for a prey item to come well within attack range. Even swift prey are not immune to attack. Like other crocodiles, Nile crocodiles have an extremely powerful [[bite]] that is unique amongst all animals and sharp conical [[teeth]] that sink into flesh allowing for a grip that is almost impossible to loosen. They can apply high levels of force for extended periods of time, a great advantage for holding down large [[prey]] underwater to drown.<ref name="Guggisberg"/><ref name="library.sandiegozoo.org">{{cite web|url=http://library.sandiegozoo.org/factsheets/nile_crocodile/crocodile.html#diet |title=Nile Crocodile Fact Sheet |publisher=Library.sandiegozoo.org |date= |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref>
The Nile crocodile is an opportunistic [[apex predator]] and a very aggressive species of crocodile that is capable of taking almost any animal within its range. They are [[generalist and specialist species|generalists]], taking a variety of prey.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> Their diet consists mostly of different species of [[fish]], [[reptile]]s, [[bird]]s and [[mammal]]s. The Nile crocodile is an [[ambush predator]] that can wait for hours, days and even weeks for the suitable moment to attack. They are agile [[predator]]s and wait for the opportunity for a prey item to come well within attack range. Even swift prey are not immune to attack. Like other crocodiles, Nile crocodiles have an extremely powerful [[bite]] that is unique amongst all animals and sharp conical [[teeth]] that sink into flesh allowing for a grip that is almost impossible to loosen. They can apply high levels of force for extended periods of time, a great advantage for holding down large [[prey]] underwater to drown.<ref name="Guggisberg"/><ref name="library.sandiegozoo.org">{{cite web|url=http://library.sandiegozoo.org/factsheets/nile_crocodile/crocodile.html#diet |title=Nile Crocodile Fact Sheet |publisher=Library.sandiegozoo.org |date= |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref>


Nile crocodiles are relatively social crocodiles.<ref name= Huchzermeyer>Huchzermeyer, F. (2003). ''Crocodiles: Biology, Husbandry, Diseases''. CABI International Publishing. UK and Massachusetts.</ref> They share [[Body temperature|basking]] spots and large [[food]] sources, such as schools of fish and big carcasses. There is a strict [[hierarchy]], which is determined by size. Large, old males are at the top of this hierarchy and have primary access to food and the best basking spots. Crocodiles tend to respect this order; when it is infringed, the results are often violent and sometimes fatal.<ref name= Garrick>{{cite journal|author=Garrick, L. D., & Lang, J. W. |title= Social signals and behaviors of adult alligators and crocodiles|journal= American Zoologist|volume= 17|pages= 225|doi=10.1093/icb/17.1.225|year= 1977}}</ref> Like most other reptiles, Nile crocodiles lay [[egg (biology)|egg]]s; these are guarded by the female. The [[hatchling]]s are also protected for a period of time, but hunt by themselves and are not fed by the parents.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Kofron>{{cite journal|author=Kofron, C. P.|title= The reproductive cycle of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'')|journal= Journal of Zoology|volume= 221|issue= 3|pages= 477|doi=10.1111/j.1469-7998.1990.tb04014.x|year= 1990}}</ref> The Nile crocodile is one of the most dangerous species of crocodile and is responsible for hundreds of [[human]] deaths every year.<ref name= Sideleau>Sideleau, B., & Britton, A. R. C. (2012). A preliminary analysis of worldwide crocodilian attacks. In ''Crocodiles Proceedings of the 21st Working Meeting of the IUCN-SSC Crocodile Specialist Group.'' Gland, Switzerland: IUCN (pp. 111–114).</ref> It is a rather common species of crocodile and is not endangered despite some regional declines or extinctions.
Nile crocodiles are relatively social crocodiles.<ref name= Huchzermeyer>Huchzermeyer, F. (2003). ''Crocodiles: Biology, Husbandry, Diseases''. CABI International Publishing. UK and Massachusetts.</ref> They share [[Body temperature|basking]] spots and large [[food]] sources, such as schools of fish and big carcasses. There is a strict [[hierarchy]], which is determined by size. Large, old males are at the top of this hierarchy and have primary access to food and the best basking spots. Crocodiles tend to respect this order; when it is infringed, the results are often violent and sometimes fatal.<ref name= Garrick>{{cite journal|author=Garrick, L. D.Lang, J. W. |title= Social signals and behaviors of adult alligators and crocodiles|journal= American Zoologist|volume= 17|pages= 225|doi=10.1093/icb/17.1.225|year= 1977}}</ref> Like most other reptiles, Nile crocodiles lay [[egg (biology)|egg]]s; these are guarded by the female. The [[hatchling]]s are also protected for a period of time, but hunt by themselves and are not fed by the parents.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Kofron>{{cite journal|author=Kofron, C. P.|title= The reproductive cycle of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'')|journal= Journal of Zoology|volume= 221|issue= 3|pages= 477|doi=10.1111/j.1469-7998.1990.tb04014.x|year= 1990}}</ref> The Nile crocodile is one of the most dangerous species of crocodile and is responsible for hundreds of [[human]] deaths every year.<ref name= Sideleau>Sideleau, B., & Britton, A. R. C. (2012). A preliminary analysis of worldwide crocodilian attacks. In ''Crocodiles Proceedings of the 21st Working Meeting of the IUCN-SSC Crocodile Specialist Group.'' Gland, Switzerland: IUCN (pp. 111–114).</ref> It is a rather common species of crocodile and is not endangered despite some regional declines or extinctions.


==Etymology==
==Etymology==
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The mouths of Nile crocodiles are filled with 64 to 68 sharply pointed, cone-shaped [[teeth]] (about a dozen less than [[alligator]]s have). For most of a crocodile's life, broken teeth can be replaced. On each side of the mouth, there are five teeth in the front of the upper jaw ([[premaxilla]]), 13 or 14 in the rest of the upper jaw ([[maxilla]]), and 14 or 15 on either side of the lower jaw ([[mandible]]). The enlarged 4th lower tooth fits into the notch on the upper jaw and is visible when the jaws are closed, as is the case with all true crocodiles.<ref name= Huchzermeyer/><ref name= Grigg/> Hatchlings quickly lose a hardened piece of skin on the top of their mouths called the [[egg tooth]], which they use to break through their eggshells at birth. Among crocodilians, the Nile Crocodile possesses a relatively long snout, which is approximately 1.6 to 2 times as long as broad at the level of the front corners of the eyes.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.waza.org/en/zoo/visit-the-zoo/reptile-house/crocodiles-1254385523/crocodylus-niloticus |title=Crocodylus niloticus |publisher=World Association of Zoos and Aquariums |accessdate=2015}}</ref> As is the [[saltwater crocodile]], the Nile crocodile is considered a species with medium-width snout relative to other extant crocodilian species.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Brochu, C. A. |title=Crocodylian snouts in space and time: phylogenetic approaches toward adaptive radiation|journal=American Zoologist|volume=41|issue=3|pages=564|doi=10.1093/icb/41.3.564|year=2001}}</ref>
The mouths of Nile crocodiles are filled with 64 to 68 sharply pointed, cone-shaped [[teeth]] (about a dozen less than [[alligator]]s have). For most of a crocodile's life, broken teeth can be replaced. On each side of the mouth, there are five teeth in the front of the upper jaw ([[premaxilla]]), 13 or 14 in the rest of the upper jaw ([[maxilla]]), and 14 or 15 on either side of the lower jaw ([[mandible]]). The enlarged 4th lower tooth fits into the notch on the upper jaw and is visible when the jaws are closed, as is the case with all true crocodiles.<ref name= Huchzermeyer/><ref name= Grigg/> Hatchlings quickly lose a hardened piece of skin on the top of their mouths called the [[egg tooth]], which they use to break through their eggshells at birth. Among crocodilians, the Nile Crocodile possesses a relatively long snout, which is approximately 1.6 to 2 times as long as broad at the level of the front corners of the eyes.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.waza.org/en/zoo/visit-the-zoo/reptile-house/crocodiles-1254385523/crocodylus-niloticus |title=Crocodylus niloticus |publisher=World Association of Zoos and Aquariums |accessdate=2015}}</ref> As is the [[saltwater crocodile]], the Nile crocodile is considered a species with medium-width snout relative to other extant crocodilian species.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Brochu, C. A. |title=Crocodylian snouts in space and time: phylogenetic approaches toward adaptive radiation|journal=American Zoologist|volume=41|issue=3|pages=564|doi=10.1093/icb/41.3.564|year=2001}}</ref>


In a search for the largest crocodilian skulls in museums, the largest verifiable Nile crocodile skulls found were several housed in [[Arba Minch]], [[Ethiopia]] sourced to nearby [[Lake Chamo]], which apparently included several specimens with a skull length of more than {{convert|65|cm|in|abbr=on}}, the largest one being {{convert|68.6|cm|in|abbr=on}} in length with a mandibular length of {{convert|87|cm|in|abbr=on}}. Nile crocodiles with skulls this size are likely to measure in the range of {{convert|5.4|to|5.6|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, which is also the length of the animals according to the museum where they were found. However, larger skulls may exist as this study largely focused on crocodilians from Asia.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Whitaker>{{cite journal | author = Whitaker R., Whitaker N. | year = 2008 | title = Who's got the biggest? | url = | journal = Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter | volume = 27 | issue = 4| pages = 26–30 }}</ref> The detached head of an exceptional big (and man-eating) Nile crocodile (killed in 1968 and measuring {{convert|5.87|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length) was found to have weighed {{convert|166|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, including the large tendons used to shut the jaw.<ref name="Wood 1983"/>
In a search for the largest crocodilian skulls in museums, the largest verifiable Nile crocodile skulls found were several housed in [[Arba Minch]], [[Ethiopia]] sourced to nearby [[Lake Chamo]], which apparently included several specimens with a skull length of more than {{convert|65|cm|in|abbr=on}}, the largest one being {{convert|68.6|cm|in|abbr=on}} in length with a mandibular length of {{convert|87|cm|in|abbr=on}}. Nile crocodiles with skulls this size are likely to measure in the range of {{convert|5.4|to|5.6|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, which is also the length of the animals according to the museum where they were found. However, larger skulls may exist as this study largely focused on crocodilians from Asia.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Whitaker>{{cite journal | author = Whitaker R. Whitaker N. | year = 2008 | title = Who's got the biggest? | url = | journal = Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter | volume = 27 | issue = 4| pages = 26–30 }}</ref> The detached head of an exceptional big (and man-eating) Nile crocodile (killed in 1968 and measuring {{convert|5.87|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length) was found to have weighed {{convert|166|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, including the large tendons used to shut the jaw.<ref name="Wood 1983"/>


====Biting force====
====Biting force====
[[File:Crocodylus-krokodilskopf.jpg|thumb|upright|Details of the skull from a juvenile Nile crocodile]]
[[File:Crocodylus-krokodilskopf.jpg|thumb|upright|Details of the skull from a juvenile Nile crocodile]]
The bite force exerted by an adult Nile crocodile has been shown by Dr. [[Brady Barr]] to measure {{convert|5000|lbf|kN|disp=flip|abbr=on}}. However, the muscles responsible for opening the mouth are exceptionally weak, allowing a person to easily hold them shut with a small amount of force or to use duct-tape to adhere the jaws together even in large crocodiles.<ref>National Geographic documentary; "Bite Force", Brady Barr.</ref> The broadest snouted modern crocodilians are [[alligator]]s and larger [[caiman]]s. For example, a {{convert|3.9|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} [[black caiman]] (''Melanosuchus niger'') was found to have skull that was notably broader and heavier than that of a Nile crocodile measuring {{convert|4.8|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Endangered">Potts, Ryan J. [http://www.oocities.org/vermont_herpetology/article3.htm ''Endangered Reptiles and Amphibians of the World – II. The Black Caiman, Melanosuchus niger''], Vermont Herpetology.</ref> However, despite their robust skulls, alligators and caimans appear to be proportionately equal in biting force to true crocodiles as the muscular tendons used to shut the jaws are similar in proportional size. Only the [[gharial]] (''Gavialis gangeticus'') (and perhaps some of the few very thin-snouted crocodilians) is likely to have noticeably diminished bite force compared to other living species due to its exceptionally narrow, fragile snout. More or less, the size of the tendons used to impart bite force increases with body size and the larger the crocodilian gets, the stronger its bite is likely to be. Therefore, a very large male [[saltwater crocodile]], which had attained a length of approximately {{convert|4.59|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, was found to have the most powerful biting force ever tested in a lab setting for any type of animal.<ref name="erickson">{{cite journal|last=Erickson|first=GM|author2=Gignac PM |author3=Steppan SJ |author4=Lappin AK |author5=Vliet KA |year=2012|title=Insights into the Ecology and Evolutionary Success of Crocodilians Revealed through Bite-Force and Tooth-Pressure Experimentation|journal=PLoS ONE|volume=7|issue=3|pages=e31781|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0031781|pmid=22431965|pmc=3303775|display-authors=etal}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Erickson, G. M., Gignac, P. M., Lappin, A. K., Vliet, K. A., Brueggen, J. D., & Webb, G. J. W. |title= A comparative analysis of ontogenetic bite‐force scaling among Crocodylia|journal= Journal of Zoology|volume= 292|pages= 48|doi=10.1111/jzo.12081|year= 2014}}</ref>
The bite force exerted by an adult Nile crocodile has been shown by Dr. [[Brady Barr]] to measure {{convert|5000|lbf|kN|disp=flip|abbr=on}}. However, the muscles responsible for opening the mouth are exceptionally weak, allowing a person to easily hold them shut with a small amount of force or to use duct-tape to adhere the jaws together even in large crocodiles.<ref>National Geographic documentary; "Bite Force", Brady Barr.</ref> The broadest snouted modern crocodilians are [[alligator]]s and larger [[caiman]]s. For example, a {{convert|3.9|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} [[black caiman]] (''Melanosuchus niger'') was found to have skull that was notably broader and heavier than that of a Nile crocodile measuring {{convert|4.8|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Endangered">Potts, Ryan J. [http://www.oocities.org/vermont_herpetology/article3.htm ''Endangered Reptiles and Amphibians of the World – II. The Black Caiman, Melanosuchus niger''], Vermont Herpetology.</ref> However, despite their robust skulls, alligators and caimans appear to be proportionately equal in biting force to true crocodiles as the muscular tendons used to shut the jaws are similar in proportional size. Only the [[gharial]] (''Gavialis gangeticus'') (and perhaps some of the few very thin-snouted crocodilians) is likely to have noticeably diminished bite force compared to other living species due to its exceptionally narrow, fragile snout. More or less, the size of the tendons used to impart bite force increases with body size and the larger the crocodilian gets, the stronger its bite is likely to be. Therefore, a very large male [[saltwater crocodile]], which had attained a length of approximately {{convert|4.59|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, was found to have the most powerful biting force ever tested in a lab setting for any type of animal.<ref name="erickson">{{cite journal|last=Erickson|first=GM|author2=Gignac PM |author3=Steppan SJ |author4=Lappin AK |author5=Vliet KA |year=2012|title=Insights into the Ecology and Evolutionary Success of Crocodilians Revealed through Bite-Force and Tooth-Pressure Experimentation|journal=PLoS ONE|volume=7|issue=3|pages=e31781|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0031781|pmid=22431965|pmc=3303775|display-authors=etal}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Erickson, G. M.Gignac, P. M.Lappin, A. K.Vliet, K. A.Brueggen, J. D.Webb, G. J. W. |title= A comparative analysis of ontogenetic bite‐force scaling among Crocodylia|journal= Journal of Zoology|volume= 292|pages= 48|doi=10.1111/jzo.12081|year= 2014}}</ref>


===Size===
===Size===
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Like all crocodiles they are [[sexual dimorphism|sexually dimorphic]], with the males up to 30% larger than the females, though the difference is considerably less compared to some species, like the saltwater crocodile. Male Nile crocodiles are about {{convert|30|to|50|cm|in|abbr=on}} longer on average at sexual maturity and grow more so than females after becoming sexually mature, especially expanding in bulk after exceeding {{convert|4|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length.<ref name= Pooley/><ref name=lthesis>Leslie, A.J. (1997). The ecology and physiology of the Nile crocodile, ''Crocodylus niloticus'', in Lake St Lucia, Kwazulu/Natal, South Africa. PhD thesis. Drexel University, PA, USA.</ref> Adult male Nile crocodiles usually range in length from {{convert|3.3|to|5|m|ftin|abbr=on}} long, at these weights, an average sized male may weigh from {{convert|150|to|700|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/><ref>{{cite web |url=http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/reptiles/nile-crocodile.html |title=Nile Crocodile |publisher=National Geographic |accessdate=2011-04-03 }}</ref><ref name=NDF_nilecroc>{{cite web|last=Kyalo|first=Solomon|title=Non-detriment Finding Studies on Nile Crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus''): the Status of and Trade in the Nile Crocodile in Kenya|url=http://www.conabio.gob.mx/institucion/cooperacion_internacional/TallerNDF/Links-Documentos/Casos%20de%20Estudio/Reptiles%20and%20Amphibians/WG7%20CS1.pdf|publisher=Conabio|accessdate=3 February 2013}}</ref><ref name=wildliferanching>{{cite web|title=Nile Crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') |url=http://www.wildliferanching.com/content/nile-crocodile-crocodylus-niloticus |publisher=Wildliferanching.com |accessdate=3 February 2013 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141218101153/http://www.wildliferanching.com/content/nile-crocodile-crocodylus-niloticus |archivedate=December 18, 2014 }}</ref> In [[Limpopo]], [[South Africa]], males reportedly average {{convert|527|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name= deBoer/> Very old, mature ones can grow to {{convert|5.5|m|ftin|abbr=on}} or more in length (all specimens over {{convert|5.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} from 1900 onward are cataloged later).<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name="nas">Somma, Louis A. (June 19, 2002). ''Crocodylus niloticus'' Laurenti, 1768. USGS Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database. [https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/FactSheet.asp?speciesID=2273 Retrieved July 14, 2006 from the USGS]</ref> Mature female Nile crocodiles typically measure {{convert|2.2|to|3.8|m|ftin|abbr=on}}, at which lengths the average female specimen would weigh {{convert|40|to|250|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/><ref name= Pooley/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.answers.com/topic/nile-crocodile |title=Nile crocodile: Definition from |publisher=Answers.com |date= |accessdate=2010-03-16}}</ref>
Like all crocodiles they are [[sexual dimorphism|sexually dimorphic]], with the males up to 30% larger than the females, though the difference is considerably less compared to some species, like the saltwater crocodile. Male Nile crocodiles are about {{convert|30|to|50|cm|in|abbr=on}} longer on average at sexual maturity and grow more so than females after becoming sexually mature, especially expanding in bulk after exceeding {{convert|4|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length.<ref name= Pooley/><ref name=lthesis>Leslie, A.J. (1997). The ecology and physiology of the Nile crocodile, ''Crocodylus niloticus'', in Lake St Lucia, Kwazulu/Natal, South Africa. PhD thesis. Drexel University, PA, USA.</ref> Adult male Nile crocodiles usually range in length from {{convert|3.3|to|5|m|ftin|abbr=on}} long, at these weights, an average sized male may weigh from {{convert|150|to|700|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/><ref>{{cite web |url=http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/reptiles/nile-crocodile.html |title=Nile Crocodile |publisher=National Geographic |accessdate=2011-04-03 }}</ref><ref name=NDF_nilecroc>{{cite web|last=Kyalo|first=Solomon|title=Non-detriment Finding Studies on Nile Crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus''): the Status of and Trade in the Nile Crocodile in Kenya|url=http://www.conabio.gob.mx/institucion/cooperacion_internacional/TallerNDF/Links-Documentos/Casos%20de%20Estudio/Reptiles%20and%20Amphibians/WG7%20CS1.pdf|publisher=Conabio|accessdate=3 February 2013}}</ref><ref name=wildliferanching>{{cite web|title=Nile Crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') |url=http://www.wildliferanching.com/content/nile-crocodile-crocodylus-niloticus |publisher=Wildliferanching.com |accessdate=3 February 2013 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141218101153/http://www.wildliferanching.com/content/nile-crocodile-crocodylus-niloticus |archivedate=December 18, 2014 }}</ref> In [[Limpopo]], [[South Africa]], males reportedly average {{convert|527|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name= deBoer/> Very old, mature ones can grow to {{convert|5.5|m|ftin|abbr=on}} or more in length (all specimens over {{convert|5.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} from 1900 onward are cataloged later).<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name="nas">Somma, Louis A. (June 19, 2002). ''Crocodylus niloticus'' Laurenti, 1768. USGS Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database. [https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/FactSheet.asp?speciesID=2273 Retrieved July 14, 2006 from the USGS]</ref> Mature female Nile crocodiles typically measure {{convert|2.2|to|3.8|m|ftin|abbr=on}}, at which lengths the average female specimen would weigh {{convert|40|to|250|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/><ref name= Pooley/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.answers.com/topic/nile-crocodile |title=Nile crocodile: Definition from |publisher=Answers.com |date= |accessdate=2010-03-16}}</ref>


The bulk and mass of individual crocodiles can be fairly variable, some animals being relatively slender, while others being very robust; females are often bulkier than males of a similar length.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> As an example of the body mass increase undergone by mature crocodiles, one of the larger crocodiles handled firsthand by Cott (1961) was {{convert|4.4|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and weighed {{convert|414.5|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, while the largest specimen measured by Graham and Beard (1973) was {{convert|4.8|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and weighed more than {{convert|680|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Cott/><ref name= Beard>Graham, A., & Beard, P. (1973). ''Eyelids of Mornings''. A. & W. Visual Library, Greenwich, CT, 113.</ref> In attempts to parse the mean male and female lengths across the species, it was estimated that the mean adult length is reportedly {{convert|4|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in males, at which males would average about {{convert|280|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in weight, while that of the female is {{convert|3.05|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, at which females would average about {{convert|116|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/><ref>Richardson, K.C., G.J.W. Webb, and S.C. Manolis. (2002). ''Crocodiles Inside Out: A Guide to the Crocodilians and Their Functional Morphology''. Surrey Beatty and Sons, Australia.</ref><ref name= Hutton>{{cite journal|author=Hutton, J. M. |title=Growth and feeding ecology of the Nile crocodile ''Crocodylus niloticus'' at Ngezi, Zimbabwe|journal=The Journal of Animal Ecology|volume=56|pages=25|doi=10.2307/4797|jstor=4797|year=1987}}</ref> This gives the Nile crocodile somewhat of a size advantage over the next largest non-marine predator on the African continent, the [[lion]] (''Panthera leo''), which averages {{convert|188|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in males and {{convert|124|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in females, and attains a maximum known weight of {{convert|313|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, far less than that of large male crocodiles.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Radloff, F. G., & Du Toit, J. T. |title= Large predators and their prey in a southern African savanna: a predator's size determines its prey size range|journal= Journal of Animal Ecology|volume= 73|issue= 3|pages= 410|doi=10.1111/j.0021-8790.2004.00817.x|year= 2004}}</ref>
The bulk and mass of individual crocodiles can be fairly variable, some animals being relatively slender, while others being very robust; females are often bulkier than males of a similar length.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> As an example of the body mass increase undergone by mature crocodiles, one of the larger crocodiles handled firsthand by Cott (1961) was {{convert|4.4|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and weighed {{convert|414.5|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, while the largest specimen measured by Graham and Beard (1973) was {{convert|4.8|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and weighed more than {{convert|680|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Cott/><ref name= Beard>Graham, A., & Beard, P. (1973). ''Eyelids of Mornings''. A. & W. Visual Library, Greenwich, CT, 113.</ref> In attempts to parse the mean male and female lengths across the species, it was estimated that the mean adult length is reportedly {{convert|4|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in males, at which males would average about {{convert|280|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in weight, while that of the female is {{convert|3.05|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, at which females would average about {{convert|116|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/><ref>Richardson, K.C., G.J.W. Webb, and S.C. Manolis. (2002). ''Crocodiles Inside Out: A Guide to the Crocodilians and Their Functional Morphology''. Surrey Beatty and Sons, Australia.</ref><ref name= Hutton>{{cite journal|author=Hutton, J. M. |title=Growth and feeding ecology of the Nile crocodile ''Crocodylus niloticus'' at Ngezi, Zimbabwe|journal=The Journal of Animal Ecology|volume=56|pages=25|doi=10.2307/4797|jstor=4797|year=1987}}</ref> This gives the Nile crocodile somewhat of a size advantage over the next largest non-marine predator on the African continent, the [[lion]] (''Panthera leo''), which averages {{convert|188|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in males and {{convert|124|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in females, and attains a maximum known weight of {{convert|313|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, far less than that of large male crocodiles.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Radloff, F. G.Du Toit, J. T. |title= Large predators and their prey in a southern African savanna: a predator's size determines its prey size range|journal= Journal of Animal Ecology|volume= 73|issue= 3|pages= 410|doi=10.1111/j.0021-8790.2004.00817.x|year= 2004}}</ref>


Evidence exists of Nile crocodiles from cooler climates, like the southern tip of Africa, being smaller, and may reach maximum lengths of only {{convert|4|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}. A smaller population from [[Mali]], the [[Sahara Desert]] and elsewhere in West Africa reaches only {{convert|2|to|3|m|abbr=on}} in length,<ref>"[http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/06/0617_020618_croc.html Desert-Adapted Crocs Found in Africa]", National Geographic News, June 18, 2002</ref> but it is now largely recognized as a separate species, the [[West African crocodile]].<ref name="hekkala"/>
Evidence exists of Nile crocodiles from cooler climates, like the southern tip of Africa, being smaller, and may reach maximum lengths of only {{convert|4|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}. A smaller population from [[Mali]], the [[Sahara Desert]] and elsewhere in West Africa reaches only {{convert|2|to|3|m|abbr=on}} in length,<ref>"[http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/06/0617_020618_croc.html Desert-Adapted Crocs Found in Africa]", National Geographic News, June 18, 2002</ref> but it is now largely recognized as a separate species, the [[West African crocodile]].<ref name="hekkala"/>
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==Distribution and habitat==
==Distribution and habitat==


The Nile crocodile is the most common crocodilian in Africa today and may be seen throughout much of the continent. Among crocodilians today, only the [[saltwater crocodile]] occurs over a broader geographic area,<ref name="Thorbjarnarson, J. B. 1992">Thorbjarnarson, J. B., Messel, H., King, F. W., & Ross, J. P. (1992). ''Crocodiles: An action plan for their conservation''. IUCN.</ref> although other species, especially the [[spectacled caiman]] (''Caiman crocodilus'') (due to its small size and extreme adaptability in habitat and flexibility in diet), seem to actually be more abundant.<ref>{{IUCN2006|assessors=Crocodile Specialist Group|year=1996|id=46584|title=Caiman crocodilus|downloaded=6 May 2006}}</ref> This species’ historic range however, was even wider. They were found as far north as the Mediterranean coast in the [[Nile delta]] and across the [[Red Sea]] in [[Israel]] and [[Syria]]. The Nile crocodile has historically been recorded in areas where they are now regionally extinct. For example, [[Herodotus]] recorded the species inhabiting [[Lake Moeris]] in [[Egypt]]. Additionally, the Nile crocodile is known from fossil remains to have once inhabited [[Lake Edward]] on the border between the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]] and [[Uganda]]. They are thought to have become extinct in the [[Seychelles]] in the early 19th century (1810–1820).<ref name= Guggisberg /><ref name= Pooley/> Today, Nile crocodiles are widely found in, among others, [[Somalia]], [[Ethiopia]], [[Uganda]], [[Kenya]], [[Egypt]], [[Central African Republic]], Democratic Republic of the Congo, [[Equatorial Guinea]], [[Tanzania]], [[Rwanda]], [[Burundi]], [[Zambia]], [[Zimbabwe]], [[Gabon]], [[Angola]], [[South Africa]], [[Malawi]], [[Mozambique]], [[Sudan]], [[South Sudan]], [[Botswana]], and [[Cameroon]].<ref name= Fergusson/> The Nile crocodile's current range of distribution extends from the regional tributaries of the [[Nile]] in [[Sudan]] and [[Lake Nasser]] in [[Egypt]] to the [[Cunene River|Cunene]] of [[Angola]], the [[Okavango Delta]] of [[Botswana]] and the [[Olifants River (Western Cape)|Olifants River]] in [[South Africa]].<ref>{{cite journal|author=Hekkala, E. R., Amato, G., DeSalle, R., & Blum, M. J. |title=Molecular assessment of population differentiation and individual assignment potential of Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') populations|journal=Conservation Genetics|volume=11|issue=4|pages=1435|doi=10.1007/s10592-009-9970-5|year=2009}}</ref>
The Nile crocodile is the most common crocodilian in Africa today and may be seen throughout much of the continent. Among crocodilians today, only the [[saltwater crocodile]] occurs over a broader geographic area,<ref name="Thorbjarnarson, J. B. 1992">Thorbjarnarson, J. B., Messel, H., King, F. W., & Ross, J. P. (1992). ''Crocodiles: An action plan for their conservation''. IUCN.</ref> although other species, especially the [[spectacled caiman]] (''Caiman crocodilus'') (due to its small size and extreme adaptability in habitat and flexibility in diet), seem to actually be more abundant.<ref>{{IUCN2006|=Crocodile Specialist Group|year=1996|id=46584|title=Caiman crocodilus|downloaded=6 May 2006}}</ref> This species’ historic range however, was even wider. They were found as far north as the Mediterranean coast in the [[Nile delta]] and across the [[Red Sea]] in [[Israel]] and [[Syria]]. The Nile crocodile has historically been recorded in areas where they are now regionally extinct. For example, [[Herodotus]] recorded the species inhabiting [[Lake Moeris]] in [[Egypt]]. Additionally, the Nile crocodile is known from fossil remains to have once inhabited [[Lake Edward]] on the border between the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]] and [[Uganda]]. They are thought to have become extinct in the [[Seychelles]] in the early 19th century (1810–1820).<ref name= Guggisberg /><ref name= Pooley/> Today, Nile crocodiles are widely found in, among others, [[Somalia]], [[Ethiopia]], [[Uganda]], [[Kenya]], [[Egypt]], [[Central African Republic]], Democratic Republic of the Congo, [[Equatorial Guinea]], [[Tanzania]], [[Rwanda]], [[Burundi]], [[Zambia]], [[Zimbabwe]], [[Gabon]], [[Angola]], [[South Africa]], [[Malawi]], [[Mozambique]], [[Sudan]], [[South Sudan]], [[Botswana]], and [[Cameroon]].<ref name= Fergusson/> The Nile crocodile's current range of distribution extends from the regional tributaries of the [[Nile]] in [[Sudan]] and [[Lake Nasser]] in [[Egypt]] to the [[Cunene River|Cunene]] of [[Angola]], the [[Okavango Delta]] of [[Botswana]] and the [[Olifants River (Western Cape)|Olifants River]] in [[South Africa]].<ref>{{cite journal|author=Hekkala, E. R.Amato, G.DeSalle, R.Blum, M. J. |title=Molecular assessment of population differentiation and individual assignment potential of Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') populations|journal=Conservation Genetics|volume=11|issue=4|pages=1435|doi=10.1007/s10592-009-9970-5|year=2009}}</ref>


Isolated populations also exist in [[Madagascar]] which likely colonized the island after the extinction of [[voay]].<ref>{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1002/mmng.200800007| title = The late Pleistocene horned crocodile ''Voay robustus'' (Grandidier & Vaillant, 1872) from Madagascar in the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin| journal = Fossil Record| volume = 12| pages = 13| year = 2009| last1 = Bickelmann | first1 = C. | last2 = Klein | first2 = N. }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Wilson, J. M. |title=The crocodile caves of Ankarana, Madagascar|journal=Oryx|volume=21|pages=43|doi=10.1017/S0030605300020470|year=2009}}</ref> In [[Madagascar]], crocodiles occur in the western and southern parts from [[Sambirano River|Sambirano]] to [[Tôlanaro]]. They have occasionally been spotted in [[Zanzibar]] and the [[Comoros]] in modern times but occur very rarely.<ref name= Guggisberg/>
Isolated populations also exist in [[Madagascar]] which likely colonized the island after the extinction of [[voay]].<ref>{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1002/mmng.200800007| title = The late Pleistocene horned crocodile ''Voay robustus'' (Grandidier & Vaillant, 1872) from Madagascar in the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin| journal = Fossil Record| volume = 12| pages = 13| year = 2009| last1 = Bickelmann | first1 = C. | last2 = Klein | first2 = N. }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Wilson, J. M. |title=The crocodile caves of Ankarana, Madagascar|journal=Oryx|volume=21|pages=43|doi=10.1017/S0030605300020470|year=2009}}</ref> In [[Madagascar]], crocodiles occur in the western and southern parts from [[Sambirano River|Sambirano]] to [[Tôlanaro]]. They have occasionally been spotted in [[Zanzibar]] and the [[Comoros]] in modern times but occur very rarely.<ref name= Guggisberg/>


The species was previously thought to extend in range into the whole of [[West Africa|West]] and [[Central Africa]],<ref>{{cite journal|last=de Smet|first=Klaas |title= Status of the Nile crocodile in the Sahara desert |journal=Hydrobiologia|date=January 1998|volume= 391 |issue= 1–3|pages=81–86|doi=10.1023/A:1003592123079|quote=Another relict population [of Nile crocodiles], in the Tagant hills of Mauretania, was found to be probably extinct in 1996.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Shine, T., Böhme, W., Nickel, H., Thies, D. F., & Wilms, T. |title=Rediscovery of relict populations of the Nile crocodile ''Crocodylus niloticus'' in south‐eastern Mauritania, with observations on their natural history|journal=Oryx|volume=35|issue=3|pages=260|doi=10.1046/j.1365-3008.2001.00187.x|year=2001}}</ref> but these populations are now typically recognized as a distinct species, the [[West African crocodile|West African (or desert) crocodile]].<ref name="hekkala">{{cite journal|author=Hekkala, E., Shirley, M.H., Amato, G., Austin, J.D., Charter, S., Thorbjarnarson, J., Vliet, K.A., Houck, M.L., Desalle, R., and Blum, M.J.|year=2011|title=An ancient icon reveals new mysteries: mummy DNA resurrects a cryptic species within the Nile crocodile|journal=[[Molecular Ecology|Mol. Ecol.]]|volume=20|issue=20|pages=4199–215|doi=10.1111/j.1365-294X.2011.05245.x|pmid=21906195}}</ref> The distributional boundaries between these species were poorly understood, but following several studies, they are now better known. West African crocodiles are found throughout much of West and Central Africa, ranging east to South Sudan and Uganda where the species may come into contact with the Nile crocodile. Nile crocodiles are absent from most of West and Central Africa, but range into the latter region in eastern and southern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and along the Central African coastal Atlantic region (as far north to Cameroon).<ref name="hekkala"/><ref>{{cite journal| authors=Shirley; Villanova; Vliet; and Austin |year=2015 |title=Genetic barcoding facilitates captive and wild management of three cryptic African crocodile species complexes | journal=Animal Conservation | volume=18 | issue=4 | pages=322–330 | doi=10.1111/acv.12176}}</ref> There is likely a level of [[Niche segregation|habitat segregation]] between the two species, but this remains to be confirmed for certain.<ref name= Cunningham/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Pooley, S. |year=2016 |title=A Cultural Herpetology of Nile Crocodiles in Africa | journal=Conservation & Society | volume=14 | issue=4 | pages=391–405 | doi=10.4103/0972-4923.197609}}</ref>
The species was previously thought to extend in range into the whole of [[West Africa|West]] and [[Central Africa]],<ref>{{cite journal|last=de Smet|first=Klaas |title= Status of the Nile crocodile in the Sahara desert |journal=Hydrobiologia|date=January 1998|volume= 391 |issue= 1–3|pages=81–86|doi=10.1023/A:1003592123079|quote=Another relict population [of Nile crocodiles], in the Tagant hills of Mauretania, was found to be probably extinct in 1996.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Shine, T.Böhme, W.Nickel, H.Thies, D. F.Wilms, T. |title=Rediscovery of relict populations of the Nile crocodile ''Crocodylus niloticus'' in south‐eastern Mauritania, with observations on their natural history|journal=Oryx|volume=35|issue=3|pages=260|doi=10.1046/j.1365-3008.2001.00187.x|year=2001}}</ref> but these populations are now typically recognized as a distinct species, the [[West African crocodile|West African (or desert) crocodile]].<ref name="hekkala">{{cite journal|author=Hekkala, E.Shirley, M.H.Amato, G.Austin, J.D.Charter, S.Thorbjarnarson, J.Vliet, K.A.Houck, M.L.Desalle, R.Blum, M.J.|year=2011|title=An ancient icon reveals new mysteries: mummy DNA resurrects a cryptic species within the Nile crocodile|journal=[[Molecular Ecology|Mol. Ecol.]]|volume=20|issue=20|pages=4199–215|doi=10.1111/j.1365-294X.2011.05245.x|pmid=21906195}}</ref> The distributional boundaries between these species were poorly understood, but following several studies, they are now better known. West African crocodiles are found throughout much of West and Central Africa, ranging east to South Sudan and Uganda where the species may come into contact with the Nile crocodile. Nile crocodiles are absent from most of West and Central Africa, but range into the latter region in eastern and southern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and along the Central African coastal Atlantic region (as far north to Cameroon).<ref name="hekkala"/><ref>{{cite journal| =Shirley Villanova Vliet Austin |year=2015 |title=Genetic barcoding facilitates captive and wild management of three cryptic African crocodile species complexes | journal=Animal Conservation | volume=18 | issue=4 | pages=322–330 | doi=10.1111/acv.12176}}</ref> There is likely a level of [[Niche segregation|habitat segregation]] between the two species, but this remains to be confirmed for certain.<ref name= Cunningham/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Pooley, S. |year=2016 |title=A Cultural Herpetology of Nile Crocodiles in Africa | journal=Conservation & Society | volume=14 | issue=4 | pages=391–405 | doi=10.4103/0972-4923.197609}}</ref>


Nile crocodiles may be able to tolerate an extremely broad range of habitat types, including small brackish streams, fast flowing rivers, swamps, dams and tidal lakes and estuaries.<ref name=lthesis/> In East Africa, they are found mostly in rivers, lakes, marshes, and dams, favoring open, broad bodies of water over smaller ones. In Madagascar, the remnant population of Nile crocodiles has adapted to living within caves.<ref name= Guggisberg/> Although not a regular sea-going species as is the [[American crocodile]] and, especially, the [[saltwater crocodile]], the Nile crocodile possesses salt glands like all true crocodiles (but not [[alligator]]s and [[caiman]]s) and does on occasion enter coastal and even marine waters.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Mazzotti, F. J., & Dunson, W. A. |title=Osmoregulation in crocodilians |journal=American Zoologist |volume=29 |issue=3 |pages=903 |jstor=3883493|doi=10.1093/icb/29.3.903|year=1989 }}</ref> They have been known to enter the sea in some areas, with one specimen having been recorded {{convert|11|km|mi|abbr=on}} off [[Lake St. Lucia|St. Lucia Bay]] in 1917.<ref name= Cott/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Leslie, A. J., & Spotila, J. R. |title= Osmoregulation of the Nile crocodile, ''Crocodylus niloticus'', in Lake St. Lucia, Kwazulu/Natal, South Africa|journal= Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A|volume= 126|issue= 3|pages= 351–65|pmid=10964030|year= 2000|doi=10.1016/s1095-6433(00)00215-4}}</ref>
Nile crocodiles may be able to tolerate an extremely broad range of habitat types, including small brackish streams, fast flowing rivers, swamps, dams and tidal lakes and estuaries.<ref name=lthesis/> In East Africa, they are found mostly in rivers, lakes, marshes, and dams, favoring open, broad bodies of water over smaller ones. In Madagascar, the remnant population of Nile crocodiles has adapted to living within caves.<ref name= Guggisberg/> Although not a regular sea-going species as is the [[American crocodile]] and, especially, the [[saltwater crocodile]], the Nile crocodile possesses salt glands like all true crocodiles (but not [[alligator]]s and [[caiman]]s) and does on occasion enter coastal and even marine waters.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Mazzotti, F. J.Dunson, W. A. |title=Osmoregulation in crocodilians |journal=American Zoologist |volume=29 |issue=3 |pages=903 |jstor=3883493|doi=10.1093/icb/29.3.903|year=1989 }}</ref> They have been known to enter the sea in some areas, with one specimen having been recorded {{convert|11|km|mi|abbr=on}} off [[Lake St. Lucia|St. Lucia Bay]] in 1917.<ref name= Cott/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Leslie, A. J.Spotila, J. R. |title= Osmoregulation of the Nile crocodile, ''Crocodylus niloticus'', in Lake St. Lucia, Kwazulu/Natal, South Africa|journal= Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A|volume= 126|issue= 3|pages= 351–65|pmid=10964030|year= 2000|doi=10.1016/s1095-6433(00)00215-4}}</ref>


===Invasive species===
===Invasive species===
Nile crocodiles are an [[invasive species]] in North America, and several specimens have been recently captured in southern [[Florida]], though there are not yet signs that the population is reproducing in the wild.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/24/science/crocodiles-in-florida.html|title=Nile Crocodiles Found Really Far Out of Africa. In Florida.|last=Bakalar|first=Nicholas|date=2016-05-23|newspaper=The New York Times|issn=0362-4331|access-date=2016-05-24}}</ref> Genetic studies of Nile crocodiles captured in the wild in Florida have revealed that the specimens are all closely related to each other, suggesting a single source of the introduction. This source remains unclear, as their genetics do not match samples collected from captives at various zoos and theme parks in Florida. When compared to Nile crocodiles from their native Africa, the Florida wild specimens are most closely related to South African Nile crocodiles.<ref>{{cite journal| authors=Rockfort; Krysko; Mazzotti; Shirley; Parry; Wasilewski; Beauchamp; Gillette; Metzger; Squires; and Somma |year=2016 |title=Molecular analysis confirming the introduction of Nile crocodile, Crocodylus niloticus Laurenti 1768 (Crocodylidae), in Southern Florida, with an assesment of potential for establishment, spread, and impacts | journal=Herpetological Conservation and Biology | volume=11 | issue=1 | pages=80–89}}</ref> It is unknown how many Nile crocodiles are currently at large in Florida.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Rochford|first1=Michael R.|title=Introduction of Nile Crocodiles in southern Florida.|journal=Herpetological Conservation and Biology|date=30 April 2016|volume=11|issue=1|pages=80–89|url=http://www.herpconbio.org/Volume_11/Issue_1/Rochford_etal_2016.pdf|accessdate=22 May 2016|display-authors=etal}}</ref><ref>[http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/05/20/478869171/nile-crocodiles-found-near-miami-researchers-confirm], Nile Crocodiles Found Near Miami, Researchers Confirm</ref> It is likely that the animals were either brought there to be released, or that they are escapees.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.foxnews.com/science/2016/05/20/nile-crocodiles-captured-in-south-florida-still-have-scientists-seeking-answers.html|title=Nile crocodiles captured in South Florida still have scientists seeking answers|website=Fox News Science}}</ref>
Nile crocodiles are an [[invasive species]] in North America, and several specimens have been recently captured in southern [[Florida]], though there are not yet signs that the population is reproducing in the wild.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/24/science/crocodiles-in-florida.html|title=Nile Crocodiles Found Really Far Out of Africa. In Florida.|last=Bakalar|first=Nicholas|date=2016-05-23|newspaper=The New York Times|issn=0362-4331|access-date=2016-05-24}}</ref> Genetic studies of Nile crocodiles captured in the wild in Florida have revealed that the specimens are all closely related to each other, suggesting a single source of the introduction. This source remains unclear, as their genetics do not match samples collected from captives at various zoos and theme parks in Florida. When compared to Nile crocodiles from their native Africa, the Florida wild specimens are most closely related to South African Nile crocodiles.<ref>{{cite journal| =Rockfort Krysko Mazzotti Shirley Parry Wasilewski Beauchamp Gillette Metzger Squires Somma |year=2016 |title=Molecular analysis confirming the introduction of Nile crocodile, Crocodylus niloticus Laurenti 1768 (Crocodylidae), in Southern Florida, with an assesment of potential for establishment, spread, and impacts | journal=Herpetological Conservation and Biology | volume=11 | issue=1 | pages=80–89}}</ref> It is unknown how many Nile crocodiles are currently at large in Florida.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Rochford|first1=Michael R.|title=Introduction of Nile Crocodiles in southern Florida.|journal=Herpetological Conservation and Biology|date=30 April 2016|volume=11|issue=1|pages=80–89|url=http://www.herpconbio.org/Volume_11/Issue_1/Rochford_etal_2016.pdf|accessdate=22 May 2016|display-authors=etal}}</ref><ref>[http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/05/20/478869171/nile-crocodiles-found-near-miami-researchers-confirm], Nile Crocodiles Found Near Miami, Researchers Confirm</ref> It is likely that the animals were either brought there to be released, or that they are escapees.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.foxnews.com/science/2016/05/20/nile-crocodiles-captured-in-south-florida-still-have-scientists-seeking-answers.html|title=Nile crocodiles captured in South Florida still have scientists seeking answers|website=Fox News Science}}</ref>


==Behaviour==
==Behaviour==
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[[File:CrocoLoco-swimming-01.jpg|thumb|left|Crocodiles are deft and agile swimmers when motivated.]]
[[File:CrocoLoco-swimming-01.jpg|thumb|left|Crocodiles are deft and agile swimmers when motivated.]]
In [[South Africa]], Nile crocodiles are more easily observed in winter because of the extensive amount of time they spend basking at this time of year. More time is spent in water in overcast, rainy or misty days.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Downs, C. T., Greaver, C., & Taylor, R. |title=Body temperature and basking behaviour of Nile crocodiles (''Crocodylus niloticus'') during winter|journal=Journal of Thermal Biology|volume=33|issue=3|pages=185|doi=10.1016/j.jtherbio.2008.02.001|year=2008}}</ref> In the southern reaches of their range, as a response to dry, cool conditions that they cannot survive externally, crocodiles may dig and take refuge in tunnels and engage in [[aestivation]].<ref name= Pooley/> Pooley found in [[Royal Natal National Park]] that during aestivation, young crocodiles of {{convert|60|to|90|cm|in|abbr=on}} total length would dig tunnels averaging {{convert|1.2|to|1.8|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in depth for most, some tunnels measuring more than {{convert|2.7|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, the longest there being {{convert|3.65|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}. Crocodiles in aestivation are totally lethargic, entering a state similar to animals who [[hibernate]]. Only the largest individuals engaging in aestivation would leave the burrow to sun on warmest days, otherwise these crocodiles rarely left their burrows. Aestivation has been recorded from the months of May to August.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Pooley/>
In [[South Africa]], Nile crocodiles are more easily observed in winter because of the extensive amount of time they spend basking at this time of year. More time is spent in water in overcast, rainy or misty days.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Downs, C. T.Greaver, C.Taylor, R. |title=Body temperature and basking behaviour of Nile crocodiles (''Crocodylus niloticus'') during winter|journal=Journal of Thermal Biology|volume=33|issue=3|pages=185|doi=10.1016/j.jtherbio.2008.02.001|year=2008}}</ref> In the southern reaches of their range, as a response to dry, cool conditions that they cannot survive externally, crocodiles may dig and take refuge in tunnels and engage in [[aestivation]].<ref name= Pooley/> Pooley found in [[Royal Natal National Park]] that during aestivation, young crocodiles of {{convert|60|to|90|cm|in|abbr=on}} total length would dig tunnels averaging {{convert|1.2|to|1.8|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in depth for most, some tunnels measuring more than {{convert|2.7|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, the longest there being {{convert|3.65|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}. Crocodiles in aestivation are totally lethargic, entering a state similar to animals who [[hibernate]]. Only the largest individuals engaging in aestivation would leave the burrow to sun on warmest days, otherwise these crocodiles rarely left their burrows. Aestivation has been recorded from the months of May to August.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Pooley/>


Nile crocodiles normally dive for only a few minutes at a time, but can swim underwater for up to 30 minutes if threatened, and if they remain fully inactive they can hold their breath for up to two hours (which, as aforementioned, is due to the high levels of lactic acid in their blood).<ref name= Crocodilian.com/> They have a rich vocal range, and good [[hearing (sense)|hearing]]. Nile crocodiles normally crawl along on their bellies, but they can also "high walk" with their trunks raised above the ground. Smaller specimens can [[Horse gallop|gallop]], and even larger individuals are capable on occasion of surprising bursts of speed, briefly reaching up to {{convert|12|to|14|km/h|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Kofron2>{{cite journal|author=Kofron, C. P. |title= Behavior of Nile crocodiles in a seasonal river in Zimbabwe |journal= Copeia |volume= 1993 |issue= 2 |pages= 463 |doi=10.2307/1447146|jstor= 1447146 |year= 1993 }}</ref> They can swim much faster by moving their bodies and tails in a sinuous fashion, and they can sustain this form of movement much longer than on land, with a maximum known swimming speed {{convert|30|to|35|km/h|abbr=on}}, more than three times faster than any human.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Molnar, J. L., Pierce, S. E., & Hutchinson, J. R. |title= An experimental and morphometric test of the relationship between vertebral morphology and joint stiffness in Nile crocodiles (''Crocodylus niloticus'')|journal= Journal of Experimental Biology|volume= 217|issue= Pt 5|pages= 758–68|pmid=24574389|year= 2014|doi= 10.1242/jeb.089904}}</ref>
Nile crocodiles normally dive for only a few minutes at a time, but can swim underwater for up to 30 minutes if threatened, and if they remain fully inactive they can hold their breath for up to two hours (which, as aforementioned, is due to the high levels of lactic acid in their blood).<ref name= Crocodilian.com/> They have a rich vocal range, and good [[hearing (sense)|hearing]]. Nile crocodiles normally crawl along on their bellies, but they can also "high walk" with their trunks raised above the ground. Smaller specimens can [[Horse gallop|gallop]], and even larger individuals are capable on occasion of surprising bursts of speed, briefly reaching up to {{convert|12|to|14|km/h|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Kofron2>{{cite journal|author=Kofron, C. P. |title= Behavior of Nile crocodiles in a seasonal river in Zimbabwe |journal= Copeia |volume= 1993 |issue= 2 |pages= 463 |doi=10.2307/1447146|jstor= 1447146 |year= 1993 }}</ref> They can swim much faster by moving their bodies and tails in a sinuous fashion, and they can sustain this form of movement much longer than on land, with a maximum known swimming speed {{convert|30|to|35|km/h|abbr=on}}, more than three times faster than any human.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Molnar, J. L.Pierce, S. E.Hutchinson, J. R. |title= An experimental and morphometric test of the relationship between vertebral morphology and joint stiffness in Nile crocodiles (''Crocodylus niloticus'')|journal= Journal of Experimental Biology|volume= 217|issue= Pt 5|pages= 758–68|pmid=24574389|year= 2014|doi= 10.1242/jeb.089904}}</ref>


[[File:PloverCrocodileSymbiosis.jpg|thumb|right|Drawing depicting the mythical relationship between plovers and crocodiles – no reliable observations exist of this purported symbiosis]]
[[File:PloverCrocodileSymbiosis.jpg|thumb|right|Drawing depicting the mythical relationship between plovers and crocodiles – no reliable observations exist of this purported symbiosis]]
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The type and size of the prey depends mostly on the size of the crocodile.<ref name="Hutton"/> The diet of young crocodiles is made up largely of [[insect]]s and other [[invertebrate]]s since this is the only prey the same animals can easily take. Cott (1961) studied the food of hatchlings and juveniles very extensively in [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]] (then called Rhodesia). In that study, more than a hundred species and genera (i.e. those could not be specified to species level) of insect were identified amongst the foods of crocodiles of this age. All told, he found that more than 70% of the diet of young crocodiles was made up of insects. Of the insects taken there, [[beetle]]s made up 58% of the diet composition, with the most frequently identifying being water-based varieties such as ''[[Hydrophilus (insect)|Hydrophilus]]'' and ''[[Cybister]]''. [[Belostomatidae|Giant water bugs]] were also frequently recorded, although several largely terrestrial varieties were also found in young crocodile’s stomachs, presumably having been caught in riparian vegetation by night, including [[Orthoptera]], such as [[cricket]]s, and [[Odonata]], such as [[dragonflies]]. [[Arachnid]]s such as ''[[Dolomedes]]'' water-spiders are taken but always secondarily to insects in Uganda and Zambia.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Wallace/>
The type and size of the prey depends mostly on the size of the crocodile.<ref name="Hutton"/> The diet of young crocodiles is made up largely of [[insect]]s and other [[invertebrate]]s since this is the only prey the same animals can easily take. Cott (1961) studied the food of hatchlings and juveniles very extensively in [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]] (then called Rhodesia). In that study, more than a hundred species and genera (i.e. those could not be specified to species level) of insect were identified amongst the foods of crocodiles of this age. All told, he found that more than 70% of the diet of young crocodiles was made up of insects. Of the insects taken there, [[beetle]]s made up 58% of the diet composition, with the most frequently identifying being water-based varieties such as ''[[Hydrophilus (insect)|Hydrophilus]]'' and ''[[Cybister]]''. [[Belostomatidae|Giant water bugs]] were also frequently recorded, although several largely terrestrial varieties were also found in young crocodile’s stomachs, presumably having been caught in riparian vegetation by night, including [[Orthoptera]], such as [[cricket]]s, and [[Odonata]], such as [[dragonflies]]. [[Arachnid]]s such as ''[[Dolomedes]]'' water-spiders are taken but always secondarily to insects in Uganda and Zambia.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Wallace/>


[[Crab]]s are also largely taken by crocodiles under {{convert|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, especially the genus ''[[Potamonautes]]'', with different species being the primary crustacean food in different areas. [[Mollusk]]s may occasionally be taken by young crocodiles (they are taken in larger numbers later in life in parts of Uganda and Zambia).<ref name= Cott/> In the [[Okavango Delta]], [[Botswana]], the diet was similar but young crocodiles ate a broader range of [[insect]]s and [[invertebrate]]s, with beetles taken in similar numbers to other, similar prey, both aquatic and terrestrial. In Botswana, arachnids were more often found in young crocodiles than in Uganda and Zambia.<ref name= Wallace>{{cite journal|author=Wallace, K. M., & Leslie, A. J. |title=Diet of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') in the Okavango Delta, Botswana|journal=Journal of Herpetology|volume=42|issue=2|pages=361|doi=10.1670/07-1071.1|year=2008}}</ref> In [[Zimbabwe]], the dietary composition was broadly similar to that in other areas.<ref name= Hutton/> However, in the [[Uganda]]n portion of [[Lake Victoria]], [[Hemiptera|true bugs]] and [[dragonflies]] both seem to outnumber beetles notably and up to a length of {{convert|1|to|2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} crocodiles had stomach contents that were made up 70–75% of insects.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Corbet, P. S. |title=Notes on the insect food of the Nile crocodile in Uganda|journal=Proceedings of the Royal Entomological Society of London. Series A, General Entomology|volume=34|pages=17|doi=10.1111/j.1365-3032.1959.tb00223.x|year=2009}}</ref><ref>Corbet, PS (1960). The food of a sample of crocodiles (''Crocodylus niloticus'') from Lake Victoria. East African Fisheries Research Organisation, Jinja, Uganda. ''Journal of Zoology''.</ref>
[[Crab]]s are also largely taken by crocodiles under {{convert|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, especially the genus ''[[Potamonautes]]'', with different species being the primary crustacean food in different areas. [[Mollusk]]s may occasionally be taken by young crocodiles (they are taken in larger numbers later in life in parts of Uganda and Zambia).<ref name= Cott/> In the [[Okavango Delta]], [[Botswana]], the diet was similar but young crocodiles ate a broader range of [[insect]]s and [[invertebrate]]s, with beetles taken in similar numbers to other, similar prey, both aquatic and terrestrial. In Botswana, arachnids were more often found in young crocodiles than in Uganda and Zambia.<ref name= Wallace>{{cite journal|author=Wallace, K. M.Leslie, A. J. |title=Diet of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') in the Okavango Delta, Botswana|journal=Journal of Herpetology|volume=42|issue=2|pages=361|doi=10.1670/07-1071.1|year=2008}}</ref> In [[Zimbabwe]], the dietary composition was broadly similar to that in other areas.<ref name= Hutton/> However, in the [[Uganda]]n portion of [[Lake Victoria]], [[Hemiptera|true bugs]] and [[dragonflies]] both seem to outnumber beetles notably and up to a length of {{convert|1|to|2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} crocodiles had stomach contents that were made up 70–75% of insects.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Corbet, P. S. |title=Notes on the insect food of the Nile crocodile in Uganda|journal=Proceedings of the Royal Entomological Society of London. Series A, General Entomology|volume=34|pages=17|doi=10.1111/j.1365-3032.1959.tb00223.x|year=2009}}</ref><ref>Corbet, PS (1960). The food of a sample of crocodiles (''Crocodylus niloticus'') from Lake Victoria. East African Fisheries Research Organisation, Jinja, Uganda. ''Journal of Zoology''.</ref>


After Nile crocodiles reach {{convert|2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, the significance of most invertebrates in the diet decreases precipitously.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Wallace/> An exception to this is in [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]] where sub-adults and adults of even large sizes, up to {{convert|3.84|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, may eat very large numbers of [[snail]]s. Nearly 70% of the crocodiles examined by Cott (1961) had some remains of snails inside their stomachs. Predation on [[Ampullariidae|amuplariid water snails]] was especially heavy in [[Lake Bangweulu|Bangweulu Swamp]], [[Lake Mweru Wantipa]] and the [[Kafue Flats]], where mollusk representing 89.1%, 87% and 84.7% of all prey in these locations, respectively. [[Gastropoda]] (4126 records per Cott) were taken much more than [[Bivalvia|Lamellibranchiata]] (6 records). Notable favorites include ''[[Pila (gastropod)|Pila ovata]]'', which lives just under water on rocky surfaces (mainly found in crocodiles from [[Uganda]]) and ''[[Lanistes ovum]]'', which is found submerged among water plants and on detritus (mainly from stomachs in [[Zambia]]).<ref name= Cott/>
After Nile crocodiles reach {{convert|2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, the significance of most invertebrates in the diet decreases precipitously.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Wallace/> An exception to this is in [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]] where sub-adults and adults of even large sizes, up to {{convert|3.84|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, may eat very large numbers of [[snail]]s. Nearly 70% of the crocodiles examined by Cott (1961) had some remains of snails inside their stomachs. Predation on [[Ampullariidae|amuplariid water snails]] was especially heavy in [[Lake Bangweulu|Bangweulu Swamp]], [[Lake Mweru Wantipa]] and the [[Kafue Flats]], where mollusk representing 89.1%, 87% and 84.7% of all prey in these locations, respectively. [[Gastropoda]] (4126 records per Cott) were taken much more than [[Bivalvia|Lamellibranchiata]] (6 records). Notable favorites include ''[[Pila (gastropod)|Pila ovata]]'', which lives just under water on rocky surfaces (mainly found in crocodiles from [[Uganda]]) and ''[[Lanistes ovum]]'', which is found submerged among water plants and on detritus (mainly from stomachs in [[Zambia]]).<ref name= Cott/>
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===Fish===
===Fish===
[[File:Nile Crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) trying to swallow a big Tilapia (Oreochromis sp.)... (16647120860).jpg|thumb|Sub-adult with [[tilapia]] as its prey]]
[[File:Nile Crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) trying to swallow a big Tilapia (Oreochromis sp.)... (16647120860).jpg|thumb|Sub-adult with [[tilapia]] as its prey]]
During the time from when they’re roughly {{convert|1.5|to|2.2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} long (roughly 5 to 9 years old), Nile crocodiles seem to have the broadest diet of any age range. They take more or less much the same small prey as smaller crocodiles, including [[insect]]s and [[arachnid]]s, but also take many small to medium-sized vertebrates and quickly become capable taking down prey of up to their own weight. Especially [[fish]] become significant around this age and size. However, Cott (1961) found that the only size range where fish were numerically dominant over other types of food was from {{convert|2|to|3.05|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}. This size range consists of subadult males and a mixture of subadult and adult females.<ref name= Cott/> In [[Lake Turkana]], [[Kenya]], fish were the only food in the stomachs of 45.4% of the crocodiles who did not have empty stomachs, in total 87.8% of the crocodiles who did not have empty stomachs there had fish in their stomachs. Graham (1968) noted that throughout [[East Africa]], crocodile diets are driven by the regional availability of prey. The arid land surrounding Lake Turkana is a relatively barren region for diverse or numerous prey other than fish, so therefore fish are an exceptionally important food source to crocodiles there.<ref name= Graham/><ref name= Beard/> In [[Lake Kyoga]] and [[Kwana Island|Lake Kwana]], [[Uganda]] 73.1% of the crocodiles who did not have empty stomachs had fish in their stomachs.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Hippel, E. V. |year=1946|title=Stomach contents of crocodiles|journal=The Uganda Journal|volume= 10|pages= 148–149}}</ref> At [[Lake St. Lucia]] in [[South Africa]], many Nile crocodile congregate to feed on [[striped mullet]] (''Mugil cephalus'') as they make their seaward migration for spawning. Here, the crocodiles may line up in dozens across narrow straits of the estuary in order to effectively force the mullet into easy striking distance, with no observed in-fighting among these crocodile feeding congregations. At this time of plenty (before irrigation operations by humans led St. Lucia to have dangerously high saline levels), a {{convert|2.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} crocodile could expect to eat {{convert|1.1|kg|lb|abbr=on}} of mullet daily, an exceptionally large daily amount for a crocodile.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Whitfield, A.K., & Blaber, S.J. |title= Predation on striped mullet (''Mugil cephalus'') by ''Crocodylus niloticus'' at St. Lucia, South Africa|journal= Copeia|volume= 1979|issue= 2|pages= 266|doi=10.2307/1443412|jstor= 1443412|year= 1979}}</ref>
During the time from when they’re roughly {{convert|1.5|to|2.2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} long (roughly 5 to 9 years old), Nile crocodiles seem to have the broadest diet of any age range. They take more or less much the same small prey as smaller crocodiles, including [[insect]]s and [[arachnid]]s, but also take many small to medium-sized vertebrates and quickly become capable taking down prey of up to their own weight. Especially [[fish]] become significant around this age and size. However, Cott (1961) found that the only size range where fish were numerically dominant over other types of food was from {{convert|2|to|3.05|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}. This size range consists of subadult males and a mixture of subadult and adult females.<ref name= Cott/> In [[Lake Turkana]], [[Kenya]], fish were the only food in the stomachs of 45.4% of the crocodiles who did not have empty stomachs, in total 87.8% of the crocodiles who did not have empty stomachs there had fish in their stomachs. Graham (1968) noted that throughout [[East Africa]], crocodile diets are driven by the regional availability of prey. The arid land surrounding Lake Turkana is a relatively barren region for diverse or numerous prey other than fish, so therefore fish are an exceptionally important food source to crocodiles there.<ref name= Graham/><ref name= Beard/> In [[Lake Kyoga]] and [[Kwana Island|Lake Kwana]], [[Uganda]] 73.1% of the crocodiles who did not have empty stomachs had fish in their stomachs.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Hippel, E. V. |year=1946|title=Stomach contents of crocodiles|journal=The Uganda Journal|volume= 10|pages= 148–149}}</ref> At [[Lake St. Lucia]] in [[South Africa]], many Nile crocodile congregate to feed on [[striped mullet]] (''Mugil cephalus'') as they make their seaward migration for spawning. Here, the crocodiles may line up in dozens across narrow straits of the estuary in order to effectively force the mullet into easy striking distance, with no observed in-fighting among these crocodile feeding congregations. At this time of plenty (before irrigation operations by humans led St. Lucia to have dangerously high saline levels), a {{convert|2.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} crocodile could expect to eat {{convert|1.1|kg|lb|abbr=on}} of mullet daily, an exceptionally large daily amount for a crocodile.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Whitfield, A.K.Blaber, S.J. |title= Predation on striped mullet (''Mugil cephalus'') by ''Crocodylus niloticus'' at St. Lucia, South Africa|journal= Copeia|volume= 1979|issue= 2|pages= 266|doi=10.2307/1443412|jstor= 1443412|year= 1979}}</ref>


Larger fish, like [[catfish]] and freshwater [[bass (fish)|bass]], are preferred by adults of more than {{convert|2.2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length. Particularly small fish are likely to be eaten only in case of sudden encounter, mostly in shallow dry season ponds where not much effort is needed to catch the small, agile prey.<ref name= Stevenson-Hamilton/> Most observed fishing by crocodiles takes place in waters less than {{convert|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} deep and fish are often caught when they swim into contact with the crocodile’s head, even literally right into the reptile’s mouth.<ref name= Graham/> Across much of their range, they will take any fish they encounter but largish and relatively sluggish [[mesopredator]] fish such as [[lungfish]] and ''[[Barbus]]'' [[carp]]s seem to be most widely reported. Many other genera are taken widely and relatively regularly including ''[[Tilapia]]'' (which was the most significant prey genera in [[Lake Turkana]]), ''[[Clarias]]'', ''[[Haplochromis]]'' and ''[[Mormyrus]]''.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Cott, H. B. |year=1954|title= The status of the Nile crocodile in Uganda|journal=Uganda Journal|volume=18|issue=1|pages= 1–13}}</ref> In [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]], lungfish comprised nearly two-thirds of the piscivorian diet for crocodiles.<ref name= Cott/> Similarly, in [[Lake Baringo]] in [[Kenya]], the lungfish is the crocodile’s main prey and the crocodile is the lungfish’s primary predator.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Mlewa, C. M., & Green, J. M. |title=Biology of the marbled lungfish, ''Protopterus aethiopicus'' Heckel, in Lake Baringo, Kenya|journal=African Journal of Ecology|volume=42|issue=4|pages=338|doi=10.1111/j.1365-2028.2004.00536.x|year=2004}}</ref> In the [[Okavango Delta]], [[Botswana]], the [[Hepsetus|African pikes]] (''Hepsetus'' sp.) were the leading prey group for sub-adults, comprising more than a fourth of the diet.<ref>Wallace, K. M. (2006). [http://scholar.sun.ac.za/handle/10019.1/2439 The feeding ecology of yearling, juvenile and sub-adult Nile crocodiles, ''Crocodylus niloticus'', in the Okavango Delta, Botswana]. Doctoral dissertation. University of Stellenbosch.</ref> Extremely large fish, such as [[Nile perch]] (''Lates niloticus''), [[Hydrocynus goliath|goliath tigerfish]] (''Hydrocynus goliath'') and even [[shark]]s, are taken on occasion, in addition to big catfish, such as ''[[Bagrus]]'' ssp. and ''[[Clarias gariepinus]]'', which are preyed upon quite regularly in areas where they are common. In the Zambezi River and Lake St. Lucia, Nile crocodiles have been known to prey on [[bull shark]]s (''Carcharhinus leucas'') and [[sand tiger shark]]s (''Carcharias taurus'').<ref>{{Cite web|title = FLMNH Ichthyology Department: Bull Shark|url = http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/gallery/descript/bullshark/bullshark.htm|website = www.flmnh.ufl.edu|accessdate = 2015-10-23}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title = Ecology and Conservation of Estuarine Ecosystems: Lake St Lucia as a Global Model|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=QxEgAwAAQBAJ|publisher = Cambridge University Press|date = 2013-05-16|isbn = 9781107354999|first = Renzo|last = Perissinotto|first2 = Derek D.|last2 = Stretch|first3 = Ricky H.|last3 = Taylor}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title = Deadly bull shark is a magnificent, hunted creature {{!}} Florida Weekly|url = http://charlotte.floridaweekly.com/news/2010-06-24/Outdoors/Deadly_bull_shark_is_a_magnificent_hunted_creature.html|website = charlotte.floridaweekly.com|accessdate = 2015-10-23}}</ref> The largest fishes attacked in such cases may potentially weigh more than {{convert|45|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref>Pienaar, U. (1968). ''The Freshwater Fishes of the Kruger National Park''. Republic of South Africa: The National Parks Board of Trustees of the Republic of South Africa.</ref><ref>Skelton, P. (1993). ''A Complete Guide to the Freshwater Fishes of Southern Africa''. Halfway House: Southern Book Publishers Ltd.</ref>
Larger fish, like [[catfish]] and freshwater [[bass (fish)|bass]], are preferred by adults of more than {{convert|2.2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length. Particularly small fish are likely to be eaten only in case of sudden encounter, mostly in shallow dry season ponds where not much effort is needed to catch the small, agile prey.<ref name= Stevenson-Hamilton/> Most observed fishing by crocodiles takes place in waters less than {{convert|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} deep and fish are often caught when they swim into contact with the crocodile’s head, even literally right into the reptile’s mouth.<ref name= Graham/> Across much of their range, they will take any fish they encounter but largish and relatively sluggish [[mesopredator]] fish such as [[lungfish]] and ''[[Barbus]]'' [[carp]]s seem to be most widely reported. Many other genera are taken widely and relatively regularly including ''[[Tilapia]]'' (which was the most significant prey genera in [[Lake Turkana]]), ''[[Clarias]]'', ''[[Haplochromis]]'' and ''[[Mormyrus]]''.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Cott, H. B. |year=1954|title= The status of the Nile crocodile in Uganda|journal=Uganda Journal|volume=18|issue=1|pages= 1–13}}</ref> In [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]], lungfish comprised nearly two-thirds of the piscivorian diet for crocodiles.<ref name= Cott/> Similarly, in [[Lake Baringo]] in [[Kenya]], the lungfish is the crocodile’s main prey and the crocodile is the lungfish’s primary predator.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Mlewa, C. M.Green, J. M. |title=Biology of the marbled lungfish, ''Protopterus aethiopicus'' Heckel, in Lake Baringo, Kenya|journal=African Journal of Ecology|volume=42|issue=4|pages=338|doi=10.1111/j.1365-2028.2004.00536.x|year=2004}}</ref> In the [[Okavango Delta]], [[Botswana]], the [[Hepsetus|African pikes]] (''Hepsetus'' sp.) were the leading prey group for sub-adults, comprising more than a fourth of the diet.<ref>Wallace, K. M. (2006). [http://scholar.sun.ac.za/handle/10019.1/2439 The feeding ecology of yearling, juvenile and sub-adult Nile crocodiles, ''Crocodylus niloticus'', in the Okavango Delta, Botswana]. Doctoral dissertation. University of Stellenbosch.</ref> Extremely large fish, such as [[Nile perch]] (''Lates niloticus''), [[Hydrocynus goliath|goliath tigerfish]] (''Hydrocynus goliath'') and even [[shark]]s, are taken on occasion, in addition to big catfish, such as ''[[Bagrus]]'' ssp. and ''[[Clarias gariepinus]]'', which are preyed upon quite regularly in areas where they are common. In the Zambezi River and Lake St. Lucia, Nile crocodiles have been known to prey on [[bull shark]]s (''Carcharhinus leucas'') and [[sand tiger shark]]s (''Carcharias taurus'').<ref>{{Cite web|title = FLMNH Ichthyology Department: Bull Shark|url = http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/gallery/descript/bullshark/bullshark.htm|website = www.flmnh.ufl.edu|accessdate = 2015-10-23}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title = Ecology and Conservation of Estuarine Ecosystems: Lake St Lucia as a Global Model|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=QxEgAwAAQBAJ|publisher = Cambridge University Press|date = 2013-05-16|isbn = 9781107354999|first = Renzo|last = Perissinotto|first2 = Derek D.|last2 = Stretch|first3 = Ricky H.|last3 = Taylor}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title = Deadly bull shark is a magnificent, hunted creature {{!}} Florida Weekly|url = http://charlotte.floridaweekly.com/news/2010-06-24/Outdoors/Deadly_bull_shark_is_a_magnificent_hunted_creature.html|website = charlotte.floridaweekly.com|accessdate = 2015-10-23}}</ref> The largest fishes attacked in such cases may potentially weigh more than {{convert|45|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref>Pienaar, U. (1968). ''The Freshwater Fishes of the Kruger National Park''. Republic of South Africa: The National Parks Board of Trustees of the Republic of South Africa.</ref><ref>Skelton, P. (1993). ''A Complete Guide to the Freshwater Fishes of Southern Africa''. Halfway House: Southern Book Publishers Ltd.</ref>


When capturing large fish, they often drag the fish onto shore and swing their head around to smash the fish onto the ground until it is deceased or incapacitated. More modestly sized fish are generally swallowed whole.<ref name= Graham/> The Nile crocodile has a reputation as a voracious and destructive feeder on freshwater fish, many of which are essential to the livelihoods of local fisherman and the industry of sport fishing. However, this is very much an unearned reputation. As cold-blooded creatures, Nile crocodiles need to eat far less compared to an equivalent weighted warm-blooded animal. It has been found that the crocodile of {{convert|2|to|3.05|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} consumes an average {{convert|286|g|oz|abbr=on}} of fish per day. In comparison, piscivorous [[water bird]]s from Africa eat far more daily despite being a fraction of the body size of a crocodile, for example a [[cormorant]] eats up to {{convert|1.4|kg|lb|abbr=on}} per day (about 70% of its own body weight) while a [[pelican]] consumes up to {{convert|3.1|kg|lb|abbr=on}} per day (about 35% of its own weight).<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> The taking of commercially important fish, such as ''Tilapia'', has been mentioned as a source of conflict between humans and crocodiles and used as justification for crocodile culling operations; however, even a primarily piscivorous crocodile needs relatively so little fish that they cannot deplete fish populations on their own without other (often [[Human impact on the environment|anthropogenic]]) influences.<ref name= Gans>{{cite journal|author=Gans, C., & Pooley, A. C. |title=Research on Crocodiles?|journal=Ecology|volume=57|issue=5|pages=839|doi=10.2307/1941051|jstor=1941051|year=1976}}</ref> Additionally, crocodiles readily take dead or dying fish given the opportunity and are thus likely to incidentally improve the health of some fish species’ populations.<ref name= Guggisberg/>
When capturing large fish, they often drag the fish onto shore and swing their head around to smash the fish onto the ground until it is deceased or incapacitated. More modestly sized fish are generally swallowed whole.<ref name= Graham/> The Nile crocodile has a reputation as a voracious and destructive feeder on freshwater fish, many of which are essential to the livelihoods of local fisherman and the industry of sport fishing. However, this is very much an unearned reputation. As cold-blooded creatures, Nile crocodiles need to eat far less compared to an equivalent weighted warm-blooded animal. It has been found that the crocodile of {{convert|2|to|3.05|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} consumes an average {{convert|286|g|oz|abbr=on}} of fish per day. In comparison, piscivorous [[water bird]]s from Africa eat far more daily despite being a fraction of the body size of a crocodile, for example a [[cormorant]] eats up to {{convert|1.4|kg|lb|abbr=on}} per day (about 70% of its own body weight) while a [[pelican]] consumes up to {{convert|3.1|kg|lb|abbr=on}} per day (about 35% of its own weight).<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> The taking of commercially important fish, such as ''Tilapia'', has been mentioned as a source of conflict between humans and crocodiles and used as justification for crocodile culling operations; however, even a primarily piscivorous crocodile needs relatively so little fish that they cannot deplete fish populations on their own without other (often [[Human impact on the environment|anthropogenic]]) influences.<ref name= Gans>{{cite journal|author=Gans, C.Pooley, A. C. |title=Research on Crocodiles?|journal=Ecology|volume=57|issue=5|pages=839|doi=10.2307/1941051|jstor=1941051|year=1976}}</ref> Additionally, crocodiles readily take dead or dying fish given the opportunity and are thus likely to incidentally improve the health of some fish species’ populations.<ref name= Guggisberg/>


===Reptiles and amphibians===
===Reptiles and amphibians===
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[[Frog]]s are regionally significant prey for small, young crocodiles in many regions, mainly those in the {{convert|0.5|to|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} size range. The main amphibian prey species from [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]] was the [[Amietophrynus regularis|African common toad]] (''Amietophrynus regularis'') while in [[Botswana]] the main amphibian prey was the [[African reed frog|reed frog]] (''Hyperolius viridiflavus'').<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Wallace/> Even the largest frog in the world, the [[goliath frog]] (''Conraua goliath''), has reportedly been preyed on by young Nile crocodiles.<ref>Thomson, G. (2006). ''Goliath Frog (Conraua goliath)''. B Freedman, ed. Encyclopedia of Endangered Species, Vol. 1.</ref> In general, reptiles become relatively common only in the diet in larger juvenile specimens and subadults. Large reptiles, or armoured reptiles such as turtles were almost negligible in crocodiles under {{convert|2.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and most common in the stomachs of crocodiles over {{convert|3.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length from [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]]. Small species of reptiles are largely ignored as prey at this size. Freshwater turtles are often the most frequently recorded reptilian prey, unsurprisingly perhaps because most other reptiles other than a small handful of ''[[Lycodonomorphus]]'' water snakes are more terrestrial than water-based.<ref name= Cott/>
[[Frog]]s are regionally significant prey for small, young crocodiles in many regions, mainly those in the {{convert|0.5|to|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} size range. The main amphibian prey species from [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]] was the [[Amietophrynus regularis|African common toad]] (''Amietophrynus regularis'') while in [[Botswana]] the main amphibian prey was the [[African reed frog|reed frog]] (''Hyperolius viridiflavus'').<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Wallace/> Even the largest frog in the world, the [[goliath frog]] (''Conraua goliath''), has reportedly been preyed on by young Nile crocodiles.<ref>Thomson, G. (2006). ''Goliath Frog (Conraua goliath)''. B Freedman, ed. Encyclopedia of Endangered Species, Vol. 1.</ref> In general, reptiles become relatively common only in the diet in larger juvenile specimens and subadults. Large reptiles, or armoured reptiles such as turtles were almost negligible in crocodiles under {{convert|2.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and most common in the stomachs of crocodiles over {{convert|3.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length from [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]]. Small species of reptiles are largely ignored as prey at this size. Freshwater turtles are often the most frequently recorded reptilian prey, unsurprisingly perhaps because most other reptiles other than a small handful of ''[[Lycodonomorphus]]'' water snakes are more terrestrial than water-based.<ref name= Cott/>


In a study, the [[serrated hinged terrapin]] (''Pelusios sinuatus'') (also sometimes referred to as the "water tortoise") was more commonly reported in the stomach contents of adult crocodiles from [[Kruger National Park]] than any single mammal species.<ref name= Pienaar>{{cite journal|author=Pienaar, U. D. V. |title= Predator-prey relationships amongst the larger mammals of the Kruger National Park|journal= Koedoe|volume= 12|doi=10.4102/koedoe.v12i1.753|year= 1969}}</ref> Other turtle species commonly recorded among Nile crocodile prey include the [[Speke's hinge-back tortoise]] (''Kinixys spekii'') and [[east African black mud turtle]] (''Pelusios subniger''). Beyond their ready availability and respectable size, turtles are favored by big crocodiles due to their slowness which allows the cumbersome crocodiles to capture them more easily than swifter vertebrates.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Hailey, A. |title=Low survival rate and high predation in the African hingeback tortoise ''Kinixys spekii''|journal=African Journal of Ecology|volume=39|issue=4|pages=383|doi=10.1046/j.0141-6707.2001.00328.x|year=2001}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Caro, T., & Shaffer, H. B. |title= Chelonian antipredator strategies: preliminary and comparative data from Tanzanian Pelusios|journal= Chelonian Conservation and Biology|volume= 9|issue= 2|pages= 302|doi=10.2744/CCB-0812.1|year= 2010}}</ref> While adults have a sufficient bite force to crush turtle shells, sometimes younger crocodiles are overly ambitious and one choked to death attempting to swallow a whole large river turtle.<ref name= Alderton/> A variety of snakes have been preyed on from relatively small innocuous species such as the [[Dasypeltis scabra|common egg-eating snake]] (''Dasypeltis scabra'') to the largest African snakes species, the [[African rock python]] (''Python sebae''), which can exceed {{convert|6.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length and weigh over {{convert|91|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. Venomous species, including the [[Bitis arietans|puff adder]] (''Bitis arietans''), the [[forest cobra]] (''Naja melanoleuca'') and the [[black mamba]] (''Dendroaspis polylepis'') have been recorded as Nile crocodile prey.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> The only frequently recorded lizard prey are the large [[Nile monitor]] (''Varanus niloticus''), although this [[mesopredator]] may be eaten fairly regularly as they often share similar habitat preferences, whenever a crocodile is able to ambush the stealthy monitor, which is more agile on land than the bulkier crocodile.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/>
In a study, the [[serrated hinged terrapin]] (''Pelusios sinuatus'') (also sometimes referred to as the "water tortoise") was more commonly reported in the stomach contents of adult crocodiles from [[Kruger National Park]] than any single mammal species.<ref name= Pienaar>{{cite journal|author=Pienaar, U. D. V. |title= Predator-prey relationships amongst the larger mammals of the Kruger National Park|journal= Koedoe|volume= 12|doi=10.4102/koedoe.v12i1.753|year= 1969}}</ref> Other turtle species commonly recorded among Nile crocodile prey include the [[Speke's hinge-back tortoise]] (''Kinixys spekii'') and [[east African black mud turtle]] (''Pelusios subniger''). Beyond their ready availability and respectable size, turtles are favored by big crocodiles due to their slowness which allows the cumbersome crocodiles to capture them more easily than swifter vertebrates.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Hailey, A. |title=Low survival rate and high predation in the African hingeback tortoise ''Kinixys spekii''|journal=African Journal of Ecology|volume=39|issue=4|pages=383|doi=10.1046/j.0141-6707.2001.00328.x|year=2001}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Caro, T.Shaffer, H. B. |title= Chelonian antipredator strategies: preliminary and comparative data from Tanzanian Pelusios|journal= Chelonian Conservation and Biology|volume= 9|issue= 2|pages= 302|doi=10.2744/CCB-0812.1|year= 2010}}</ref> While adults have a sufficient bite force to crush turtle shells, sometimes younger crocodiles are overly ambitious and one choked to death attempting to swallow a whole large river turtle.<ref name= Alderton/> A variety of snakes have been preyed on from relatively small innocuous species such as the [[Dasypeltis scabra|common egg-eating snake]] (''Dasypeltis scabra'') to the largest African snakes species, the [[African rock python]] (''Python sebae''), which can exceed {{convert|6.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length and weigh over {{convert|91|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. Venomous species, including the [[Bitis arietans|puff adder]] (''Bitis arietans''), the [[forest cobra]] (''Naja melanoleuca'') and the [[black mamba]] (''Dendroaspis polylepis'') have been recorded as Nile crocodile prey.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> The only frequently recorded lizard prey are the large [[Nile monitor]] (''Varanus niloticus''), although this [[mesopredator]] may be eaten fairly regularly as they often share similar habitat preferences, whenever a crocodile is able to ambush the stealthy monitor, which is more agile on land than the bulkier crocodile.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/>


===Birds===
===Birds===
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Numerous birds including, [[stork]]s, small [[wading bird]]s, [[waterfowl]], [[eagle]]s and even small swift-flying [[bird]]s may be snatched. As a whole, birds are quite secondary prey, rarely comprising more than 10–15% of crocodile’s diets although are taken fairly evenly across all crocodile size ranges excluding juveniles of less than {{convert|1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Pooley/> Birds most often taken are [[African darter]]s (''Anhinga rufa'') and [[Reed cormorant|reed]] (''Microcarbo africanus'') and [[white-breasted cormorant]]s (''Phalacrocorax lucidus''), followed by various [[waterfowl]], including most breeding [[geese]] and [[duck]]s in Africa. Slow-swimming [[pelican]]s are also frequently vulnerable to crocodiles.<ref name= Ross>{{cite book|title=Crocodiles and Alligators |editor1-last=Ross |editor1-first=Charles A |editor2-last=Garnett |editor2-first=Stephen |publisher=Checkmark Books |year=1989 |isbn=978-0816021741}}</ref> Nile crocodile apparently frequently station themselves underneath breeding colonies of darter and cormorants and presumably snatch up fledgling birds as they drop to the water before they can competently escape the saurian, as has been recorded with several other crocodilians.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/>
Numerous birds including, [[stork]]s, small [[wading bird]]s, [[waterfowl]], [[eagle]]s and even small swift-flying [[bird]]s may be snatched. As a whole, birds are quite secondary prey, rarely comprising more than 10–15% of crocodile’s diets although are taken fairly evenly across all crocodile size ranges excluding juveniles of less than {{convert|1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Pooley/> Birds most often taken are [[African darter]]s (''Anhinga rufa'') and [[Reed cormorant|reed]] (''Microcarbo africanus'') and [[white-breasted cormorant]]s (''Phalacrocorax lucidus''), followed by various [[waterfowl]], including most breeding [[geese]] and [[duck]]s in Africa. Slow-swimming [[pelican]]s are also frequently vulnerable to crocodiles.<ref name= Ross>{{cite book|title=Crocodiles and Alligators |editor1-last=Ross |editor1-first=Charles A |editor2-last=Garnett |editor2-first=Stephen |publisher=Checkmark Books |year=1989 |isbn=978-0816021741}}</ref> Nile crocodile apparently frequently station themselves underneath breeding colonies of darter and cormorants and presumably snatch up fledgling birds as they drop to the water before they can competently escape the saurian, as has been recorded with several other crocodilians.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/>


Wading birds, even large and relatively slow-moving types such as the [[goliath heron]] (''Ardea goliath''), tend to be highly cautious about avoiding deep water in crocodile occupied wetlands whereas cormorants and waterfowl forage over deeper water and are easier for crocodiles to ambush, with [[Egyptian geese]] (''Alopochen aegyptiaca'') and [[spur-winged geese]] (''Plectropterus gambensis'') recorded as being taken largely while flightless due to molting their flight feathers.<ref>{{cite journal|author=McKinney, F., Buitron, D., & Derrickson, S. R. |year=1990|title= Persistent quacking in dabbling ducks: a predator-luring signal? |url=http://wildfowl.wwt.org.uk/index.php/wildfowl/article/view/839|journal=Wildfowl|volume=41|issue=41|pages= 92–98}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Pitman, C. C. |year=1965|title= The nesting and some other habits of Alopochen, Nettapus, Plectropterus and Sarkidiornis|journal=Wildfowl|volume=16|issue=16|pages= 7|url=http://wildfowl.wwt.org.uk/index.php/wildfowl/article/view/288}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Mock, D. W., & Mock, K. C. |year=1980|title=Feeding behavior and ecology of the Goliath Heron|journal= The Auk|pages= 433–448|volume=97|jstor=4085837 |url=https://sora.unm.edu/node/23426}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Petri, S. |year=1998|title=Molt patterns of nonbreeding white-faced whistling-ducks in South Africa|url=https://sora.unm.edu/sites/default/files/journals/auk/v115n03/p0774-p0780.pdf|journal= The Auk|volume= 115|issue=3|pages= 774–780|jstor=4089428|doi=10.2307/4089427 }}</ref><ref>Todd, F.S. ed. (1996). ''Natural History of the Waterfowl''. San Diego Natural History Museum, San Diego, California and Ibis Publishing Company. {{ISBN|0-934797-11-0}}.</ref> On the contrary, there are several records of them capturing wading birds. Guggisberg (1972) saw multiple cases of predation on [[marabou stork]]s (''Leptoptilos crumenifer'') and around [[Lake Turkana]] several may frequent heronries to pick off fledglings.<ref name= Graham/><ref name= Guggisberg/> In one case, a crocodile was filmed capturing a [[striated heron]] (''Butorides striata'') in mid-flight.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hk2pGJNIpL8 |title=Crocodile snaps heron from air |publisher=YouTube.com |accessdate=2015}}</ref> [[Osprey]] (''Pandion haliaetus'') are known to be grabbed while they dive for fish<ref>Poole, Alan F., Rob O. Bierregaard and Mark S. Martell. (2002). Osprey (''Pandion haliaetus''). ''The Birds of North America Online'' (A. Poole, Ed.). Ithaca: Cornell Lab of Ornithology.</ref> as are possibly [[African fish eagle]]s (''Haliaeetus vocifer'') while [[crowned eagle]]s (''Stephanoaetus coronatus'') have reportedly been ambushed on land at carrion.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Thomsett>{{cite web |url=http://www.africanraptors.org/simon-thomsett-on-the-african-crowned-eagle-part-2/ |title=Simon Thomsett on the African Crowned Eagle |author=Simon Thomsett |publisher=African Raptors |accessdate=2015}}</ref> Crocodiles are occasionally successful in grabbing passerines such as [[Ploceidae|weaver birds]], including the abundant [[red-billed quelea]] (''Quelea quelea''), and [[swallow]]s, having been observed to breach the water and in a matter of seconds sweep off a branch full of birds with remarkable success.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Attwell, R. I. G. |title=Crocodiles feeding on weaver birds|journal=Ibis|volume=96|issue=3|pages=485|doi=10.1111/j.1474-919X.1954.tb02342.x|year=2008}}</ref><ref>Thiollay, J. M. (1989). Natural predation on quelea. ''Quelea quelea''. ''Africa’s Bird Pest'' 216–229.</ref><ref>Baker, S. W. (1891). ''Wild beasts and their ways: reminiscences of Europe, Asia, Africa and America''. Macmillan and co.</ref> Larger land birds, such as [[bustard]]s, [[guineafowl]], [[ground hornbill]]s (''Bucorvus'' sp.) and [[ostrich]]es (''Struthio camelus''), may be taken when they come to water to drink but like most birds are seldom harassed and a minor part of the diet.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.frankfurnessresources.com/mabula/pages/Ostrich%20killed%20by%20croc.html |title=Ostrich killed by croc |author=Furness, Frank |publisher= Mabula Lodge South Africa |accessdate=2015}}</ref>
Wading birds, even large and relatively slow-moving types such as the [[goliath heron]] (''Ardea goliath''), tend to be highly cautious about avoiding deep water in crocodile occupied wetlands whereas cormorants and waterfowl forage over deeper water and are easier for crocodiles to ambush, with [[Egyptian geese]] (''Alopochen aegyptiaca'') and [[spur-winged geese]] (''Plectropterus gambensis'') recorded as being taken largely while flightless due to molting their flight feathers.<ref>{{cite journal|author=McKinney, F.Buitron, D.Derrickson, S. R. |year=1990|title= Persistent quacking in dabbling ducks: a predator-luring signal? |url=http://wildfowl.wwt.org.uk/index.php/wildfowl/article/view/839|journal=Wildfowl|volume=41|issue=41|pages= 92–98}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Pitman, C. C. |year=1965|title= The nesting and some other habits of Alopochen, Nettapus, Plectropterus and Sarkidiornis|journal=Wildfowl|volume=16|issue=16|pages= 7|url=http://wildfowl.wwt.org.uk/index.php/wildfowl/article/view/288}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Mock, D. W.Mock, K. C. |year=1980|title=Feeding behavior and ecology of the Goliath Heron|journal= The Auk|pages= 433–448|volume=97|jstor=4085837 |url=https://sora.unm.edu/node/23426}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Petri, S. |year=1998|title=Molt patterns of nonbreeding white-faced whistling-ducks in South Africa|url=https://sora.unm.edu/sites/default/files/journals/auk/v115n03/p0774-p0780.pdf|journal= The Auk|volume= 115|issue=3|pages= 774–780|jstor=4089428|doi=10.2307/4089427 }}</ref><ref>Todd, F.S. ed. (1996). ''Natural History of the Waterfowl''. San Diego Natural History Museum, San Diego, California and Ibis Publishing Company. {{ISBN|0-934797-11-0}}.</ref> On the contrary, there are several records of them capturing wading birds. Guggisberg (1972) saw multiple cases of predation on [[marabou stork]]s (''Leptoptilos crumenifer'') and around [[Lake Turkana]] several may frequent heronries to pick off fledglings.<ref name= Graham/><ref name= Guggisberg/> In one case, a crocodile was filmed capturing a [[striated heron]] (''Butorides striata'') in mid-flight.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hk2pGJNIpL8 |title=Crocodile snaps heron from air |publisher=YouTube.com |accessdate=2015}}</ref> [[Osprey]] (''Pandion haliaetus'') are known to be grabbed while they dive for fish<ref>Poole, Alan F., Rob O. Bierregaard and Mark S. Martell. (2002). Osprey (''Pandion haliaetus''). ''The Birds of North America Online'' (A. Poole, Ed.). Ithaca: Cornell Lab of Ornithology.</ref> as are possibly [[African fish eagle]]s (''Haliaeetus vocifer'') while [[crowned eagle]]s (''Stephanoaetus coronatus'') have reportedly been ambushed on land at carrion.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Thomsett>{{cite web |url=http://www.africanraptors.org/simon-thomsett-on-the-african-crowned-eagle-part-2/ |title=Simon Thomsett on the African Crowned Eagle |author=Simon Thomsett |publisher=African Raptors |accessdate=2015}}</ref> Crocodiles are occasionally successful in grabbing passerines such as [[Ploceidae|weaver birds]], including the abundant [[red-billed quelea]] (''Quelea quelea''), and [[swallow]]s, having been observed to breach the water and in a matter of seconds sweep off a branch full of birds with remarkable success.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Attwell, R. I. G. |title=Crocodiles feeding on weaver birds|journal=Ibis|volume=96|issue=3|pages=485|doi=10.1111/j.1474-919X.1954.tb02342.x|year=2008}}</ref><ref>Thiollay, J. M. (1989). Natural predation on quelea. ''Quelea quelea''. ''Africa’s Bird Pest'' 216–229.</ref><ref>Baker, S. W. (1891). ''Wild beasts and their ways: reminiscences of Europe, Asia, Africa and America''. Macmillan and co.</ref> Larger land birds, such as [[bustard]]s, [[guineafowl]], [[ground hornbill]]s (''Bucorvus'' sp.) and [[ostrich]]es (''Struthio camelus''), may be taken when they come to water to drink but like most birds are seldom harassed and a minor part of the diet.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.frankfurnessresources.com/mabula/pages/Ostrich%20killed%20by%20croc.html |title=Ostrich killed by croc |author=Furness, Frank |publisher= Mabula Lodge South Africa |accessdate=2015}}</ref>


===Mammals===
===Mammals===
Considering the fact that crocodiles defecate in water, making it impossible for scat analysis, and that the examination of stomach contents is fairly difficult for which capturing of the animals individually is required for analysis, it is hard to say anything about the percentage of any specific food item in a crocodile's diet. In addition, as an animal that feeds rarely, sometimes only a couple of times in a year, even the individual stomach content examinations sometimes prove to be unsuccessful. However, it is known that as crocodiles grow, it becomes difficult to rely solely on small and agile food items such as fish, this causes a shift in the diet as the animal matures, for energy conservation purposes, as in other predators.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/> Nonetheless, starting at around {{convert|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, they can become capable mammalian hunters and their ability to overpower a wide range of mammals increases in sync with their size. Crocodiles of less than {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} may take a variety of medium–sized mammals of up to equal their own mass, including various [[monkey]]s, [[duiker]]s,<ref name="Mammals of Africa">{{cite book |authors=Kingdon, J., Happold, D., Butynski, T., Hoffmann, M., Happold, M., & Kalina, J. |year=2013 |title=Mammals of Africa |volume=1 |publisher=A&C Black}}</ref> [[rodent]]s, [[hare]]s, [[pangolin]]s,<ref name= Cott/> [[bat]]s, [[dik-dik]], [[suni]] (''Neotragus moschatus''),<ref name= Schutze>Schütze, H. (2002). ''Field Guide to the Mammals of the Kruger National Park''. Struik.</ref> [[oribi]] (''Ourebia ourebi'')<ref>{{cite journal|author=Tekalign, W., & Bekele, A. |url=http://www.ajol.info/index.php/sinet/article/view/78229|year=2011|title= Population Status, Foraging and Diurnal Activity Patterns of Oribi (''Ourebia ourebi'') in Senkele Swayne's Hartebeest Sanctuary, Ethiopia|journal=SINET: Ethiopian Journal of Science|volume=34|issue=1|pages= 29–38}}</ref> and other small [[ungulate]]s up to the size of a [[Thomson's gazelle]] (''Eudorcas thomsonii'').<ref name= Beard/>
Considering the fact that crocodiles defecate in water, making it impossible for scat analysis, and that the examination of stomach contents is fairly difficult for which capturing of the animals individually is required for analysis, it is hard to say anything about the percentage of any specific food item in a crocodile's diet. In addition, as an animal that feeds rarely, sometimes only a couple of times in a year, even the individual stomach content examinations sometimes prove to be unsuccessful. However, it is known that as crocodiles grow, it becomes difficult to rely solely on small and agile food items such as fish, this causes a shift in the diet as the animal matures, for energy conservation purposes, as in other predators.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Graham/> Nonetheless, starting at around {{convert|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, they can become capable mammalian hunters and their ability to overpower a wide range of mammals increases in sync with their size. Crocodiles of less than {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} may take a variety of medium–sized mammals of up to equal their own mass, including various [[monkey]]s, [[duiker]]s,<ref name="Mammals of Africa">{{cite book |=Kingdon, J. Happold, D. Butynski, T. Hoffmann, M. Happold, M. Kalina, J. |year=2013 |title=Mammals of Africa |volume=1 |publisher=A&C Black}}</ref> [[rodent]]s, [[hare]]s, [[pangolin]]s,<ref name= Cott/> [[bat]]s, [[dik-dik]], [[suni]] (''Neotragus moschatus''),<ref name= Schutze>Schütze, H. (2002). ''Field Guide to the Mammals of the Kruger National Park''. Struik.</ref> [[oribi]] (''Ourebia ourebi'')<ref>{{cite journal|author=Tekalign, W.Bekele, A. |url=http://www.ajol.info/index.php/sinet/article/view/78229|year=2011|title= Population Status, Foraging and Diurnal Activity Patterns of Oribi (''Ourebia ourebi'') in Senkele Swayne's Hartebeest Sanctuary, Ethiopia|journal=SINET: Ethiopian Journal of Science|volume=34|issue=1|pages= 29–38}}</ref> and other small [[ungulate]]s up to the size of a [[Thomson's gazelle]] (''Eudorcas thomsonii'').<ref name= Beard/>


Rodents and [[shrew]]s may enter the diet of juvenile crocodiles, i.e. {{convert|1|to|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, and become commonplace in sub-adult and small adult crocodiles. Species recorded include the [[Natal multimammate mouse]] (''Mastomys natalensis''), [[African marsh rat]] (''Dasymys incomtus''), [[common rufous-nosed rat]] (''Oenomys hypoxanthus'') and the [[savanna swamp shrew]] (''Crocidura longipes'').<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Wallace/> In many areas, the [[cane rat]]s are a particular favorite mammalian food for crocodiles, particularly the relatively large [[greater cane rat]] (''Thryonomys swinderianus''). In [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]], the latter species are the leading overall mammalian prey type for crocodiles and one Kenyan crocodile of {{convert|2.7|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length had 40 greater cane rats in its stomach.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>Fonck, H. (1910). ''Deutsch-Ost-Afrika: eine Schilderung deutscher Tropen nach 10 Wanderjahren''. Vossische. Berlin.</ref> [[Cape porcupine]]s (''Hystrix africaeaustralis'') are known to have been preyed on several times in [[Kruger National Park]], their quills apparently being an insufficient defense against the tough jaws and digestive system of crocodiles.<ref name= Grenard>Grenard, S. (1991). ''Handbook of alligators and crocodiles''. Malabar, FL: Krieger.</ref><ref name= Pienaar/> Small carnivores are readily taken opportunistically including both [[African clawless otter|African clawless]] (''Aonyx capensis'')<ref>{{cite journal|author=Larivière, S. |year=2001|title=''Aonyx capensis''|journal=Mammalian Species|volume=671|pages=1–6|url=http://www.science.smith.edu/msi/pdf/671_Aonyx_capensis.pdf|doi=10.1644/1545-1410(2001)671<0001:ac>2.0.co;2}}</ref> and [[spotted-necked otter]]s (''Hydrictis maculicollis''),<ref name= Guggisberg/> as well as [[water mongoose]] (''Atilax paludinosus''),<ref name= Cott/> [[African wildcat]]s (''Felis silvestris lybica'')<ref name= Cott/> and [[serval]]s (''Leptailurus serval'').<ref>{{cite journal|author=Geertsema, A. A. |year=1976|title= Impressions and observations of serval behavior in Tanzania, East Africa|journal=Mammalia|volume= 40|pages=13–19|url=http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewarticle.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fj$002fmamm.1976.40.issue-1$002fmamm.1976.40.1.13$002fmamm.1976.40.1.13.pdf?t:ac=j$002fmamm.1976.40.issue-1$002fmamm.1976.40.1.13$002fmamm.1976.40.1.13.xml|doi=10.1515/mamm.1976.40.1.13}}</ref>
Rodents and [[shrew]]s may enter the diet of juvenile crocodiles, i.e. {{convert|1|to|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, and become commonplace in sub-adult and small adult crocodiles. Species recorded include the [[Natal multimammate mouse]] (''Mastomys natalensis''), [[African marsh rat]] (''Dasymys incomtus''), [[common rufous-nosed rat]] (''Oenomys hypoxanthus'') and the [[savanna swamp shrew]] (''Crocidura longipes'').<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Wallace/> In many areas, the [[cane rat]]s are a particular favorite mammalian food for crocodiles, particularly the relatively large [[greater cane rat]] (''Thryonomys swinderianus''). In [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]], the latter species are the leading overall mammalian prey type for crocodiles and one Kenyan crocodile of {{convert|2.7|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length had 40 greater cane rats in its stomach.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>Fonck, H. (1910). ''Deutsch-Ost-Afrika: eine Schilderung deutscher Tropen nach 10 Wanderjahren''. Vossische. Berlin.</ref> [[Cape porcupine]]s (''Hystrix africaeaustralis'') are known to have been preyed on several times in [[Kruger National Park]], their quills apparently being an insufficient defense against the tough jaws and digestive system of crocodiles.<ref name= Grenard>Grenard, S. (1991). ''Handbook of alligators and crocodiles''. Malabar, FL: Krieger.</ref><ref name= Pienaar/> Small carnivores are readily taken opportunistically including both [[African clawless otter|African clawless]] (''Aonyx capensis'')<ref>{{cite journal|author=Larivière, S. |year=2001|title=''Aonyx capensis''|journal=Mammalian Species|volume=671|pages=1–6|url=http://www.science.smith.edu/msi/pdf/671_Aonyx_capensis.pdf|doi=10.1644/1545-1410(2001)671<0001:ac>2.0.co;2}}</ref> and [[spotted-necked otter]]s (''Hydrictis maculicollis''),<ref name= Guggisberg/> as well as [[water mongoose]] (''Atilax paludinosus''),<ref name= Cott/> [[African wildcat]]s (''Felis silvestris lybica'')<ref name= Cott/> and [[serval]]s (''Leptailurus serval'').<ref>{{cite journal|author=Geertsema, A. A. |year=1976|title= Impressions and observations of serval behavior in Tanzania, East Africa|journal=Mammalia|volume= 40|pages=13–19|url=http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewarticle.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fj$002fmamm.1976.40.issue-1$002fmamm.1976.40.1.13$002fmamm.1976.40.1.13.pdf?t:ac=j$002fmamm.1976.40.issue-1$002fmamm.1976.40.1.13$002fmamm.1976.40.1.13.xml|doi=10.1515/mamm.1976.40.1.13}}</ref>


Adult Nile crocodiles, i.e. at least {{convert|3.05|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, are [[apex predator]]s. While adults can and will consume nearly all types of prey consumed by the younger specimens, as adult crocodiles gain bulk they lose much of the necessary maneuverability to capture agile prey like fish nor are likely to meet their dietary needs by consuming small prey and may expel unnecessary amounts of energy, so take them secondarily to larger prey.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Pienaar/> Primates of various sizes may be taken by sub-adult or adult crocodiles. In some areas, some number of baboons are taken, such as in [[Okavango Delta]] where [[chacma baboon]]s (''Papio ursinus'') are eaten and [[Uganda]] where [[olive baboon]]s (''Papio anubis'') are taken.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Cheney, D. L., Seyfarth, R. M., Fischer, J., Beehner, J., Bergman, T., Johnson, S. E., & Silk, J. B. |title=Factors affecting reproduction and mortality among baboons in the Okavango Delta, Botswana|journal=International Journal of Primatology|volume=25|issue=2|pages=401|doi=10.1023/B:IJOP.0000019159.75573.13|url=http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~palombit/Cheney_et_al_2004.pdf|year=2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Rowell, T.E. |title=Forest living baboons in Uganda|journal=Journal of Zoology|volume=149|issue=3|pages=344|doi=10.1111/j.1469-7998.1966.tb04054.x|year=2009}}</ref> There are no records of them hunting [[ape]]s (other than humans) but based on a strong reluctance to cross waters with crocodiles and a violent reaction to the visual stimuli of crocodiles, it is thought that [[Common chimpanzee|chimpanzee]]s (''Pan troglodytes'') and [[Gorilla beringei|gorilla]]s (''Gorilla beringei'') consider Nile crocodiles a serious threat.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Klailova, M., Casanova, C., Henschel, P., Lee, P., Rovero, F., & Todd, A. |pmid=23363591|title= Non-human predator interactions with wild great apes in Africa and the use of camera traps to study their dynamics|journal=Folia Primatologica|volume=83|issue=3–6|pages=312–28|year=2012|doi=10.1159/000342143}}</ref> Few details are known about the dietary habits of Nile crocodiles living in [[Madagascar]], although they are considered potential predators of several [[lemur]] species.<ref>Small, E. (2013). Steven M. Goodman', Sheila O'Connor, and Olivier Langrand ''Field Museum of Natural History. Lemur Social Systems and Their Ecological Basis'', 51.</ref><ref>Goodman, S. M., O’Connor, S., & Langrand, O. (1993). "A review of predation on lemurs: implications for the evolution of social behavior in small, nocturnal primates", pp. 51–66 in ''Lemur social systems and their ecological basis''. Springer US.</ref> Other non-ungulate prey known to be attacked by Nile crocodiles includes [[aardvark]]s (''Orycteropus afer'')<ref>Knöthig, J. (2005). [http://www.tierseiten.com/roehrenzaehner/aardvark.pdf ''Biology of the Aardvark (Orycteropus afer)'']. Ruprecht-Karls-Universität, Heidelberg, Germany (MSc thesis).</ref> and [[African manatee]]s (''Trichechus senegalensis'').<ref>Dodman, T., Dagou Diop, N.M. & Khady, S. (eds.). (2008). ''Conservation Strategy for the West African Manatee''. UNEP, Nairobi, Kenya andWetlands International Africa, Dakar, Senegal.</ref>
Adult Nile crocodiles, i.e. at least {{convert|3.05|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, are [[apex predator]]s. While adults can and will consume nearly all types of prey consumed by the younger specimens, as adult crocodiles gain bulk they lose much of the necessary maneuverability to capture agile prey like fish nor are likely to meet their dietary needs by consuming small prey and may expel unnecessary amounts of energy, so take them secondarily to larger prey.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Pienaar/> Primates of various sizes may be taken by sub-adult or adult crocodiles. In some areas, some number of baboons are taken, such as in [[Okavango Delta]] where [[chacma baboon]]s (''Papio ursinus'') are eaten and [[Uganda]] where [[olive baboon]]s (''Papio anubis'') are taken.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Cheney, D. L.Seyfarth, R. M.Fischer, J.Beehner, J.Bergman, T.Johnson, S. E.Silk, J. B. |title=Factors affecting reproduction and mortality among baboons in the Okavango Delta, Botswana|journal=International Journal of Primatology|volume=25|issue=2|pages=401|doi=10.1023/B:IJOP.0000019159.75573.13|url=http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~palombit/Cheney_et_al_2004.pdf|year=2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Rowell, T.E. |title=Forest living baboons in Uganda|journal=Journal of Zoology|volume=149|issue=3|pages=344|doi=10.1111/j.1469-7998.1966.tb04054.x|year=2009}}</ref> There are no records of them hunting [[ape]]s (other than humans) but based on a strong reluctance to cross waters with crocodiles and a violent reaction to the visual stimuli of crocodiles, it is thought that [[Common chimpanzee|chimpanzee]]s (''Pan troglodytes'') and [[Gorilla beringei|gorilla]]s (''Gorilla beringei'') consider Nile crocodiles a serious threat.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Klailova, M.Casanova, C.Henschel, P.Lee, P.Rovero, F.Todd, A. |pmid=23363591|title= Non-human predator interactions with wild great apes in Africa and the use of camera traps to study their dynamics|journal=Folia Primatologica|volume=83|issue=3–6|pages=312–28|year=2012|doi=10.1159/000342143}}</ref> Few details are known about the dietary habits of Nile crocodiles living in [[Madagascar]], although they are considered potential predators of several [[lemur]] species.<ref>Small, E. (2013). Steven M. Goodman', Sheila O'Connor, and Olivier Langrand ''Field Museum of Natural History. Lemur Social Systems and Their Ecological Basis'', 51.</ref><ref>Goodman, S. M., O’Connor, S., & Langrand, O. (1993). "A review of predation on lemurs: implications for the evolution of social behavior in small, nocturnal primates", pp. 51–66 in ''Lemur social systems and their ecological basis''. Springer US.</ref> Other non-ungulate prey known to be attacked by Nile crocodiles includes [[aardvark]]s (''Orycteropus afer'')<ref>Knöthig, J. (2005). [http://www.tierseiten.com/roehrenzaehner/aardvark.pdf ''Biology of the Aardvark (Orycteropus afer)'']. Ruprecht-Karls-Universität, Heidelberg, Germany (MSc thesis).</ref> and [[African manatee]]s (''Trichechus senegalensis'').<ref>Dodman, T., Dagou Diop, N.M. & Khady, S. (eds.). (2008). ''Conservation Strategy for the West African Manatee''. UNEP, Nairobi, Kenya andWetlands International Africa, Dakar, Senegal.</ref>


[[File:Crocodile attack during Mara River crossing - frame 1 - Flickr - Lip Kee.jpg|thumb|[[Wildebeest]] crossing the [[Mara River]], [[Crocodile attack|attacked by crocodiles]]]]
[[File:Crocodile attack during Mara River crossing - frame 1 - Flickr - Lip Kee.jpg|thumb|[[Wildebeest]] crossing the [[Mara River]], [[Crocodile attack|attacked by crocodiles]]]]


Among the mammals, the bulk of the prey for adults are [[antelope]]s. In particular, the genus ''[[Kobus (antelope)|Kobus]]'' is often amongst the most vulnerable because it forages primarily in wetland areas and seeks to evade more prolific mammalian predators (such as [[hyena]]s, [[lion]]s, etc.) by traveling along waterways.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Pienaar/> In some cases in [[Kruger National Park]], antelope have been driven into water while being pursued by packs of [[African wild dog]]s (''Lycaon pictus''), who hunt by endurance engaging prey in a grueling chase until it is exhausted (a very successful hunting style), only to be killed by opportunistic crocodiles.<ref name= Stevenson-Hamilton/> While not as extensively aquatic as the ''Kobus'' genus, the [[reedbuck]]s and the [[impala]] (''Aepyceros melampus'') have both shown a partiality for grasslands adjoining wetlands and riparian zones and so are also very commonly recorded prey items. In [[Kruger National Park]], over the course of 22 years of discontinuous observation, 60% of the large game kills observed as perpetrated by crocodiles consisted of impala, while more than 15% of observed kills were made up of [[waterbuck]] (''Kobus ellipsiprymnus''), the largest of the ''Kobus'' genus at more than {{convert|200|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in weight.<ref name= Grenard/><ref name= Pienaar/> Elsewhere, the waterbuck appears to be the most significant mammalian prey for large adult crocodiles, such as in [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]] (although due to more sporadic general ungulate populations in those countries, ungulates are less common as prey than in some other countries) as well as in [[Hluhluwe–iMfolozi Park]], [[South Africa]].<ref name= Cott/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Melton, D. A., & Melton, C. |doi=10.1111/j.1365-2028.1982.tb00279.x|title= Condition and mortality of waterbuck (''Kobus ellipsiprymnus'') in the Umfolozi Game Reserve|journal=African Journal of Ecology|volume=20|issue=2|pages=89|year=1982}}</ref> Other antelopes recorded as prey including [[gazelle]]s,<ref name= Grenard/> [[Kéwel|bushbuck]] (''Tragelaphus scriptus''),<ref name= Pienaar/> [[sitatunga]] (''Tragelaphus spekii''),<ref name= Guggisberg/> [[Greater kudu|kudu]] (''Tragelaphus strepsiceros''),<ref>{{cite journal|author=Cronje, H. P., Reilly, B. K., & MacFadyen, I. D. |title=Natural mortality amoung &#91;sic&#93; four common ungulate species on Letaba Ranch, Limpopo Province, South Africa|journal=Koedoe|volume=45|doi=10.4102/koedoe.v45i1.12|year=2002}}</ref> [[steenbok]] (''Raphicerus campestris''),<ref>Schaller, G. B. (2009). ''The Serengeti lion: a study of predator-prey relations''. University of Chicago Press.</ref> [[Common eland|eland]] (''Taurotragus oryx''),<ref name= Grenard/> [[gemsbok]] (''Oryx gazella''),<ref name= Crocodilecentre>{{cite web |url= http://www.crocodilesoftheworld.co.uk/animals/crocodylus-niloticus.html |title=Nile Crocodile |publisher=Crocodiles of the World, Crocodile Conversation and Education Centre |accessdate=2015}}</ref> [[Sable antelope|sable]] (''Hippotragus niger'') and [[roan antelope]]s (''Hippotragus equinus''),<ref name= Crocodilecentre/> up to a half dozen types of [[duiker]],<ref name= Schutze/> [[Korrigum|topi]] (''Damaliscus lunatus''),<ref>Anthony, S. B. (2011). ''[http://repository.sustech.edu/bitstream/handle/123456789/6585/The%20feed%20and%20...%20.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y The feed and feeding Habits of Tiang (Damaliscus korrigrum) in the Sudd Region–Sudan]'' (Doctoral dissertation, Sudan University of Science and Technology).</ref> [[hartebeest]] (''Alcelaphus buselaphus'')<ref name= Guggisberg/> and both species of [[wildebeest]] (''Connochaetes'' sp.).<ref name="Mills and Biggs">{{cite journal|author=Mills, M. G. L., & Biggs, H. C. |year=1993|title= Prey apportionment and related ecological relationships between large carnivores in Kruger National Park|journal=Symposia of the Zoological Society of London|volume=65|pages= 253–268}}</ref>
Among the mammals, the bulk of the prey for adults are [[antelope]]s. In particular, the genus ''[[Kobus (antelope)|Kobus]]'' is often amongst the most vulnerable because it forages primarily in wetland areas and seeks to evade more prolific mammalian predators (such as [[hyena]]s, [[lion]]s, etc.) by traveling along waterways.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Pienaar/> In some cases in [[Kruger National Park]], antelope have been driven into water while being pursued by packs of [[African wild dog]]s (''Lycaon pictus''), who hunt by endurance engaging prey in a grueling chase until it is exhausted (a very successful hunting style), only to be killed by opportunistic crocodiles.<ref name= Stevenson-Hamilton/> While not as extensively aquatic as the ''Kobus'' genus, the [[reedbuck]]s and the [[impala]] (''Aepyceros melampus'') have both shown a partiality for grasslands adjoining wetlands and riparian zones and so are also very commonly recorded prey items. In [[Kruger National Park]], over the course of 22 years of discontinuous observation, 60% of the large game kills observed as perpetrated by crocodiles consisted of impala, while more than 15% of observed kills were made up of [[waterbuck]] (''Kobus ellipsiprymnus''), the largest of the ''Kobus'' genus at more than {{convert|200|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in weight.<ref name= Grenard/><ref name= Pienaar/> Elsewhere, the waterbuck appears to be the most significant mammalian prey for large adult crocodiles, such as in [[Uganda]] and [[Zambia]] (although due to more sporadic general ungulate populations in those countries, ungulates are less common as prey than in some other countries) as well as in [[Hluhluwe–iMfolozi Park]], [[South Africa]].<ref name= Cott/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Melton, D. A.Melton, C. |doi=10.1111/j.1365-2028.1982.tb00279.x|title= Condition and mortality of waterbuck (''Kobus ellipsiprymnus'') in the Umfolozi Game Reserve|journal=African Journal of Ecology|volume=20|issue=2|pages=89|year=1982}}</ref> Other antelopes recorded as prey including [[gazelle]]s,<ref name= Grenard/> [[Kéwel|bushbuck]] (''Tragelaphus scriptus''),<ref name= Pienaar/> [[sitatunga]] (''Tragelaphus spekii''),<ref name= Guggisberg/> [[Greater kudu|kudu]] (''Tragelaphus strepsiceros''),<ref>{{cite journal|author=Cronje, H. P.Reilly, B. K.MacFadyen, I. D. |title=Natural mortality amoung &#91;sic&#93; four common ungulate species on Letaba Ranch, Limpopo Province, South Africa|journal=Koedoe|volume=45|doi=10.4102/koedoe.v45i1.12|year=2002}}</ref> [[steenbok]] (''Raphicerus campestris''),<ref>Schaller, G. B. (2009). ''The Serengeti lion: a study of predator-prey relations''. University of Chicago Press.</ref> [[Common eland|eland]] (''Taurotragus oryx''),<ref name= Grenard/> [[gemsbok]] (''Oryx gazella''),<ref name= Crocodilecentre>{{cite web |url= http://www.crocodilesoftheworld.co.uk/animals/crocodylus-niloticus.html |title=Nile Crocodile |publisher=Crocodiles of the World, Crocodile Conversation and Education Centre |accessdate=2015}}</ref> [[Sable antelope|sable]] (''Hippotragus niger'') and [[roan antelope]]s (''Hippotragus equinus''),<ref name= Crocodilecentre/> up to a half dozen types of [[duiker]],<ref name= Schutze/> [[Korrigum|topi]] (''Damaliscus lunatus''),<ref>Anthony, S. B. (2011). ''[http://repository.sustech.edu/bitstream/handle/123456789/6585/The%20feed%20and%20...%20.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y The feed and feeding Habits of Tiang (Damaliscus korrigrum) in the Sudd Region–Sudan]'' (Doctoral dissertation, Sudan University of Science and Technology).</ref> [[hartebeest]] (''Alcelaphus buselaphus'')<ref name= Guggisberg/> and both species of [[wildebeest]] (''Connochaetes'' sp.).<ref name="Mills and Biggs">{{cite journal|author=Mills, M. G. L.Biggs, H. C. |year=1993|title= Prey apportionment and related ecological relationships between large carnivores in Kruger National Park|journal=Symposia of the Zoological Society of London|volume=65|pages= 253–268}}</ref>


Other ungulates are taken by Nile crocodile more or less opportunistically. These may include [[Grévy's zebra|Grévy's]] (''Equus grevyi'')<ref>Moehlman, P. D. R. (2002). ''[http://www.equids.org/docs/Moehlman_02_Low.pdf Equids: zebras, asses, and horses: status survey and conservation action plan]''. IUCN.</ref> and [[plains zebra]]s (''Equus quagga''),<ref>Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 2004. ''Encyclopedia of the Aquatic World''. New York: Marshall Cavendish.</ref> [[pygmy hippopotamus]] (''Choeropsis liberiensis''),<ref>Eltringham, S. K. (1999). ''The hippos: natural history and conservation''. Princeton University Press.</ref> [[warthog]]s (''Phacochoerus africanus''),<ref name= Guggisberg/> [[bushpig]]s (''Potamochoerus larvatus'')<ref name= Pienaar/> and [[red river hog]]s (''Potamochoerus porcus'').<ref name= Cott/> In [[Maasai Mara]], [[Tanzania]], large crocodiles congregate at river crossings utilized by migrating herds of Burchell’s zebras and [[blue wildebeest]]s (''Connochaetes taurinus''), picking off hundreds of these large ungulates annually.<ref>Kennedy, A. S., & Kennedy, V. (2013). ''[https://books.google.com/books?isbn=1400844916 Animals of the Masai Mara]''. Princeton University Press.</ref> All domesticated ungulates and pet animals will on occasion be hunted by Nile crocodiles, up to the size of [[dromedary camel]]s (''Camelus dromedarius'')<ref>{{cite journal | author = Owen T. R. H. | year = 1951 | title = Notes on the feeding and other habits of the crocodile | url = | journal = Sudan Wild Life and Sport | volume = 2 | issue = 2| pages = 33–5 }}</ref> and [[cattle]] (''Bos taurus'')<ref name= Aust>{{cite journal|author=Aust, P., Boyle, B., Fergusson, R., & Coulson, T.|title=The impact of Nile crocodiles on rural livelihoods in northeastern Namibia|journal=South African Journal of Wildlife Research|volume=39|pages=57|doi=10.3957/056.039.0107|year=2009}}</ref> In [[Tanzania]], up to 54 head of cattle may be lost to crocodiles annually, increasing the human-crocodile conflict level. [[Goat]]s (''Capra aegagrus hircus''), [[donkey]]s (''Equus africanus asinus'') and [[dog]]s (''Canis lupus familiaris'') may also rank amongst the most regularly recorded domesticated animals to be taken by Nile crocodiles.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite journal | author = Baldus R.D. | year = 2005 | title = Community in Tanzania to Harvest Problem Crocodiles | url = | journal = African Indaba e-Newsletter | volume = 3 | issue = 3| page = 20 }}</ref>
Other ungulates are taken by Nile crocodile more or less opportunistically. These may include [[Grévy's zebra|Grévy's]] (''Equus grevyi'')<ref>Moehlman, P. D. R. (2002). ''[http://www.equids.org/docs/Moehlman_02_Low.pdf Equids: zebras, asses, and horses: status survey and conservation action plan]''. IUCN.</ref> and [[plains zebra]]s (''Equus quagga''),<ref>Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 2004. ''Encyclopedia of the Aquatic World''. New York: Marshall Cavendish.</ref> [[pygmy hippopotamus]] (''Choeropsis liberiensis''),<ref>Eltringham, S. K. (1999). ''The hippos: natural history and conservation''. Princeton University Press.</ref> [[warthog]]s (''Phacochoerus africanus''),<ref name= Guggisberg/> [[bushpig]]s (''Potamochoerus larvatus'')<ref name= Pienaar/> and [[red river hog]]s (''Potamochoerus porcus'').<ref name= Cott/> In [[Maasai Mara]], [[Tanzania]], large crocodiles congregate at river crossings utilized by migrating herds of Burchell’s zebras and [[blue wildebeest]]s (''Connochaetes taurinus''), picking off hundreds of these large ungulates annually.<ref>Kennedy, A. S., & Kennedy, V. (2013). ''[https://books.google.com/books?isbn=1400844916 Animals of the Masai Mara]''. Princeton University Press.</ref> All domesticated ungulates and pet animals will on occasion be hunted by Nile crocodiles, up to the size of [[dromedary camel]]s (''Camelus dromedarius'')<ref>{{cite journal | author = Owen T. R. H. | year = 1951 | title = Notes on the feeding and other habits of the crocodile | url = | journal = Sudan Wild Life and Sport | volume = 2 | issue = 2| pages = 33–5 }}</ref> and [[cattle]] (''Bos taurus'')<ref name= Aust>{{cite journal|author=Aust, P.Boyle, B.Fergusson, R.Coulson, T.|title=The impact of Nile crocodiles on rural livelihoods in northeastern Namibia|journal=South African Journal of Wildlife Research|volume=39|pages=57|doi=10.3957/056.039.0107|year=2009}}</ref> In [[Tanzania]], up to 54 head of cattle may be lost to crocodiles annually, increasing the human-crocodile conflict level. [[Goat]]s (''Capra aegagrus hircus''), [[donkey]]s (''Equus africanus asinus'') and [[dog]]s (''Canis lupus familiaris'') may also rank amongst the most regularly recorded domesticated animals to be taken by Nile crocodiles.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite journal | author = Baldus R.D. | year = 2005 | title = Community in Tanzania to Harvest Problem Crocodiles | url = | journal = African Indaba e-Newsletter | volume = 3 | issue = 3| page = 20 }}</ref>


Particularly large adults, on occasion, take on even larger prey, such as [[giraffe]] (''Giraffa camelopardalis'')<ref name= Pienaar/><ref name="philadelphiazoo.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.philadelphiazoo.org/zoo/Meet-Our-Animals/Reptiles/Crocodiles-and-Alligators/Nile-crocodile.htm |title=Nile crocodile |publisher=Philadelphiazoo.org |date=2003-07-25 |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref> [[Cape buffalo]] (''Syncerus caffer'')<ref name= Pienaar/><ref name="philadelphiazoo.org"/> and young [[African bush elephant]]s (''Loxodonta africana'').<ref>{{cite book |last=Macdonald |first=David |year=2001 |title=The new encyclopedia of mammals |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780198508236}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.switcheroozoo.com/profiles/africanelephant.htm |title=African Elephant – Animal Facts |publisher=Switcheroozoo.com |date= |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref> Even heavier prey, such as [[black rhinoceros]] (''Diceros bicornis''), have been killed by crocodiles. In one case in the [[Tana River (Kenya)|Tana River]] of [[Kenya]], as observed by Max Fleishmann (communicated via letter to [[Theodore Roosevelt]]), a crocodile was able to bring down one of these huge herbivores by the help of muddy bank terrain, the adult female rhino’s poor decision to enter deeper water rather than retreat to land and finally having been joined in drowning the animal by one to two other crocodiles.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>Selous, F. C. (1908). African nature notes and reminiscences. ''Galago''.</ref> An additional case of predation on an adult black rhino was reportedly observed in northern [[Zambia]].<ref name= Guggisberg/> A bull giraffe who lost his footing on a river bank in [[Kruger National Park]] was seen to be killed by a large crocodile, while in another case there a healthy bull buffalo was seen to be overpowered and killed by an average sized adult male crocodile measuring {{convert|4.25|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} after a massive struggle, an incident less commonly seen at this size.<ref name= Graham/><ref name= Pienaar/> Since crocodiles are solitary hunters, the Nile crocodile is the only predator in Africa known to attack full grown buffaloes alone, compared to the preferred pride attack method of lions.<ref>Notling, M. (2013) ''African Safari Journal and Field Guide''. Global Travel Publishers, {{ISBN|093989517X}}.</ref>
Particularly large adults, on occasion, take on even larger prey, such as [[giraffe]] (''Giraffa camelopardalis'')<ref name= Pienaar/><ref name="philadelphiazoo.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.philadelphiazoo.org/zoo/Meet-Our-Animals/Reptiles/Crocodiles-and-Alligators/Nile-crocodile.htm |title=Nile crocodile |publisher=Philadelphiazoo.org |date=2003-07-25 |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref> [[Cape buffalo]] (''Syncerus caffer'')<ref name= Pienaar/><ref name="philadelphiazoo.org"/> and young [[African bush elephant]]s (''Loxodonta africana'').<ref>{{cite book |last=Macdonald |first=David |year=2001 |title=The new encyclopedia of mammals |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780198508236}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.switcheroozoo.com/profiles/africanelephant.htm |title=African Elephant – Animal Facts |publisher=Switcheroozoo.com |date= |accessdate=2013-04-25}}</ref> Even heavier prey, such as [[black rhinoceros]] (''Diceros bicornis''), have been killed by crocodiles. In one case in the [[Tana River (Kenya)|Tana River]] of [[Kenya]], as observed by Max Fleishmann (communicated via letter to [[Theodore Roosevelt]]), a crocodile was able to bring down one of these huge herbivores by the help of muddy bank terrain, the adult female rhino’s poor decision to enter deeper water rather than retreat to land and finally having been joined in drowning the animal by one to two other crocodiles.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>Selous, F. C. (1908). African nature notes and reminiscences. ''Galago''.</ref> An additional case of predation on an adult black rhino was reportedly observed in northern [[Zambia]].<ref name= Guggisberg/> A bull giraffe who lost his footing on a river bank in [[Kruger National Park]] was seen to be killed by a large crocodile, while in another case there a healthy bull buffalo was seen to be overpowered and killed by an average sized adult male crocodile measuring {{convert|4.25|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} after a massive struggle, an incident less commonly seen at this size.<ref name= Graham/><ref name= Pienaar/> Since crocodiles are solitary hunters, the Nile crocodile is the only predator in Africa known to attack full grown buffaloes alone, compared to the preferred pride attack method of lions.<ref>Notling, M. (2013) ''African Safari Journal and Field Guide''. Global Travel Publishers, {{ISBN|093989517X}}.</ref>
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On average, sexual maturity is obtained from 12 to 16 years of age.<ref name=lthesis/> For males, the onset of [[sexual maturity]] occurs when they are about {{convert|3.3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} long and mass of {{convert|155|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, being fairly consistent.<ref>Loveridge, J. P., & Blake, D. K. (1972). Techniques in the immobilisation and handling of the Nile crocodile, ''Crocodylus niloticus''. ''National Museums and Monuments of Rhodesia''.</ref> On the other hand, that for females is rather more variable, and may be indicative of the health of a regional population based on size at sexual maturity. On average, according to Cott (1961), female sexual maturity occurs when they reach {{convert|2.2|to|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length.<ref name= Cott/> Similarly, a wide range of studies from southern Africa found that the average length for females at the onset of sexual maturity was {{convert|2.33|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Bourquin>Bourquin, S. L. (2008). [http://scholar.sun.ac.za/handle/10019.1/1281 The population ecology of the Nile Crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') in the Panhandle Region of the Okavango Delta, Botswana]. Doctoral dissertation. Stellenbosch University.</ref> However, stunted sexual maturity appears to occur in populations at opposite extremes, both where crocodiles are thought to be overpopulated and where they are overly reduced to heavy hunting, sometimes with females laying eggs when they measure as small as {{convert|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} although it is questionable whether such clutches would bear healthy hatchlings.<ref name= Beard/><ref name="Bishop"/>
On average, sexual maturity is obtained from 12 to 16 years of age.<ref name=lthesis/> For males, the onset of [[sexual maturity]] occurs when they are about {{convert|3.3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} long and mass of {{convert|155|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, being fairly consistent.<ref>Loveridge, J. P., & Blake, D. K. (1972). Techniques in the immobilisation and handling of the Nile crocodile, ''Crocodylus niloticus''. ''National Museums and Monuments of Rhodesia''.</ref> On the other hand, that for females is rather more variable, and may be indicative of the health of a regional population based on size at sexual maturity. On average, according to Cott (1961), female sexual maturity occurs when they reach {{convert|2.2|to|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length.<ref name= Cott/> Similarly, a wide range of studies from southern Africa found that the average length for females at the onset of sexual maturity was {{convert|2.33|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Bourquin>Bourquin, S. L. (2008). [http://scholar.sun.ac.za/handle/10019.1/1281 The population ecology of the Nile Crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') in the Panhandle Region of the Okavango Delta, Botswana]. Doctoral dissertation. Stellenbosch University.</ref> However, stunted sexual maturity appears to occur in populations at opposite extremes, both where crocodiles are thought to be overpopulated and where they are overly reduced to heavy hunting, sometimes with females laying eggs when they measure as small as {{convert|1.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} although it is questionable whether such clutches would bear healthy hatchlings.<ref name= Beard/><ref name="Bishop"/>


According to Bourquin (2008), the average breeding female in southern Africa is between {{convert|3|and|3.6|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Bourquin/> Earlier studies support that breeding is often inconsistent in females less than {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and clutch size is smaller, a female at {{convert|2.75|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} reportedly never lays more than 35 eggs, while a female measuring {{convert|3.64|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} can expect a clutch of up to 95 eggs.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> In "stunted" newly mature females from [[Lake Turkana]] measuring {{convert|1.83|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, the average clutch size was only 15.<ref name= Graham/><ref name= Beard/> Graham and Beard (1968) hypothesized that, while females do continue to grow as do males throughout life, that past a certain age and size that females much over {{convert|3.2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length in [[Lake Turkana]] no longer breed (supported by the physiology of the females examined here); however, subsequent studies in [[Botswana]] and [[South Africa]] have found evidence of nesting females at least {{convert|4.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length.<ref name= Beard/><ref name= Bourquin/><ref name= Swanepoel>{{cite journal|author=Swanepoel, D.G.J., Ferguson, N.S., & Perrin, M.R. |title= Nesting ecology of Nile crocodiles (''Crocodylus niloticus'') in the Olifants River, Kruger National Park|journal= Koedoe|volume= 43|issue= 2|doi=10.4102/koedoe.v43i2.197|year= 2000}}</ref> In the Olifants River in [[South Africa]], rainfall influenced the size of nesting females as only larger females (greater than {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}) nested during the driest years. Breeding females along the Olifants were overall larger than those in [[Zimbabwe]].<ref name= Swanepoel/> Most females nest only every two to three years while mature males may breed every year.<ref name= Kofron/><ref name= Bourquin/>
According to Bourquin (2008), the average breeding female in southern Africa is between {{convert|3|and|3.6|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name= Bourquin/> Earlier studies support that breeding is often inconsistent in females less than {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and clutch size is smaller, a female at {{convert|2.75|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} reportedly never lays more than 35 eggs, while a female measuring {{convert|3.64|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} can expect a clutch of up to 95 eggs.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> In "stunted" newly mature females from [[Lake Turkana]] measuring {{convert|1.83|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, the average clutch size was only 15.<ref name= Graham/><ref name= Beard/> Graham and Beard (1968) hypothesized that, while females do continue to grow as do males throughout life, that past a certain age and size that females much over {{convert|3.2|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length in [[Lake Turkana]] no longer breed (supported by the physiology of the females examined here); however, subsequent studies in [[Botswana]] and [[South Africa]] have found evidence of nesting females at least {{convert|4.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length.<ref name= Beard/><ref name= Bourquin/><ref name= Swanepoel>{{cite journal|author=Swanepoel, D.G.J.Ferguson, N.S.Perrin, M.R. |title= Nesting ecology of Nile crocodiles (''Crocodylus niloticus'') in the Olifants River, Kruger National Park|journal= Koedoe|volume= 43|issue= 2|doi=10.4102/koedoe.v43i2.197|year= 2000}}</ref> In the Olifants River in [[South Africa]], rainfall influenced the size of nesting females as only larger females (greater than {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}) nested during the driest years. Breeding females along the Olifants were overall larger than those in [[Zimbabwe]].<ref name= Swanepoel/> Most females nest only every two to three years while mature males may breed every year.<ref name= Kofron/><ref name= Bourquin/>


During the [[mating season]], males attract females by bellowing, slapping their snouts in the water, blowing water out of their noses, and making a variety of other noises. Among the larger males of a population, territorial clashes can lead to physical fighting between males especially if they are near the same size. Such clashes can be brutal affairs and can end in mortality but typically end with victor and loser still alive, the latter withdrawing into depth waters.<ref name= Pitman>{{cite journal|author=Pitman, C.R.S. |year=1941|title= About crocodiles|journal= Uganda Journal|volume= 8|issue=3|pages= 89–114}}</ref><ref name= Modha>{{cite journal|author=Modha, M. L. |year=1967|title= The ecology of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus laurenti'') on Central Island, Lake Rudolf|journal=African Journal of Ecology|volume= 5|issue=1|pages= 74–95|doi=10.1111/j.1365-2028.1967.tb00763.x}}</ref> Once a female has been attracted, the pair warble and rub the undersides of their jaws together. Compared to the tender behaviour of the female accepting the male, copulation is rather rough (even described as "rape"-like by Graham & Beard (1968)) in which the male often roars and pins the female underwater.<ref name= Beard/><ref name= Modha/> Cott noted little detectable discrepancy in the mating habits of Nile crocodiles and American alligators.<ref name= Cott/> In some regions, males have reportedly mated with several females, perhaps any female that enters his claimed territory, though in most regions annual monogamy appears to be most common in this species.<ref name= Alderton/>
During the [[mating season]], males attract females by bellowing, slapping their snouts in the water, blowing water out of their noses, and making a variety of other noises. Among the larger males of a population, territorial clashes can lead to physical fighting between males especially if they are near the same size. Such clashes can be brutal affairs and can end in mortality but typically end with victor and loser still alive, the latter withdrawing into depth waters.<ref name= Pitman>{{cite journal|author=Pitman, C.R.S. |year=1941|title= About crocodiles|journal= Uganda Journal|volume= 8|issue=3|pages= 89–114}}</ref><ref name= Modha>{{cite journal|author=Modha, M. L. |year=1967|title= The ecology of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus laurenti'') on Central Island, Lake Rudolf|journal=African Journal of Ecology|volume= 5|issue=1|pages= 74–95|doi=10.1111/j.1365-2028.1967.tb00763.x}}</ref> Once a female has been attracted, the pair warble and rub the undersides of their jaws together. Compared to the tender behaviour of the female accepting the male, copulation is rather rough (even described as "rape"-like by Graham & Beard (1968)) in which the male often roars and pins the female underwater.<ref name= Beard/><ref name= Modha/> Cott noted little detectable discrepancy in the mating habits of Nile crocodiles and American alligators.<ref name= Cott/> In some regions, males have reportedly mated with several females, perhaps any female that enters his claimed territory, though in most regions annual monogamy appears to be most common in this species.<ref name= Alderton/>


[[File:Nile crocodile eggs.jpg|thumb|left|Eggs]]
[[File:Nile crocodile eggs.jpg|thumb|left|Eggs]]
Females lay their [[egg (biology)|eggs]] about one to two months after mating. The [[nest]]ing season can fall in nearly every month of the year. In the northern extremes of the distribution (i.e. [[Somalia]] or [[Egypt]]), the nesting season is December through February while in the southern limits (i.e. [[South Africa]] or [[Tanzania]]) is in August through December. In crocodiles between these distributions egg-laying is in intermediate months, often focused between April and July. The dates correspond to about a month or two into the [[dry season]] within that given region. The benefits of this are presumably that nest flooding risk is considerably reduced at this time and the stage at which hatchlings begin their lives out of the egg falls roughly at the beginning of the [[rainy season]], when water levels are still relatively low but insect prey is in recovery. Preferred nesting locations are sandy [[shore]]s, dry [[stream bed]]s, or riverbanks. The female digs a hole a few metres from the bank and up to 0.5 m (20&nbsp;in) deep, and lays on average between 25 and 80 eggs. The number of eggs varies and depends partially on the size of the female.<ref name= Beard/> The most significant prerequisites to a nesting site are soil with the depth to permit the female to dig out the nest mound, shading to which mother can retire during the heat of the day and access to water.<ref name= Cott/> She finds a spot soft enough to allow her to dig a sideways slanted burrow. The mother Nile crocodile deposits the eggs in the terminal chamber and packs the sand or earth back over the nest pit. While, like all crocodilians, the Nile crocodile digs out a hole for a nest site, unlike most other modern crocodilians, female Nile crocodiles bury their eggs in sand or soil rather than incubate them in rotting vegetation.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Seymour, R. S., & Ackerman, R. A. |title= Adaptations to underground nesting in birds and reptiles|journal= American Zoologist|volume= 20|issue= 2|pages= 437|doi=10.1093/icb/20.2.437|year= 1980}}</ref> The female may micturate sporadically on the soil to keep it moist, which prevents soil from hardening excessively.<ref name= Guggisberg/> After burying the eggs, the female then guards them for the three-month incubation period. Nests have been recorded seldom in concealed positions such as under a bush or in grasses, but normally in open spots on the bank. It is thought the Nile crocodile cannot nest under heavy forest cover as can two of the three other African crocodiles because they do not utilize rotting leaves (a very effective method of producing heat for the eggs) and thus require sunlight on sand or soil the surface of the egg chamber to provide the appropriate warmth for embryo development. In [[South Africa]], the invasive plant ''[[Chromolaena odorata]]'' has recently exploded along banks traditionally used by crocodiles as nesting sites and caused nest failures by blocking sunlight over the nest chamber.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Leslie, A. J., & Spotila, J. R. |title=Alien plant threatens Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') breeding in Lake St. Lucia, South Africa|journal=Biological Conservation|volume=98|issue=3|pages=347|doi=10.1016/S0006-3207(00)00177-4|year=2001}}</ref>
Females lay their [[egg (biology)|eggs]] about one to two months after mating. The [[nest]]ing season can fall in nearly every month of the year. In the northern extremes of the distribution (i.e. [[Somalia]] or [[Egypt]]), the nesting season is December through February while in the southern limits (i.e. [[South Africa]] or [[Tanzania]]) is in August through December. In crocodiles between these distributions egg-laying is in intermediate months, often focused between April and July. The dates correspond to about a month or two into the [[dry season]] within that given region. The benefits of this are presumably that nest flooding risk is considerably reduced at this time and the stage at which hatchlings begin their lives out of the egg falls roughly at the beginning of the [[rainy season]], when water levels are still relatively low but insect prey is in recovery. Preferred nesting locations are sandy [[shore]]s, dry [[stream bed]]s, or riverbanks. The female digs a hole a few metres from the bank and up to 0.5 m (20&nbsp;in) deep, and lays on average between 25 and 80 eggs. The number of eggs varies and depends partially on the size of the female.<ref name= Beard/> The most significant prerequisites to a nesting site are soil with the depth to permit the female to dig out the nest mound, shading to which mother can retire during the heat of the day and access to water.<ref name= Cott/> She finds a spot soft enough to allow her to dig a sideways slanted burrow. The mother Nile crocodile deposits the eggs in the terminal chamber and packs the sand or earth back over the nest pit. While, like all crocodilians, the Nile crocodile digs out a hole for a nest site, unlike most other modern crocodilians, female Nile crocodiles bury their eggs in sand or soil rather than incubate them in rotting vegetation.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Seymour, R. S.Ackerman, R. A. |title= Adaptations to underground nesting in birds and reptiles|journal= American Zoologist|volume= 20|issue= 2|pages= 437|doi=10.1093/icb/20.2.437|year= 1980}}</ref> The female may micturate sporadically on the soil to keep it moist, which prevents soil from hardening excessively.<ref name= Guggisberg/> After burying the eggs, the female then guards them for the three-month incubation period. Nests have been recorded seldom in concealed positions such as under a bush or in grasses, but normally in open spots on the bank. It is thought the Nile crocodile cannot nest under heavy forest cover as can two of the three other African crocodiles because they do not utilize rotting leaves (a very effective method of producing heat for the eggs) and thus require sunlight on sand or soil the surface of the egg chamber to provide the appropriate warmth for embryo development. In [[South Africa]], the invasive plant ''[[Chromolaena odorata]]'' has recently exploded along banks traditionally used by crocodiles as nesting sites and caused nest failures by blocking sunlight over the nest chamber.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Leslie, A. J.Spotila, J. R. |title=Alien plant threatens Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') breeding in Lake St. Lucia, South Africa|journal=Biological Conservation|volume=98|issue=3|pages=347|doi=10.1016/S0006-3207(00)00177-4|year=2001}}</ref>


When Nile crocodiles have been entirely free from disturbance in the past, they may nest gregariously with the nest lying so close together that after hatching time the rims of craters are almost contiguous. These communal nesting sites are not known to exist today, perhaps being most recently recorded at [[Ntoroko|Ntoroko peninsula]], [[Uganda]] where two such sites remaining until 1952. In one area, 17 craters were found in an area of {{convert|25|x|22|yd|ft|abbr=on}}, in another 24 in an area of {{convert|26|x|24|yd|ft|abbr=on}}. Communal nesting areas also reported from [[Lake Victoria]] (up until the 1930s) and also in the 20th century at [[Rahad River]], [[Lake Turkana]] and [[Malawi]].<ref name= Cott/><ref>Adamson, J. (1956). Höhnel Island (South Island) in Lake Rudolf. ''Geographical Journal'' 478–482.</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Grabham, G. W. |title= A Crocodile's Nest|journal= Nature|volume= 80|issue= 2056|pages= 96|doi=10.1038/080096a0|bibcode=1909Natur..80...96G|year= 1909}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Mitchell, B. L. |year=1946|title= A naturalist in Nyasaland|journal=Nyasaland Agricultural Quarterly Journal|volume=6|pages= 1–47}}</ref> The behaviour of the female Nile crocodile is considered unpredictable and may be driven by the regional extent of prior human disturbance and human persecution rather than natural variability. In some areas, the mother crocodiles will only leave the nest if she needs to cool off ([[thermoregulation]]) by taking a quick dip or seeking out a patch of shade.<ref name= Guggisberg/> Females will not leave nest site even if rocks throw at her back and several authors note her trance-like state while standing near nest, similar to crocodiles in aestivation but not like any other stage in their life-cycle. In such a trance, some mother Nile crocodiles may show no discernable reaction even if pelted with stones.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> At other times, the female will fiercely attack anything approaching their eggs, sometimes joined by another crocodile which may be the sire of the young.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>Pooley, T. (1982). ''Discoveries of a Crocodile Man''. 1st edition. William Collins Sons & Co Ltd, Johannesburg.</ref> In other areas, the nesting female may disappear upon potential disturbance which may allow the presence of both the female and her buried nest to escape unwanted detection by predators.<ref name= Kofron/><ref name= Beard/> Despite the attentive care of both parents, the nests are often raided by [[human]]s and [[monitor lizard]]s or other animals while she is temporarily absent.<ref>Trutnau, L. & Sommerland, R. (2006). ''Crocodilians: Their Natural History and Captive Husbandry''. 1 edition. Brahm, A.S., Frankfurt.</ref>
When Nile crocodiles have been entirely free from disturbance in the past, they may nest gregariously with the nest lying so close together that after hatching time the rims of craters are almost contiguous. These communal nesting sites are not known to exist today, perhaps being most recently recorded at [[Ntoroko|Ntoroko peninsula]], [[Uganda]] where two such sites remaining until 1952. In one area, 17 craters were found in an area of {{convert|25|x|22|yd|ft|abbr=on}}, in another 24 in an area of {{convert|26|x|24|yd|ft|abbr=on}}. Communal nesting areas also reported from [[Lake Victoria]] (up until the 1930s) and also in the 20th century at [[Rahad River]], [[Lake Turkana]] and [[Malawi]].<ref name= Cott/><ref>Adamson, J. (1956). Höhnel Island (South Island) in Lake Rudolf. ''Geographical Journal'' 478–482.</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Grabham, G. W. |title= A Crocodile's Nest|journal= Nature|volume= 80|issue= 2056|pages= 96|doi=10.1038/080096a0|bibcode=1909Natur..80...96G|year= 1909}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Mitchell, B. L. |year=1946|title= A naturalist in Nyasaland|journal=Nyasaland Agricultural Quarterly Journal|volume=6|pages= 1–47}}</ref> The behaviour of the female Nile crocodile is considered unpredictable and may be driven by the regional extent of prior human disturbance and human persecution rather than natural variability. In some areas, the mother crocodiles will only leave the nest if she needs to cool off ([[thermoregulation]]) by taking a quick dip or seeking out a patch of shade.<ref name= Guggisberg/> Females will not leave nest site even if rocks throw at her back and several authors note her trance-like state while standing near nest, similar to crocodiles in aestivation but not like any other stage in their life-cycle. In such a trance, some mother Nile crocodiles may show no discernable reaction even if pelted with stones.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/> At other times, the female will fiercely attack anything approaching their eggs, sometimes joined by another crocodile which may be the sire of the young.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>Pooley, T. (1982). ''Discoveries of a Crocodile Man''. 1st edition. William Collins Sons & Co Ltd, Johannesburg.</ref> In other areas, the nesting female may disappear upon potential disturbance which may allow the presence of both the female and her buried nest to escape unwanted detection by predators.<ref name= Kofron/><ref name= Beard/> Despite the attentive care of both parents, the nests are often raided by [[human]]s and [[monitor lizard]]s or other animals while she is temporarily absent.<ref>Trutnau, L. & Sommerland, R. (2006). ''Crocodilians: Their Natural History and Captive Husbandry''. 1 edition. Brahm, A.S., Frankfurt.</ref>


At a reported incubation period of about 90 days, the stage is notably shorter than that of the [[American alligator]] (110–120 days) but slightly longer than that of the [[mugger crocodile]].<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Pitman/> Nile crocodiles have [[temperature-dependent sex determination]] (TSD), which means the sex of their hatchlings is determined not by genetics as is the case in mammals and birds, but by the average [[temperature]] during the middle third of their incubation period. If the temperature inside the nest is below 31.7&nbsp;°C (89.1&nbsp;°F), or above 34.5&nbsp;°C (94.1&nbsp;°F), the offspring will be female. Males can only be born if the temperature is within that narrow range.<ref>{{cite journal | author = Webb G.J.W., Cooper-Preston H. | year = 1989 | title = Effects of Incubation Temperature on Crocodiles and the Evolution of Reptilian Oviparity | url = | journal = American Zoologist | volume = 29 | issue = 3| pages = 953–971 | doi=10.1093/icb/29.3.953}}</ref> The hatchlings start to make a high-pitched chirping noise before hatching, which is the signal for the mother to rip open the nest.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Pooley, A. C. |title= Nest opening response of the Nile crocodile ''Crocodylus niloticus''|journal= Journal of Zoology|volume= 182|pages= 17|doi=10.1111/j.1469-7998.1977.tb04137.x|year= 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author1=Vergne, A. L. |author2=Avril, A. |author3=Martin, S. |author4=Mathevon, N. |title=Parent–offspring communication in the Nile crocodile ''Crocodylus niloticus'': do newborns' calls show an individual signature? |journal=Naturwissenschaften |volume=94 |issue=1 |pages=49–54 |pmid=17106675|year=2007 |doi=10.1007/s00114-006-0156-4 }}</ref> It is thought to be either difficult to impossible for hatchlings to escape the nest burrow without assistance, as the surface may become very heavy and packed above them.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Beard/> The mother crocodile may pick up the eggs in her mouth, and roll them between their [[tongue]] and the upper [[palate]] to help crack the shell and release her offspring. Once the eggs hatch, the female may lead the hatchlings to water, or even carry them there in her mouth, as female [[American alligator#Reproduction|American alligator]]s have been observed doing.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/>
At a reported incubation period of about 90 days, the stage is notably shorter than that of the [[American alligator]] (110–120 days) but slightly longer than that of the [[mugger crocodile]].<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Pitman/> Nile crocodiles have [[temperature-dependent sex determination]] (TSD), which means the sex of their hatchlings is determined not by genetics as is the case in mammals and birds, but by the average [[temperature]] during the middle third of their incubation period. If the temperature inside the nest is below 31.7&nbsp;°C (89.1&nbsp;°F), or above 34.5&nbsp;°C (94.1&nbsp;°F), the offspring will be female. Males can only be born if the temperature is within that narrow range.<ref>{{cite journal | author = Webb G.J.W. Cooper-Preston H. | year = 1989 | title = Effects of Incubation Temperature on Crocodiles and the Evolution of Reptilian Oviparity | url = | journal = American Zoologist | volume = 29 | issue = 3| pages = 953–971 | doi=10.1093/icb/29.3.953}}</ref> The hatchlings start to make a high-pitched chirping noise before hatching, which is the signal for the mother to rip open the nest.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Pooley, A. C. |title= Nest opening response of the Nile crocodile ''Crocodylus niloticus''|journal= Journal of Zoology|volume= 182|pages= 17|doi=10.1111/j.1469-7998.1977.tb04137.x|year= 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author1=Vergne, A. L. |author2=Avril, A. |author3=Martin, S. |author4=Mathevon, N. |title=Parent–offspring communication in the Nile crocodile ''Crocodylus niloticus'': do newborns' calls show an individual signature? |journal=Naturwissenschaften |volume=94 |issue=1 |pages=49–54 |pmid=17106675|year=2007 |doi=10.1007/s00114-006-0156-4 }}</ref> It is thought to be either difficult to impossible for hatchlings to escape the nest burrow without assistance, as the surface may become very heavy and packed above them.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Beard/> The mother crocodile may pick up the eggs in her mouth, and roll them between their [[tongue]] and the upper [[palate]] to help crack the shell and release her offspring. Once the eggs hatch, the female may lead the hatchlings to water, or even carry them there in her mouth, as female [[American alligator#Reproduction|American alligator]]s have been observed doing.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/>


[[File:Juvenile Nile Crocodiles (14345392644).jpg|thumb|A grouping of yearling baby Nile crocodiles.]]
[[File:Juvenile Nile Crocodiles (14345392644).jpg|thumb|A grouping of yearling baby Nile crocodiles.]]
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===Natural mortality of young Nile crocodiles===
===Natural mortality of young Nile crocodiles===
An estimated 10% of eggs will survive to hatch and a mere 1% of young that hatch will successfully reach adulthood.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Beard/> The full range of causes for mortality of young Nile crocodiles is not well understood, as very young and small Nile crocodiles or well-concealed nests are only sporadically observed. Unseasonable flooding (during nesting which corresponds with the regional dry season) is not uncommon and has probably destroyed several nests, although statistical likelihood of such an event is not known.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/> The only aspect of mortality in this age range that is well studied is predation and this is most likely the primary cause of death while the saurians are still diminutive.<ref name= Somaweera>{{cite journal|author=Somaweera, R., Brien, M., & Shine, R. |title=The role of predation in shaping crocodilian natural history|journal=Herpetological Monographs|volume=27|pages=23|doi=10.1655/HERPMONOGRAPHS-D-11-00001|year=2013}}</ref> The single most virulent predator of nests is almost certainly the [[Nile monitor]]. This predator can destroy about 50% of studied Nile crocodile eggs on its own, often being successful (as are other nest predators) in light of the trance-like state that the mother crocodile enters while brooding or taking advantage of moments where she is distracted or needs to leave the nest. In comparison, [[perentie]]s (''Varanus giganteus'') (the Australian ecological equivalent of the Nile monitor) succeeds in depredating about 90% of [[freshwater crocodile]] (''Crocodylus johnsoni'') eggs and about 25% of saltwater crocodile nests.<ref name= Somaweera/> Mammalian predators can take nearly as heavy of a toll, especially large mongooses such the [[Egyptian mongoose]] (''Herpestes ichneumon'') in the north and the [[water mongoose]] in the south of crocodile’s range. Opportunistic mammals who attack Nile crocodile nests have included wild [[pig]]s, medium-sized wild [[cat]]s and [[baboon]] troops. Like Nile monitors, mammalian predators probably locate crocodile nests by scent as the padded-down mound is easy to miss visually.<ref name= Stevenson-Hamilton/><ref name= Somaweera/> [[Marabou stork]]s sometimes follow monitors to pirate crocodile eggs for themselves to consume, although can also dig out nests on their own with their massive, awl-like bills if they can visually discern the nest mound.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Somaweera/>
An estimated 10% of eggs will survive to hatch and a mere 1% of young that hatch will successfully reach adulthood.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Beard/> The full range of causes for mortality of young Nile crocodiles is not well understood, as very young and small Nile crocodiles or well-concealed nests are only sporadically observed. Unseasonable flooding (during nesting which corresponds with the regional dry season) is not uncommon and has probably destroyed several nests, although statistical likelihood of such an event is not known.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/> The only aspect of mortality in this age range that is well studied is predation and this is most likely the primary cause of death while the saurians are still diminutive.<ref name= Somaweera>{{cite journal|author=Somaweera, R.Brien, M.Shine, R. |title=The role of predation in shaping crocodilian natural history|journal=Herpetological Monographs|volume=27|pages=23|doi=10.1655/HERPMONOGRAPHS-D-11-00001|year=2013}}</ref> The single most virulent predator of nests is almost certainly the [[Nile monitor]]. This predator can destroy about 50% of studied Nile crocodile eggs on its own, often being successful (as are other nest predators) in light of the trance-like state that the mother crocodile enters while brooding or taking advantage of moments where she is distracted or needs to leave the nest. In comparison, [[perentie]]s (''Varanus giganteus'') (the Australian ecological equivalent of the Nile monitor) succeeds in depredating about 90% of [[freshwater crocodile]] (''Crocodylus johnsoni'') eggs and about 25% of saltwater crocodile nests.<ref name= Somaweera/> Mammalian predators can take nearly as heavy of a toll, especially large mongooses such the [[Egyptian mongoose]] (''Herpestes ichneumon'') in the north and the [[water mongoose]] in the south of crocodile’s range. Opportunistic mammals who attack Nile crocodile nests have included wild [[pig]]s, medium-sized wild [[cat]]s and [[baboon]] troops. Like Nile monitors, mammalian predators probably locate crocodile nests by scent as the padded-down mound is easy to miss visually.<ref name= Stevenson-Hamilton/><ref name= Somaweera/> [[Marabou stork]]s sometimes follow monitors to pirate crocodile eggs for themselves to consume, although can also dig out nests on their own with their massive, awl-like bills if they can visually discern the nest mound.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Somaweera/>


Predators of Nile crocodiles eggs have ranged from [[insect]]s such as the [[red flour beetle]] (''Tribolium castaneum'') to predators as large and formidable as [[spotted hyena]]s (''Crocuta crocuta'').<ref name= Somaweera/> Unsurprisingly, once exposed to the elements as hatchlings, the young, small Nile crocodiles are even more vulnerable. Most of the predators of eggs also opportunistically eat young crocodiles, including monitors and marabous, plus almost all co-existing raptorial birds, including [[vulture]]s, [[eagle]]s, and large [[owl]]s and [[buzzard]]s. Many "large waders" are virulent predators of crocodile hatchlings, from dainty [[little egret]]s (''Egretta garzetta'') and compact [[hamerkop]]s (''Scopus umbretta'') to towering [[saddle-billed stork]]s (''Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis''), [[goliath heron]]s and [[shoebill]]s (''Balaeniceps rex''). Larger [[corvid]]s and some non-wading [[water bird]]s (i.e. [[pelican]]s) can also take some young Nile crocodiles. Mammalian carnivores take many hatchlings as well as large [[turtle]]s and [[snake]]s, large predatory freshwater fish, such as the [[Hydrocynus vittatus|African tigerfish]], the introduced [[largemouth bass]], and possibly [[bull shark]]s, when they enter river systems. When crocodile nests are dug out and the young placed in water by the mother, in areas such as [[Royal Natal National Park]] predators can essentially enter a feeding frenzy.<ref name= Somaweera/><ref>Cott, H.B. (1971). Parental care in Crocodilia, with special reference to ''Crocodylus niloticus''. Proc. 1st. work.</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author1=Berry, PSM |author2=Dowsett, RJ |title=Pel's Fishing Owl, ''Scotopelia peli'', preying on a small crocodile|journal=Ostrich|volume=74|pages=133|doi=10.2989/00306520309485380|year=2003}}</ref><ref>Hancock, James A.; Kushlan, James Anthony and Kahl, M. Philip (1992) ''Storks, Ibises and Spoonbills of the World''. Princeton University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-12-322730-0}}.</ref> It may take a few years before predation is no longer a major cause of mortality for young crocodiles. [[African fish eagle]]s can take crocodile hatchlings up to a few months of age and [[honey badger]]s can prey on yearlings. Once they reach their juvenile stage, very large [[African rock python]]s and [[big cat]]s remain as the only predatory threat to young crocodiles.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.honeybadger.com/diet.html |publisher=The Honey Badger |title=The Honey Badger Diet }}</ref> Perhaps no predator is more deadly to young Nile crocodiles than larger crocodiles of their own species, as, like most crocodilians, they are cannibalistic. This species may be particularly dangerous to their own kind considering the aggressive disposition they tend to bear.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name="Kofron2"/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Morpurgo, B., Gvaryahu, G., & Robinzon, B. |title=Aggressive behaviour in immature captive Nile crocodiles, ''Crocodylus niloticus'', in relation to feeding|journal=Physiology & Behavior|volume=53|issue=6|pages=1157–61|pmid=8346299|year=1993|doi=10.1016/0031-9384(93)90373-n}}</ref> While the mother crocodile will react aggressively towards potential predators and has been recorded chasing and occasionally catching and killing such interlopers into her range, due to the sheer number of animals who feed on baby crocodiles and the large number of hatchlings, she is more often than not unsuccessful at deflecting such predators.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Somaweera/>
Predators of Nile crocodiles eggs have ranged from [[insect]]s such as the [[red flour beetle]] (''Tribolium castaneum'') to predators as large and formidable as [[spotted hyena]]s (''Crocuta crocuta'').<ref name= Somaweera/> Unsurprisingly, once exposed to the elements as hatchlings, the young, small Nile crocodiles are even more vulnerable. Most of the predators of eggs also opportunistically eat young crocodiles, including monitors and marabous, plus almost all co-existing raptorial birds, including [[vulture]]s, [[eagle]]s, and large [[owl]]s and [[buzzard]]s. Many "large waders" are virulent predators of crocodile hatchlings, from dainty [[little egret]]s (''Egretta garzetta'') and compact [[hamerkop]]s (''Scopus umbretta'') to towering [[saddle-billed stork]]s (''Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis''), [[goliath heron]]s and [[shoebill]]s (''Balaeniceps rex''). Larger [[corvid]]s and some non-wading [[water bird]]s (i.e. [[pelican]]s) can also take some young Nile crocodiles. Mammalian carnivores take many hatchlings as well as large [[turtle]]s and [[snake]]s, large predatory freshwater fish, such as the [[Hydrocynus vittatus|African tigerfish]], the introduced [[largemouth bass]], and possibly [[bull shark]]s, when they enter river systems. When crocodile nests are dug out and the young placed in water by the mother, in areas such as [[Royal Natal National Park]] predators can essentially enter a feeding frenzy.<ref name= Somaweera/><ref>Cott, H.B. (1971). Parental care in Crocodilia, with special reference to ''Crocodylus niloticus''. Proc. 1st. work.</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author1=Berry, PSM |author2=Dowsett, RJ |title=Pel's Fishing Owl, ''Scotopelia peli'', preying on a small crocodile|journal=Ostrich|volume=74|pages=133|doi=10.2989/00306520309485380|year=2003}}</ref><ref>Hancock, James A.; Kushlan, James Anthony and Kahl, M. Philip (1992) ''Storks, Ibises and Spoonbills of the World''. Princeton University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-12-322730-0}}.</ref> It may take a few years before predation is no longer a major cause of mortality for young crocodiles. [[African fish eagle]]s can take crocodile hatchlings up to a few months of age and [[honey badger]]s can prey on yearlings. Once they reach their juvenile stage, very large [[African rock python]]s and [[big cat]]s remain as the only predatory threat to young crocodiles.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.honeybadger.com/diet.html |publisher=The Honey Badger |title=The Honey Badger Diet }}</ref> Perhaps no predator is more deadly to young Nile crocodiles than larger crocodiles of their own species, as, like most crocodilians, they are cannibalistic. This species may be particularly dangerous to their own kind considering the aggressive disposition they tend to bear.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name="Kofron2"/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Morpurgo, B.Gvaryahu, G.Robinzon, B. |title=Aggressive behaviour in immature captive Nile crocodiles, ''Crocodylus niloticus'', in relation to feeding|journal=Physiology & Behavior|volume=53|issue=6|pages=1157–61|pmid=8346299|year=1993|doi=10.1016/0031-9384(93)90373-n}}</ref> While the mother crocodile will react aggressively towards potential predators and has been recorded chasing and occasionally catching and killing such interlopers into her range, due to the sheer number of animals who feed on baby crocodiles and the large number of hatchlings, she is more often than not unsuccessful at deflecting such predators.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Somaweera/>


==Environmental status==
==Environmental status==
Conservation organizations have determined that the main threats to Nile crocodiles, in turn, are loss of habitat, [[pollution]], hunting, and human activities such as accidental entanglement in fishing nets.<ref name= Fergusson/> Though the Nile crocodile has been [[Hunting|hunt]]ed since ancient times,<ref>{{cite web|author=Sheridan, Paul |url=http://www.anecdotesfromantiquity.net/herodotus-on-how-to-catch-a-crocodile/ |title=Herodotus on How to Catch a Crocodile |publisher=anecdotesfromantiquity.net |date=2015-06-14 |accessdate=2015-06-25}}</ref> the advent of the readily available firearm made it much easier to kill these potential dangerous reptiles.<ref name= Guggisberg/> The species began to be hunted on a much larger scale from the 1940s to the 1960s, primarily for high-quality [[leather]], although also for meat with its purported curative properties. The population was severely depleted, and the species faced [[extinction]]. National [[law]]s, and international [[trade]] regulations have resulted in a resurgence in many areas, and the species as a whole is no longer wholly threatened with extinction. The status of Nile crocodiles was variable based on the regional prosperity and extent of conserved wetlands by the 1970s.<ref>Cott, H. B., & Pooley, A. C. (1971). ''The status of crocodiles in Africa''. Proceedings of the First Working group of the Crocodile Specialist Group, 2, 98.</ref> However, as is the case for many large animal species whether they are protected or not, persecution and poaching have continued apace and between the 1950s and 1980s, an estimated 3 million Nile crocodiles were slaughtered by humans for the leather trade.<ref name= Alderton/> In [[Lake Sibaya]], [[South Africa]], it was determined that in the 21st century, persecution continues as the direct cause for the inability of Nile crocodiles to recover after the leather trade last century.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Combrink, X. |author2=Korrûbel, J. L. |author3=Kyle, R. |author4=Taylor, R. |author5=Ross, P. |title=Evidence of a declining Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') population at Lake Sibaya, South Africa|journal=South African Journal of Wildlife Research|volume=41|issue=2|pages=145|doi=10.3957/056.041.0201|year=2011}}</ref> Recovery for the species appears quite gradual and few areas have recovered to bear crocodile populations, i.e. largely insufficient to produce sustainable populations of young crocodiles, on par with times prior to the peak of leather trading.<ref name= Bishop>{{cite journal|author=Bishop, J. M. |author2=Leslie, A. J. |author3=Bourquin, S. L. |author4=O’Ryan, C. |title=Reduced effective population size in an overexploited population of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'')|journal=Biological Conservation |volume=142 |issue=10 |pages=2335–2341 |doi=10.1016/j.biocon.2009.05.016|year=2009}}</ref> Crocodile 'protection programs' are artificial environments where crocodiles exist safely and without the threat of extermination from hunters.<ref name="Thorbjarnarson, J. B. 1992"/>
Conservation organizations have determined that the main threats to Nile crocodiles, in turn, are loss of habitat, [[pollution]], hunting, and human activities such as accidental entanglement in fishing nets.<ref name= Fergusson/> Though the Nile crocodile has been [[Hunting|hunt]]ed since ancient times,<ref>{{cite web|author=Sheridan, Paul |url=http://www.anecdotesfromantiquity.net/herodotus-on-how-to-catch-a-crocodile/ |title=Herodotus on How to Catch a Crocodile |publisher=anecdotesfromantiquity.net |date=2015-06-14 |accessdate=2015-06-25}}</ref> the advent of the readily available firearm made it much easier to kill these potential dangerous reptiles.<ref name= Guggisberg/> The species began to be hunted on a much larger scale from the 1940s to the 1960s, primarily for high-quality [[leather]], although also for meat with its purported curative properties. The population was severely depleted, and the species faced [[extinction]]. National [[law]]s, and international [[trade]] regulations have resulted in a resurgence in many areas, and the species as a whole is no longer wholly threatened with extinction. The status of Nile crocodiles was variable based on the regional prosperity and extent of conserved wetlands by the 1970s.<ref>Cott, H. B., & Pooley, A. C. (1971). ''The status of crocodiles in Africa''. Proceedings of the First Working group of the Crocodile Specialist Group, 2, 98.</ref> However, as is the case for many large animal species whether they are protected or not, persecution and poaching have continued apace and between the 1950s and 1980s, an estimated 3 million Nile crocodiles were slaughtered by humans for the leather trade.<ref name= Alderton/> In [[Lake Sibaya]], [[South Africa]], it was determined that in the 21st century, persecution continues as the direct cause for the inability of Nile crocodiles to recover after the leather trade last century.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Combrink, X. |author2=Korrûbel, J. L. |author3=Kyle, R. |author4=Taylor, R. |author5=Ross, P. |title=Evidence of a declining Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') population at Lake Sibaya, South Africa|journal=South African Journal of Wildlife Research|volume=41|issue=2|pages=145|doi=10.3957/056.041.0201|year=2011}}</ref> Recovery for the species appears quite gradual and few areas have recovered to bear crocodile populations, i.e. largely insufficient to produce sustainable populations of young crocodiles, on par with times prior to the peak of leather trading.<ref name= Bishop>{{cite journal|author=Bishop, J. M. |author2=Leslie, A. J. |author3=Bourquin, S. L. |author4=, C. |title=Reduced effective population size in an overexploited population of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'')|journal=Biological Conservation |volume=142 |issue=10 |pages=2335–2341 |doi=10.1016/j.biocon.2009.05.016|year=2009}}</ref> Crocodile 'protection programs' are artificial environments where crocodiles exist safely and without the threat of extermination from hunters.<ref name="Thorbjarnarson, J. B. 1992"/>
[[File:Djerba-crocodiles-kleche.jpg|thumb|right|Large adults in captivity, [[Djerba]]]]
[[File:Djerba-crocodiles-kleche.jpg|thumb|right|Large adults in captivity, [[Djerba]]]]
[[File:CrocoLoco-0008.jpg|thumb|left|Nile crocodiles in captivity, [[Israel]]]]
[[File:CrocoLoco-0008.jpg|thumb|left|Nile crocodiles in captivity, [[Israel]]]]
[[File:0002 Faunia in Madrid, Spain.JPG|thumb|right|Nile crocodile in captivity, [[Madrid]]]]
[[File:0002 Faunia in Madrid, Spain.JPG|thumb|right|Nile crocodile in captivity, [[Madrid]]]]


An estimated 250,000 to 500,000 individuals occur in the wild today. The [[IUCN Red List]] assesses the Nile crocodile as "Least Concern (LR/lc)".<ref name="iucn"/> The [[Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora|CITES]] lists the Nile crocodile under Appendix I (threatened with extinction) in most of its range; and under Appendix II (not threatened, but trade must be controlled) in the remainder, which either allows ranching or sets an annual quota of skins taken from the wild. The Nile crocodile is also widely distributed, with strong, documented populations in many countries in eastern and southern Africa, including [[Somalia]], [[Ethiopia]], [[Kenya]], [[Zambia]] and [[Zimbabwe]].<ref name="iucn"/><ref name= Fergusson/> This species is [[farmed]] for its meat and leather in some parts of [[Africa]]. Successful sustainable-yield programs focused on [[ranch]]ing crocodiles for their skins have been successfully implemented in this area, and even countries with quotas are moving toward ranching. In 1993, 80,000 Nile crocodile skins were produced, the majority from ranches in [[Zimbabwe]] and [[South Africa]].<ref name= Bishop/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Thorbjarnarson, J. |title=Crocodile tears and skins: international trade, economic constraints, and limits to the sustainable use of crocodilians|journal=Conservation Biology|volume=13|issue=3|pages=465|doi=10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.00011.x|year=1999}}</ref> Crocodile farming is one of the few burgeoning industries in Zimbabwe.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Revol, B. |title= Crocodile farming and conservation, the example of Zimbabwe|journal= Biodiversity and Conservation|volume= 4|issue= 3|pages= 299|doi=10.1007/BF00055975|year= 1995}}</ref> Unlike American alligator flesh, Nile crocodile meat is generally considered unappetizing although edible as tribes such as the [[Turkana people|Turkana]] may opportunistically feed on them. According to Graham and Beard (1968), Nile crocodile meat has an "indescribable" and unpleasant taste, greasy texture and a "repellent" smell.<ref name= Beard/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Hoffman, L. C., Fisher, P. P., & Sales, J. |title= Carcass and meat characteristics of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'')|journal= Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture|volume= 80|issue= 3|pages= 390|doi=10.1002/1097-0010(200002)80:3<390::AID-JSFA540>3.0.CO;2-G|year= 2000}}</ref>
An estimated 250,000 to 500,000 individuals occur in the wild today. The [[IUCN Red List]] assesses the Nile crocodile as "Least Concern (LR/lc)".<ref name="iucn"/> The [[Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora|CITES]] lists the Nile crocodile under Appendix I (threatened with extinction) in most of its range; and under Appendix II (not threatened, but trade must be controlled) in the remainder, which either allows ranching or sets an annual quota of skins taken from the wild. The Nile crocodile is also widely distributed, with strong, documented populations in many countries in eastern and southern Africa, including [[Somalia]], [[Ethiopia]], [[Kenya]], [[Zambia]] and [[Zimbabwe]].<ref name="iucn"/><ref name= Fergusson/> This species is [[farmed]] for its meat and leather in some parts of [[Africa]]. Successful sustainable-yield programs focused on [[ranch]]ing crocodiles for their skins have been successfully implemented in this area, and even countries with quotas are moving toward ranching. In 1993, 80,000 Nile crocodile skins were produced, the majority from ranches in [[Zimbabwe]] and [[South Africa]].<ref name= Bishop/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Thorbjarnarson, J. |title=Crocodile tears and skins: international trade, economic constraints, and limits to the sustainable use of crocodilians|journal=Conservation Biology|volume=13|issue=3|pages=465|doi=10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.00011.x|year=1999}}</ref> Crocodile farming is one of the few burgeoning industries in Zimbabwe.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Revol, B. |title= Crocodile farming and conservation, the example of Zimbabwe|journal= Biodiversity and Conservation|volume= 4|issue= 3|pages= 299|doi=10.1007/BF00055975|year= 1995}}</ref> Unlike American alligator flesh, Nile crocodile meat is generally considered unappetizing although edible as tribes such as the [[Turkana people|Turkana]] may opportunistically feed on them. According to Graham and Beard (1968), Nile crocodile meat has an "indescribable" and unpleasant taste, greasy texture and a "repellent" smell.<ref name= Beard/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Hoffman, L. C.Fisher, P. P.Sales, J. |title= Carcass and meat characteristics of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'')|journal= Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture|volume= 80|issue= 3|pages= 390|doi=10.1002/1097-0010(200002)80:3<390::AID-JSFA540>3.0.CO;2-G|year= 2000}}</ref>


The conservation situation is more grim in central and west Africa presumably for both the Nile and west African crocodiles. The crocodile population in this area is much more sparse, and has not been adequately surveyed. While the natural population in these areas may be lower due to a less-than-ideal environment and competition with [[sympatric]] [[slender-snouted crocodile|slender-snouted]] and [[dwarf crocodile]]s, extirpation may be a serious threat in some of these areas.<ref name= Fergusson/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Shirley, M. H., Oduro, W., & Beibro, H. Y. |title=Conservation status of crocodiles in Ghana and Côte-d'Ivoire, West Africa|journal=Oryx|volume=43|pages=136|doi=10.1017/S0030605309001586|year=2009}}</ref> At some point in the 20th century, the Nile crocodile appeared to have been extirpated as a breeding species from [[Egypt]], but has locally re-established in some areas such as the [[Aswan Dam]].<ref name= Alderton/> Additional factors are a loss of wetland habitats, which is addition to direct dredging, damming and irrigation by humans, has retracted in the east, south and north of the crocodile’s range, possibly in correlation with [[global warming]].<ref name= Alderton/><ref>Shacks, V. (2006). ''[http://scholar.sun.ac.za/handle/10019.1/1510 Habitat vulnerability for the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') in the Okavango Delta, Botswana]'' (Doctoral dissertation, Stellenbosch: University of Stellenbosch).</ref> Retraction of wetlands due both to direct habitat destruction by humans and environmental factor possibly related to [[global warming]] is perhaps linked to the extinction of Nile crocodiles in the last few centuries in [[Syria]], [[Israel]] and [[Tunisia]].<ref name= Alderton/><ref name= Fergusson/> In [[Lake St. Lucia]], highly saline water has been pumped into the already brackish waters due to [[irrigation]] practices. Some deaths of crocodiles appeared to have been caused by these dangerous saline levels and this one-time stronghold for breeding crocodiles has experienced a major population decline.<ref name= Alderton/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Whitfield, A. K., & Taylor, R. H. |title=A review of the importance of freshwater inflow to the future conservation of Lake St Lucia|journal=Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems|volume=19|issue=7|pages=838|doi=10.1002/aqc.1061|year=2009}}</ref> In yet another historic crocodile stronghold, the Olifants River, which flows through [[Kruger National Park]], numerous crocodile deaths have been reported. These are officially due to unknown causes but analysis has indicated that environmental pollutants caused by humans, particularly the burgeoning coal industry, are the primary cause. Much of the contamation of crocodiles occurs when they consume rancid fish themselves killed by pollutants.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Ashton, P. J. |title=The demise of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') as a keystone species for aquatic ecosystem conservation in South Africa: The case of the Olifants River|journal=Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems|volume=20|issue=5|pages=489|doi=10.1002/aqc.1132|year=2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Botha, H., Van Hoven, W., & Guillette Jr, L. J. |year=2011|title=The decline of the Nile crocodile population in Loskop dam, Olifants River, South Africa|journal=Water SA|volume= 37|issue=1|pages= 103–108|url=http://www.ajol.info/index.php/wsa/article/view/64109|doi=10.4314/wsa.v37i1.64109}}</ref> Additional ecological surveys and establishing management programs are necessary to resolve these questions.
The conservation situation is more grim in central and west Africa presumably for both the Nile and west African crocodiles. The crocodile population in this area is much more sparse, and has not been adequately surveyed. While the natural population in these areas may be lower due to a less-than-ideal environment and competition with [[sympatric]] [[slender-snouted crocodile|slender-snouted]] and [[dwarf crocodile]]s, extirpation may be a serious threat in some of these areas.<ref name= Fergusson/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Shirley, M. H.Oduro, W.Beibro, H. Y. |title=Conservation status of crocodiles in Ghana and Côte-d'Ivoire, West Africa|journal=Oryx|volume=43|pages=136|doi=10.1017/S0030605309001586|year=2009}}</ref> At some point in the 20th century, the Nile crocodile appeared to have been extirpated as a breeding species from [[Egypt]], but has locally re-established in some areas such as the [[Aswan Dam]].<ref name= Alderton/> Additional factors are a loss of wetland habitats, which is addition to direct dredging, damming and irrigation by humans, has retracted in the east, south and north of the crocodile’s range, possibly in correlation with [[global warming]].<ref name= Alderton/><ref>Shacks, V. (2006). ''[http://scholar.sun.ac.za/handle/10019.1/1510 Habitat vulnerability for the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') in the Okavango Delta, Botswana]'' (Doctoral dissertation, Stellenbosch: University of Stellenbosch).</ref> Retraction of wetlands due both to direct habitat destruction by humans and environmental factor possibly related to [[global warming]] is perhaps linked to the extinction of Nile crocodiles in the last few centuries in [[Syria]], [[Israel]] and [[Tunisia]].<ref name= Alderton/><ref name= Fergusson/> In [[Lake St. Lucia]], highly saline water has been pumped into the already brackish waters due to [[irrigation]] practices. Some deaths of crocodiles appeared to have been caused by these dangerous saline levels and this one-time stronghold for breeding crocodiles has experienced a major population decline.<ref name= Alderton/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Whitfield, A. K.Taylor, R. H. |title=A review of the importance of freshwater inflow to the future conservation of Lake St Lucia|journal=Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems|volume=19|issue=7|pages=838|doi=10.1002/aqc.1061|year=2009}}</ref> In yet another historic crocodile stronghold, the Olifants River, which flows through [[Kruger National Park]], numerous crocodile deaths have been reported. These are officially due to unknown causes but analysis has indicated that environmental pollutants caused by humans, particularly the burgeoning coal industry, are the primary cause. Much of the contamation of crocodiles occurs when they consume rancid fish themselves killed by pollutants.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Ashton, P. J. |title=The demise of the Nile crocodile (''Crocodylus niloticus'') as a keystone species for aquatic ecosystem conservation in South Africa: The case of the Olifants River|journal=Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems|volume=20|issue=5|pages=489|doi=10.1002/aqc.1132|year=2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Botha, H.Van Hoven, W.Guillette Jr, L. J. |year=2011|title=The decline of the Nile crocodile population in Loskop dam, Olifants River, South Africa|journal=Water SA|volume= 37|issue=1|pages= 103–108|url=http://www.ajol.info/index.php/wsa/article/view/64109|doi=10.4314/wsa.v37i1.64109}}</ref> Additional ecological surveys and establishing management programs are necessary to resolve these questions.


The Nile crocodile is the top predator in its environment, and is responsible for checking the population of mesopredator species, such as the [[Catfish|barbel catfish]] and [[lungfish]], that could overeat fish populations on which other species, including birds, rely. One of the fish predators seriously affected by the unchecked mesopredator fish populations (due again to crocodile declines) is humans, particularly with respect to [[tilapia]], an important commercial fish that has declined due to excessive predation.<ref name= Guggisberg/> The Nile crocodile also consumes dead animals that would otherwise pollute the waters.
The Nile crocodile is the top predator in its environment, and is responsible for checking the population of mesopredator species, such as the [[Catfish|barbel catfish]] and [[lungfish]], that could overeat fish populations on which other species, including birds, rely. One of the fish predators seriously affected by the unchecked mesopredator fish populations (due again to crocodile declines) is humans, particularly with respect to [[tilapia]], an important commercial fish that has declined due to excessive predation.<ref name= Guggisberg/> The Nile crocodile also consumes dead animals that would otherwise pollute the waters.
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Much of the hunting of and general animosity towards Nile crocodiles stems from their reputation as a man-eater, which is not entirely unjustified.<ref>{{cite journal|author=McGregor, J. |title=Crocodile crimes: people versus wildlife and the politics of postcolonial conservation on Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe|journal=Geoforum|volume=36|issue=3|pages=353|doi=10.1016/j.geoforum.2004.06.007|year=2005}}</ref> Despite most attacks going unreported, the Nile crocodile along with the [[saltwater crocodile]] is estimated to kill hundreds (possibly thousands) of people each year, which may be more than all other crocodilian species combined.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Crocodilian.com/><ref>{{cite journal|pmid=16209470|title=Crocodile attack in Australia: an analysis of its incidence and review of the pathology and management of crocodilian attacks in general |journal=Wilderness & Environmental Medicine |volume=16 |issue=3 |pages=143–59 |year=2005 |author1=Caldicott |first1=D. G. |last2=Croser |first2=D |last3=Manolis |first3=C |last4=Webb |first4=G |last5=Britton |first5=A |doi=10.1580/1080-6032(2005)16[143:CAIAAA]2.0.CO;2 }}</ref> While these species are much more aggressive towards people than other living crocodilians (as is statistically supported by estimated numbers of crocodile attacks), Nile crocodiles are not particularly more likely to behave aggressively to humans or regard humans as potential prey than saltwater crocodiles. However, unlike other "man-eating" crocodile species, including the saltwater crocodile, the Nile crocodile lives within close proximity to human populations through most of its range, so contact is more frequent. This combined with the species’ large size renders a higher risk of attack.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Sideleau/> Crocodiles as small as {{convert|2.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} are capable of overpowering and successfully preying on small apes and hominids, presumably including children and smaller adult humans, but a majority of fatal attacks on humans are by crocodiles reportedly exceeding {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length.<ref name= Sideleau/>
Much of the hunting of and general animosity towards Nile crocodiles stems from their reputation as a man-eater, which is not entirely unjustified.<ref>{{cite journal|author=McGregor, J. |title=Crocodile crimes: people versus wildlife and the politics of postcolonial conservation on Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe|journal=Geoforum|volume=36|issue=3|pages=353|doi=10.1016/j.geoforum.2004.06.007|year=2005}}</ref> Despite most attacks going unreported, the Nile crocodile along with the [[saltwater crocodile]] is estimated to kill hundreds (possibly thousands) of people each year, which may be more than all other crocodilian species combined.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Crocodilian.com/><ref>{{cite journal|pmid=16209470|title=Crocodile attack in Australia: an analysis of its incidence and review of the pathology and management of crocodilian attacks in general |journal=Wilderness & Environmental Medicine |volume=16 |issue=3 |pages=143–59 |year=2005 |author1=Caldicott |first1=D. G. |last2=Croser |first2=D |last3=Manolis |first3=C |last4=Webb |first4=G |last5=Britton |first5=A |doi=10.1580/1080-6032(2005)16[143:CAIAAA]2.0.CO;2 }}</ref> While these species are much more aggressive towards people than other living crocodilians (as is statistically supported by estimated numbers of crocodile attacks), Nile crocodiles are not particularly more likely to behave aggressively to humans or regard humans as potential prey than saltwater crocodiles. However, unlike other "man-eating" crocodile species, including the saltwater crocodile, the Nile crocodile lives within close proximity to human populations through most of its range, so contact is more frequent. This combined with the species’ large size renders a higher risk of attack.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Sideleau/> Crocodiles as small as {{convert|2.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} are capable of overpowering and successfully preying on small apes and hominids, presumably including children and smaller adult humans, but a majority of fatal attacks on humans are by crocodiles reportedly exceeding {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} in length.<ref name= Sideleau/>


In studies preceding the slaughter of crocodiles for the leather trade, when there were believed to be many more Nile crocodiles, a roughly estimated 1,000 human fatalities per annum by Nile crocodiles were posited with a roughly equal number of aborted attacks.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>Clarke, J. (1969). ''Man is the Prey''. Stein and Day.</ref> A more contemporary study claimed the number of attacks by Nile crocodiles per year as 275 to 745, of which 63% are fatal, as opposed to an estimated 30 attacks per year by saltwater crocodiles, of which 50% are fatal. With the Nile crocodile and the saltwater crocodile, the mean size of crocodiles involved in non-fatal attacks was about {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} as opposed to a reported range of {{convert|2.5|-|5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} or larger for crocodiles responsible for fatal attacks. The average estimated size of Nile crocodiles involved in fatal attacks is {{convert|3.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}. Since a majority of fatal attacks are believed to be predatory in nature, the Nile crocodile can be considered the most prolific predator of humans among wild animals.<ref name= Attack>[https://web.archive.org/web/20090503090108/http://iucncsg.org/ph1/modules/Crocodilians/attacks.html Crocodilian attacks]. 2008 IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group</ref> In comparison, [[lion]]s, in the years from 1990 to 2006, were responsible for an estimated one-eighth as many fatal attacks on humans in Africa as were Nile crocodiles. Although Nile crocodiles are more than a dozen times more numerous than lions in the wild, probably fewer than a quarter of living Nile crocodiles are old and large enough to pose a danger to humans.<ref name= Attack/><ref>Frank, L., Hemson, G., Kushnir, H., & Packer, C. (2006, January). ''Lions, conflict and conservation in Eastern and Southern Africa''. In The Eastern and Southern African Lion Conservation Workshop (pp. 11–13).</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Inskip, C., & Zimmermann, A. |title=Human-felid conflict: a review of patterns and priorities worldwide|journal=Oryx|volume=43|pages=18|doi=10.1017/S003060530899030X|year=2009}}</ref> Other wild animals responsible for more annual human mortalities either attack humans in self-defense, as do [[venomous snake]]s,<ref>{{cite journal|author=Mohapatra, B., Warrell, D. A., Suraweera, W., Bhatia, P., Dhingra, N., Jotkar, R. M.|title=Snakebite mortality in India: a nationally representative mortality survey|journal=PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases|volume=5|issue=4|pages=e1018|pmid=21532748|pmc=3075236|year=2011|doi=10.1371/journal.pntd.0001018}}</ref> or are deadly only as vectors of disease or infection, such as [[snail]]s,<ref>{{cite journal|author=Anderson, R. M., & May, R. M. |title=Helminth infections of humans: mathematical models, population dynamics, and control|journal=Advances in parasitology|volume=24|pages=1–101|pmid=3904343|year=1985}}</ref> [[rat]]s<ref>Benedictow, O. J. (2004). ''The Black Death, 1346–1353: the complete history''. Boydell & Brewer.</ref> and [[mosquito]]s.<ref>Spielman, A., & d'Antonio, M. (2002). ''Mosquito: The story of man's deadliest foe''. Hyperion.</ref>
In studies preceding the slaughter of crocodiles for the leather trade, when there were believed to be many more Nile crocodiles, a roughly estimated 1,000 human fatalities per annum by Nile crocodiles were posited with a roughly equal number of aborted attacks.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref>Clarke, J. (1969). ''Man is the Prey''. Stein and Day.</ref> A more contemporary study claimed the number of attacks by Nile crocodiles per year as 275 to 745, of which 63% are fatal, as opposed to an estimated 30 attacks per year by saltwater crocodiles, of which 50% are fatal. With the Nile crocodile and the saltwater crocodile, the mean size of crocodiles involved in non-fatal attacks was about {{convert|3|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} as opposed to a reported range of {{convert|2.5|-|5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} or larger for crocodiles responsible for fatal attacks. The average estimated size of Nile crocodiles involved in fatal attacks is {{convert|3.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}. Since a majority of fatal attacks are believed to be predatory in nature, the Nile crocodile can be considered the most prolific predator of humans among wild animals.<ref name= Attack>[https://web.archive.org/web/20090503090108/http://iucncsg.org/ph1/modules/Crocodilians/attacks.html Crocodilian attacks]. 2008 IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group</ref> In comparison, [[lion]]s, in the years from 1990 to 2006, were responsible for an estimated one-eighth as many fatal attacks on humans in Africa as were Nile crocodiles. Although Nile crocodiles are more than a dozen times more numerous than lions in the wild, probably fewer than a quarter of living Nile crocodiles are old and large enough to pose a danger to humans.<ref name= Attack/><ref>Frank, L., Hemson, G., Kushnir, H., & Packer, C. (2006, January). ''Lions, conflict and conservation in Eastern and Southern Africa''. In The Eastern and Southern African Lion Conservation Workshop (pp. 11–13).</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Inskip, C.Zimmermann, A. |title=Human-felid conflict: a review of patterns and priorities worldwide|journal=Oryx|volume=43|pages=18|doi=10.1017/S003060530899030X|year=2009}}</ref> Other wild animals responsible for more annual human mortalities either attack humans in self-defense, as do [[venomous snake]]s,<ref>{{cite journal|author=Mohapatra, B.Warrell, D. A.Suraweera, W.Bhatia, P.Dhingra, N.Jotkar, R. M.|title=Snakebite mortality in India: a nationally representative mortality survey|journal=PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases|volume=5|issue=4|pages=e1018|pmid=21532748|pmc=3075236|year=2011|doi=10.1371/journal.pntd.0001018}}</ref> or are deadly only as vectors of disease or infection, such as [[snail]]s,<ref>{{cite journal|author=Anderson, R. M.May, R. M. |title=Helminth infections of humans: mathematical models, population dynamics, and control|journal=Advances in parasitology|volume=24|pages=1–101|pmid=3904343|year=1985}}</ref> [[rat]]s<ref>Benedictow, O. J. (2004). ''The Black Death, 1346–1353: the complete history''. Boydell & Brewer.</ref> and [[mosquito]]s.<ref>Spielman, A., & d'Antonio, M. (2002). ''Mosquito: The story of man's deadliest foe''. Hyperion.</ref>


Regional reportage from numerous areas with large crocodile populations nearby indicate, per district or large village, that crocodiles often annually claim about a dozen or more lives per year. Miscellaneous examples of areas in the last few decades with a dozen or more fatal crocodile attacks annually include [[Korogwe District]], [[Tanzania]], [[Niassa Reserve]], [[Mozambique]] and the area around [[Lower Zambezi National Park]], [[Zambia]].<ref>{{cite journal|author=Scott, R., & Scott, H. |title=Crocodile bites and traditional beliefs in Korogwe District, Tanzania|journal=BMJ|volume=309|issue=6970|pages=1691–2|doi=10.1136/bmj.309.6970.1691|pmid=7819989|pmc=2542670|year=1994}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Wallace, K. M., Leslie, A. J., & Coulson, T. |title=Living with predators: a focus on the issues of human–crocodile conflict within the lower Zambezi valley|journal=Wildlife Research|volume=38|issue=8|pages=747|doi=10.1071/WR11083|year=2011}}</ref> Despite historic claims that the victims of Nile crocodile attacks are usually "women and children",<ref name="Wood 1983"/> there is no detectable trends in this regard and any human, regardless of age, gender, or size is potentially vulnerable. Incautious human behavior unfortunately is the primary drive behind crocodile attacks.<ref name= Sideleau/> Most fatal attacks occur when a person is standing a few feet away from water on a non-steep bank, are wading in shallow waters, actively swimming or have limbs dangling over a boat or pier. Many victims are caught while crouching and people in jobs that might require heavy usage of water including [[laundry]] workers, [[fisherman]], [[game warden]]s and [[guide|regional guides]] are more likely to be attacked. Many fisherman and other workers who are not poverty-stricken will go out of their way to avoid waterways known to harbor large crocodile populations.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Dunham, K. M., Ghiurghi, A., Cumbi, R., & Urbano, F. |title=Human–wildlife conflict in Mozambique: a national perspective, with emphasis on wildlife attacks on humans|journal=Oryx|volume=44|issue=2|pages=185|doi=10.1017/S003060530999086X |year=2010}}</ref>
Regional reportage from numerous areas with large crocodile populations nearby indicate, per district or large village, that crocodiles often annually claim about a dozen or more lives per year. Miscellaneous examples of areas in the last few decades with a dozen or more fatal crocodile attacks annually include [[Korogwe District]], [[Tanzania]], [[Niassa Reserve]], [[Mozambique]] and the area around [[Lower Zambezi National Park]], [[Zambia]].<ref>{{cite journal|author=Scott, R.Scott, H. |title=Crocodile bites and traditional beliefs in Korogwe District, Tanzania|journal=BMJ|volume=309|issue=6970|pages=1691–2|doi=10.1136/bmj.309.6970.1691|pmid=7819989|pmc=2542670|year=1994}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Wallace, K. M.Leslie, A. J.Coulson, T. |title=Living with predators: a focus on the issues of human–crocodile conflict within the lower Zambezi valley|journal=Wildlife Research|volume=38|issue=8|pages=747|doi=10.1071/WR11083|year=2011}}</ref> Despite historic claims that the victims of Nile crocodile attacks are usually "women and children",<ref name="Wood 1983"/> there is no detectable trends in this regard and any human, regardless of age, gender, or size is potentially vulnerable. Incautious human behavior unfortunately is the primary drive behind crocodile attacks.<ref name= Sideleau/> Most fatal attacks occur when a person is standing a few feet away from water on a non-steep bank, are wading in shallow waters, actively swimming or have limbs dangling over a boat or pier. Many victims are caught while crouching and people in jobs that might require heavy usage of water including [[laundry]] workers, [[fisherman]], [[game warden]]s and [[guide|regional guides]] are more likely to be attacked. Many fisherman and other workers who are not poverty-stricken will go out of their way to avoid waterways known to harbor large crocodile populations.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/><ref>{{cite journal|author=Dunham, K. M.Ghiurghi, A.Cumbi, R.Urbano, F. |title=Human–wildlife conflict in Mozambique: a national perspective, with emphasis on wildlife attacks on humans|journal=Oryx|volume=44|issue=2|pages=185|doi=10.1017/S003060530999086X |year=2010}}</ref>


Most biologists who have engaged in months or even years of field work with Nile crocodiles, including Cott (1961), Graham and Beard (1968) and Guggisberg (1972), have found that with sufficient precautions, their own lives and the lives of their local guides were rarely, if ever, at risk in areas with many crocodiles.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/> However, Guggisberg accumulated several earlier writings that noted the lack of fear of crocodiles among Africans, driven in part perhaps by poverty and superstition, that caused many observed cases of an "appalling" lack of caution within view of large crocodiles, as opposed to the presence of bold lions which engendered an appropriate panic. Per Guggisberg, this disregard (essentially regarding the crocodile as a lowly creature and thus non-threatening to humans) may account for the seemingly higher frequency of deadly attacks by crocodiles than by large mammalian carnivores. Most locals are well aware of how to behave in crocodile-occupied areas and some of the writings quoted by Guggisberg from the 19th and 20th century may require being taken with a "grain of salt".<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/>
Most biologists who have engaged in months or even years of field work with Nile crocodiles, including Cott (1961), Graham and Beard (1968) and Guggisberg (1972), have found that with sufficient precautions, their own lives and the lives of their local guides were rarely, if ever, at risk in areas with many crocodiles.<ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/> However, Guggisberg accumulated several earlier writings that noted the lack of fear of crocodiles among Africans, driven in part perhaps by poverty and superstition, that caused many observed cases of an "appalling" lack of caution within view of large crocodiles, as opposed to the presence of bold lions which engendered an appropriate panic. Per Guggisberg, this disregard (essentially regarding the crocodile as a lowly creature and thus non-threatening to humans) may account for the seemingly higher frequency of deadly attacks by crocodiles than by large mammalian carnivores. Most locals are well aware of how to behave in crocodile-occupied areas and some of the writings quoted by Guggisberg from the 19th and 20th century may require being taken with a "grain of salt".<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/>
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==Examples of large Nile crocodiles==
==Examples of large Nile crocodiles==
[[File:Crocodylus nile scale.png|thumb|Average male Nile crocodile size (green), at about {{convert|4.27|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, along with size of the largest recorded specimen (grey), at {{convert|6.45|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, compared to a human]]
[[File:Crocodylus nile scale.png|thumb|Average male Nile crocodile size (green), at about {{convert|4.27|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, along with size of the largest recorded specimen (grey), at {{convert|6.45|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, compared to a human]]
In the past it has been claimed that the largest size that Nile crocodiles can attain is approximately {{convert|4.55|to|5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and this can indeed be claimed as the top size normally expected in the species.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Schmidt, K.P. |year=1944|title= Crocodiles|journal=Fauna|volume= 6|pages= 67–72}}</ref> A relatively modest top length is additionally supported by mummified crocodiles from [[ancient Egypt]] which rarely even approach such a size. However most crocodile biologists in recent decades accept that Nile crocodiles can exceptionally exceed {{convert|5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} when not overhunted.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/> The maximum size that the species can attain is a matter of some controversy and reports of outsized Nile crocodiles are met with greater skepticism than those of saltwater crocodiles.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Guggisberg/> As is the case with many outsized animals, the collection of voucher skeletal remains of very big specimens is rather scanty, in part because the understandable difficulty of even transporting such remains, but leaves the possibility of mistakes (such as measuring along the curves which can falsely boost the measured length) and outright exaggerations amidst "hunting stories". {{Convert|7|m|ft|adj=on}} specimens and larger have been reported, but since gross overestimation of size is common, these reports are suspect. Also, most outsized crocodiles were killed by hunters and leather-collectors without field scientists present to verify and thus one may take these claims with healthy skepticism. In the past, explorers have claimed to have seen massive crocodiles in Africa and Madagascar they estimated from {{convert|7.62|to|9.15|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, claims sometimes supported by native hunters and fisherman, however no measurements occurred and these are certain to be vast exaggerations.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Stevenson-Hamilton/> Currently, via unequivocal, modern scientific verification, the saltwater crocodile is the only crocodilian verified to exceed {{convert|6.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} .<ref>{{cite journal|author=Britton, A. R., Whitaker, R., & Whitaker, N. |year=2012|title=Here be a dragon: exceptional size in a Saltwater Crocodile (''Crocodylus porosus'') from the Philippines|journal= Herpetological Review|volume= 43|issue=4|pages=541–546|url=https://www.academia.edu/4464355/Here_be_a_dragon_exceptional_size_in_a_saltwater_crocodile_Crocodylus_porosus_from_the_Philippines}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Greer, A. E. |year=1974|title= On the maximum total length of the salt-water crocodile (''Crocodylus porosus'')|journal=Journal of Herpetology|pages= 381–384|jstor=1562913|volume=8|doi=10.2307/1562913}}</ref>
In the past it has been claimed that the largest size that Nile crocodiles can attain is approximately {{convert|4.55|to|5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} and this can indeed be claimed as the top size normally expected in the species.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Schmidt, K.P. |year=1944|title= Crocodiles|journal=Fauna|volume= 6|pages= 67–72}}</ref> A relatively modest top length is additionally supported by mummified crocodiles from [[ancient Egypt]] which rarely even approach such a size. However most crocodile biologists in recent decades accept that Nile crocodiles can exceptionally exceed {{convert|5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} when not overhunted.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Cott/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/> The maximum size that the species can attain is a matter of some controversy and reports of outsized Nile crocodiles are met with greater skepticism than those of saltwater crocodiles.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Guggisberg/> As is the case with many outsized animals, the collection of voucher skeletal remains of very big specimens is rather scanty, in part because the understandable difficulty of even transporting such remains, but leaves the possibility of mistakes (such as measuring along the curves which can falsely boost the measured length) and outright exaggerations amidst "hunting stories". {{Convert|7|m|ft|adj=on}} specimens and larger have been reported, but since gross overestimation of size is common, these reports are suspect. Also, most outsized crocodiles were killed by hunters and leather-collectors without field scientists present to verify and thus one may take these claims with healthy skepticism. In the past, explorers have claimed to have seen massive crocodiles in Africa and Madagascar they estimated from {{convert|7.62|to|9.15|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, claims sometimes supported by native hunters and fisherman, however no measurements occurred and these are certain to be vast exaggerations.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Stevenson-Hamilton/> Currently, via unequivocal, modern scientific verification, the saltwater crocodile is the only crocodilian verified to exceed {{convert|6.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} .<ref>{{cite journal|author=Britton, A. R.Whitaker, R.Whitaker, N. |year=2012|title=Here be a dragon: exceptional size in a Saltwater Crocodile (''Crocodylus porosus'') from the Philippines|journal= Herpetological Review|volume= 43|issue=4|pages=541–546|url=https://www.academia.edu/4464355/Here_be_a_dragon_exceptional_size_in_a_saltwater_crocodile_Crocodylus_porosus_from_the_Philippines}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Greer, A. E. |year=1974|title= On the maximum total length of the salt-water crocodile (''Crocodylus porosus'')|journal=Journal of Herpetology|pages= 381–384|jstor=1562913|volume=8|doi=10.2307/1562913}}</ref>


Prior to overhunting in the 20th century, other crocodilians may have also approached or exceeded {{convert|6.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, such sizes being somewhat reliably reported in [[gharial]]s and [[Orinoco crocodile]]s in very old reports before both species were decimated by hunting and habitat destruction and reported but unverified in [[black caiman]]s and [[American crocodile]]s (although voucher skulls from the latter species show it does likely exceed such lengths in very rare cases). However, the Nile crocodile is the only modern crocodilian besides the saltwater crocodile where specimens over {{convert|4.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} are merely uncommon rather than rare.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Whitaker/> As a whole, giants are rarer today; before the heavy hunting of the 1940s and 1950s, a larger population base and more extensive wetland [[habitat (ecology)|habitats]] meant more giants, as well as possibly diminishing of the genetic lines that fostered enormous sizes.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/> Following is a list of Nile crocodile specimens reportedly taken since 1900 that exceed {{convert|5.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, well past the "expected" length for a Nile crocodile. The list includes only crocodiles that have been "measured", thus excluding outsized crocodiles that were merely based on eye-witness accounts. The only exception is "Gustave", a male crocodile mentioned due to his notoriety.
Prior to overhunting in the 20th century, other crocodilians may have also approached or exceeded {{convert|6.1|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, such sizes being somewhat reliably reported in [[gharial]]s and [[Orinoco crocodile]]s in very old reports before both species were decimated by hunting and habitat destruction and reported but unverified in [[black caiman]]s and [[American crocodile]]s (although voucher skulls from the latter species show it does likely exceed such lengths in very rare cases). However, the Nile crocodile is the only modern crocodilian besides the saltwater crocodile where specimens over {{convert|4.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}} are merely uncommon rather than rare.<ref name="Wood 1983"/><ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Whitaker/> As a whole, giants are rarer today; before the heavy hunting of the 1940s and 1950s, a larger population base and more extensive wetland [[habitat (ecology)|habitats]] meant more giants, as well as possibly diminishing of the genetic lines that fostered enormous sizes.<ref name= Guggisberg/><ref name= Beard/> Following is a list of Nile crocodile specimens reportedly taken since 1900 that exceed {{convert|5.5|m|ftin|0|abbr=on}}, well past the "expected" length for a Nile crocodile. The list includes only crocodiles that have been "measured", thus excluding outsized crocodiles that were merely based on eye-witness accounts. The only exception is "Gustave", a male crocodile mentioned due to his notoriety.
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[[Category:Reptiles of Africa]]
[[Category:Reptiles of Africa]]
[[Category:Megafauna of Africa]]
[[Category:Megafauna of Africa]]
[[Category:Nile|crocodile]]
[[Category:Nile]]
[[Category:Invasive reptile species]]
[[Category:Invasive reptile species]]
[[Category:Reptiles described in 1768|Nile crocodile]]
[[Category:Reptiles described in 1768|Nile crocodile]]

Revision as of 01:46, 12 December 2017

Nile crocodile
Temporal range: 2.5–0 Ma
Early Pleistocene – Recent
Nile crocodile in Rancho Texas Lanzarote Park
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauromorpha
Clade: Archosauriformes
Order: Crocodilia
Family: Crocodylidae
Genus: Crocodylus
Species:
C. niloticus
Binomial name
Crocodylus niloticus
Laurenti, 1768
Synonyms
  • Crocodylus vulgaris Cuvier, 1802
Nile crocodiles

The Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) is an African crocodile, the largest freshwater predator in Africa, and may be considered the second largest extant reptile in the world, after the saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus).[2] The Nile crocodile is quite widespread throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, occurring mostly in the central, eastern, and southern regions of the continent and lives in different types of aquatic environments such as lakes, rivers and marshlands.[3] Although capable of living in saline environments, this species is rarely found in saltwater, but occasionally inhabits deltas and brackish lakes. The range of this species once stretched northward throughout the Nile, as far north as the Nile delta. On average, the adult male Nile crocodile is between 3.5 and 5 m (11 ft 6 in and 16 ft 5 in) in length and weighs 225 to 750 kg (500 to 1,650 lb).[4][5][6][7][8] However, specimens exceeding 6 m (20 ft) in length and weighing up to 1,100 kg (2,400 lb) have been recorded.[2][4][9][10][11] Sexual dimorphism is prevalent, and females are usually about 30% smaller than males.[4] They have thick scaly skin that is heavily armored.

The Nile crocodile is an opportunistic apex predator and a very aggressive species of crocodile that is capable of taking almost any animal within its range. They are generalists, taking a variety of prey.[6][11] Their diet consists mostly of different species of fish, reptiles, birds and mammals. The Nile crocodile is an ambush predator that can wait for hours, days and even weeks for the suitable moment to attack. They are agile predators and wait for the opportunity for a prey item to come well within attack range. Even swift prey are not immune to attack. Like other crocodiles, Nile crocodiles have an extremely powerful bite that is unique amongst all animals and sharp conical teeth that sink into flesh allowing for a grip that is almost impossible to loosen. They can apply high levels of force for extended periods of time, a great advantage for holding down large prey underwater to drown.[11][12]

Nile crocodiles are relatively social crocodiles.[13] They share basking spots and large food sources, such as schools of fish and big carcasses. There is a strict hierarchy, which is determined by size. Large, old males are at the top of this hierarchy and have primary access to food and the best basking spots. Crocodiles tend to respect this order; when it is infringed, the results are often violent and sometimes fatal.[14] Like most other reptiles, Nile crocodiles lay eggs; these are guarded by the female. The hatchlings are also protected for a period of time, but hunt by themselves and are not fed by the parents.[6][15] The Nile crocodile is one of the most dangerous species of crocodile and is responsible for hundreds of human deaths every year.[16] It is a rather common species of crocodile and is not endangered despite some regional declines or extinctions.

Etymology

The binomial name Crocodylus niloticus is derived from the Greek κροκό, kroko ("pebble"), δειλος, deilos ("worm", or "man"), referring to its rough skin; and niloticus, meaning "from the Nile River". The Nile crocodile is called tanin ha-yeor in Hebrew,[17] timsah al-nil in Arabic, mamba in Swahili, garwe in Shona, ngwenya in Ndebele, ngwena in Venda, kwena in Sotho and Tswana. It also sometimes referred to as the African crocodile, Ethiopian crocodile, common crocodile or the black crocodile.[11][12][18]

Taxonomy

Although no subspecies are currently formally recognized, as many as seven have been proposed, mostly due to variations in appearance and size noted in various populations through Africa. These have consisted of: C. n. africanus (informally named the East African Nile crocodile), C. n. chamses (or the West African Nile crocodile), C. n. corviei (the South African Nile crocodile), C. n. madagascariensis (Malagasy or Madagascar Nile crocodile, regionally also known as the Croco Mada, which translates to Malagasy crocodile), C. n. niloticus (would be the nominate subspecies, or the Ethiopian Nile crocodile), C. n. pauciscutatus (Kenyan Nile crocodile), C. (n.) suchus (now widely perceived by crocodilian biologists as a separate species).[19][20] In a study of the morphology of the various populations, including C. (n.) suchus, it was found that the appearance of the Nile crocodile sensu lato was more variable than any other currently recognized crocodile species and that at least some of these variations were related to locality.[21]

A study on Lake Turkana in Kenya (informally this population would be housed in C. n. pauciscutatus) has shown that the local crocodiles appear to have more osteoderms in their ventral surface than other known populations and are thus of lesser value in leather trading, accounting for an exceptionally large (possibly overpopulated) local population there in the late 20th century.[22] The segregation of the West African crocodile (C. suchus) from the Nile crocodile has been supported by morphological characteristics,[23][21] studies of genetic materials[23][20] and habitat preferences.[24] The separation of the two is not recognized by the IUCN as their last evaluations of the group was in 2008 and 2009,[1][25] years before the primary publications supporting the distinction of the West African crocodiles.[23][21][24] DNA from West African crocodiles has indicated that, unlike the Nile crocodile, it is most closely related to east Asian species, such as the Philippine crocodile (Crocodylus mindorensis), than other extant crocodilians.[20][24] At one time, it was thought that the fossil species Rimasuchus lloydi was the ancestor of the Nile crocodile but more recent research has indicated that Rimasuchus, despite its very large size (about 20–30% bigger than a Nile crocodile with a skull length estimated up to 97 cm (38 in)), is more closely related to the dwarf crocodile (Osteolaemus tetraspis) among living species.[22][26]

Other fossil species from Africa are retained in Crocodylus and appear to be closely related to the Nile crocodile: namely C. checchiai from Miocene in Kenya, C. anthropophagus from Plio-Pleistocene Tanzania, and C. thorbjarnarsoni from Plio-Pleistocene Kenya. While C. checchiai was about the same size as the larger modern Nile crocodiles, and shared similar physical characteristics to the modern species, C. anthropophagus and thorbjarnarsoni were both somewhat larger, with projected total lengths of up to 7.5–7.6 m (24 ft 7 in – 24 ft 11 in).[26][27][28] Also C. anthropophagus and thorbjarnarsoni as well as Rimasuchus were all relatively broad-snouted as well as large, indicating a specialization at hunting sizeable prey, such as large mammals and freshwater turtles, the latter much larger than any in present-day Africa.[26][27] It has been theorized that, based on morphology, time and placement of fossils, C. checchiai essentially forms a link between the Nile crocodile and today's Neotropical crocodiles. The Nile crocodile apparently is more closely related to the crocodiles of the Americas, namely the American (Crocodylus acutus), Cuban (Crocodylus rhombifer), Morelet's (Crocodylus moreletii) and Orinoco crocodile (Crocodylus intermedius), than to the West African crocodile or other extant African crocodilians.[23][26][27]

Characteristics and physiology

Side view

Adult Nile crocodiles have a dark bronze colouration above, with faded blackish spots and stripes variably appearing across the back and a dingy off-yellow on the belly, although mud can often obscure the crocodile’s actual colour.[12] The flanks, which are yellowish-green in colour, have dark patches arranged in oblique stripes in highly variable patterns. There is some variation relative to environment; specimens from swift-flowing waters tend to be lighter in colour than those dwelling in murkier lakes or swamps, which provides camouflage that suits their environment, an example of clinal variation. Nile crocodiles have green eyes.[11] The colouration also helps to camouflage it; juveniles are grey, multicoloured, or brown, with dark cross-bands on the tail and body.[29] The underbelly of young crocodiles is yellowish green. As it matures, the Nile crocodiles becomes darker and the cross-bands fade, especially those on the upper-body. A similar tendency is coloration change during maturation has been noted in most crocodile species.[19][30]

Most morphological attributes of Nile crocodiles are typical of crocodilians as a whole. Like all crocodilians, for example, the Nile crocodile is a quadruped with four short, splayed legs, a long, powerful tail, a scaly hide with rows of ossified scutes running down its back and tail, and powerful, elongated jaws.[29][31] Their skin has a number of poorly understood integumentary sense organs (ISOs) that may react to changes in water pressure, presumably allowing them to track prey movements in the water.[32] The Nile crocodile has much reduced osteoderms on the belly, which are much more conspicuous on some of the more modestly sized crocodilians. The species, however, also has small oval osteoderms on the sides of the body as well as the throat.[30][33] The Nile crocodile shares with all crocodilians a nictitating membrane to protect the eyes and lachrymal glands to cleanse its eyes with tears. The nostrils, eyes, and ears are situated on the top of the head, so the rest of the body can remain concealed underwater.[31][34] They have a four-chambered heart, although modified for their ectothermic nature due to an elongated cardiac septum, physiologically similar to the heart of a bird, which is especially efficient at oxygenating their blood.[35][36] As in all crocodilians, Nile crocodiles have exceptionally high levels of lactic acid in their blood, which allows them to sit motionless in water for up to 2 hours. Levels of lactic acid as high as they are in a crocodile would kill most vertebrates.[19] However, exertion by crocodilians can lead to death due to increasing lactic acid to lethal levels, which in turn leads to failure of the animal’s internal organs. This is rarely recorded in wild crocodiles, normally having been observed in cases where humans have mishandled crocodiles and put them through overly extended periods of physical struggling and stress.[13][22]

Nile crocodile’s head

Skull and head morphology

A skull of an adult Nile crocodile near a human skull.

The mouths of Nile crocodiles are filled with 64 to 68 sharply pointed, cone-shaped teeth (about a dozen less than alligators have). For most of a crocodile's life, broken teeth can be replaced. On each side of the mouth, there are five teeth in the front of the upper jaw (premaxilla), 13 or 14 in the rest of the upper jaw (maxilla), and 14 or 15 on either side of the lower jaw (mandible). The enlarged 4th lower tooth fits into the notch on the upper jaw and is visible when the jaws are closed, as is the case with all true crocodiles.[13][31] Hatchlings quickly lose a hardened piece of skin on the top of their mouths called the egg tooth, which they use to break through their eggshells at birth. Among crocodilians, the Nile Crocodile possesses a relatively long snout, which is approximately 1.6 to 2 times as long as broad at the level of the front corners of the eyes.[37] As is the saltwater crocodile, the Nile crocodile is considered a species with medium-width snout relative to other extant crocodilian species.[38]

In a search for the largest crocodilian skulls in museums, the largest verifiable Nile crocodile skulls found were several housed in Arba Minch, Ethiopia sourced to nearby Lake Chamo, which apparently included several specimens with a skull length of more than 65 cm (26 in), the largest one being 68.6 cm (27.0 in) in length with a mandibular length of 87 cm (34 in). Nile crocodiles with skulls this size are likely to measure in the range of 5.4 to 5.6 m (17 ft 9 in to 18 ft 4 in), which is also the length of the animals according to the museum where they were found. However, larger skulls may exist as this study largely focused on crocodilians from Asia.[11][39] The detached head of an exceptional big (and man-eating) Nile crocodile (killed in 1968 and measuring 5.87 m (19 ft 3 in) in length) was found to have weighed 166 kg (366 lb), including the large tendons used to shut the jaw.[2]

Biting force

Details of the skull from a juvenile Nile crocodile

The bite force exerted by an adult Nile crocodile has been shown by Dr. Brady Barr to measure 22 kN (5,000 lbf). However, the muscles responsible for opening the mouth are exceptionally weak, allowing a person to easily hold them shut with a small amount of force or to use duct-tape to adhere the jaws together even in large crocodiles.[40] The broadest snouted modern crocodilians are alligators and larger caimans. For example, a 3.9 m (12 ft 10 in) black caiman (Melanosuchus niger) was found to have skull that was notably broader and heavier than that of a Nile crocodile measuring 4.8 m (15 ft 9 in).[41] However, despite their robust skulls, alligators and caimans appear to be proportionately equal in biting force to true crocodiles as the muscular tendons used to shut the jaws are similar in proportional size. Only the gharial (Gavialis gangeticus) (and perhaps some of the few very thin-snouted crocodilians) is likely to have noticeably diminished bite force compared to other living species due to its exceptionally narrow, fragile snout. More or less, the size of the tendons used to impart bite force increases with body size and the larger the crocodilian gets, the stronger its bite is likely to be. Therefore, a very large male saltwater crocodile, which had attained a length of approximately 4.59 m (15 ft 1 in), was found to have the most powerful biting force ever tested in a lab setting for any type of animal.[42][43]

Size

Healthy subadult

The Nile crocodile is the largest crocodilian in Africa and is generally considered the second-largest crocodilian after the saltwater crocodile.[11] Average size has been reported to be as much as 4.5 to 5.5 m (14 ft 9 in to 18 ft 1 in), however this is excessive for actual average size per most studies and represents the upper limit of sizes attained by the very largest animals in a majority of populations.[6][29][30] According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the average mature size is between 3.4 and 3.7 m (11 ft 2 in and 12 ft 2 in), while Alexander and Marais (2007) state it is 2.8 to 3.5 m (9 ft 2 in to 11 ft 6 in) and Garrick and Lang (1977) claim from 3 to 4.5 m (9 ft 10 in to 14 ft 9 in) .[2][7][14] According to Cott (1961), the average length and weight of Nile crocodiles from Uganda and Zambia in breeding maturity was 3.16 m (10 ft 4 in) and 137.5 kg (303 lb).[6] Per Graham (1968), the average length and weight of a large sample of adult crocodiles from Lake Turkana (formerly known as Lake Rudolf), Kenya was 3.66 m (12 ft 0 in) and body mass of 201.6 kg (444 lb).[9] Similarly, adult crocodiles from Kruger National Park reportedly average 3.65 m (12 ft 0 in) in length.[11] In comparison, the saltwater crocodile and gharial reportedly both average around 4 m (13 ft 1 in) so are about 30 cm (12 in) longer on average and the false gharial (Tomistoma schlegelii) may average about 3.75 m (12 ft 4 in), so may be slightly longer as well. The largest accurately measured male, shot near Mwanza, Tanzania, measured 6.45 m (21 ft 2 in) and weighed about 1,090 kg (2,400 lb).[2] However, compared to the narrow-snouted, streamlined gharial and false gharial, the Nile crocodile is rather more robust and ranks second to the saltwater crocodile in total average body mass amongst living crocodilians and third amongst all living reptiles - the massive leatherback turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) has a mean body mass slightly less than that of an average mature male saltwater crocodiles.[2][9][11][30]

Size and sexual dimorphism

Groupings of crocodiles like this can include crocodiles of various sizes, but seldom of less than 2 m (6 ft 7 in), lest a cannibalistic large specimen launch an attack.

Like all crocodiles they are sexually dimorphic, with the males up to 30% larger than the females, though the difference is considerably less compared to some species, like the saltwater crocodile. Male Nile crocodiles are about 30 to 50 cm (12 to 20 in) longer on average at sexual maturity and grow more so than females after becoming sexually mature, especially expanding in bulk after exceeding 4 m (13 ft 1 in) in length.[29][44] Adult male Nile crocodiles usually range in length from 3.3 to 5 m (10 ft 10 in to 16 ft 5 in) long, at these weights, an average sized male may weigh from 150 to 700 kg (330 to 1,540 lb).[6][9][45][46][47] In Limpopo, South Africa, males reportedly average 527 kg (1,162 lb).[8] Very old, mature ones can grow to 5.5 m (18 ft 1 in) or more in length (all specimens over 5.5 m (18 ft 1 in) from 1900 onward are cataloged later).[2][11][48] Mature female Nile crocodiles typically measure 2.2 to 3.8 m (7 ft 3 in to 12 ft 6 in), at which lengths the average female specimen would weigh 40 to 250 kg (88 to 551 lb).[6][9][29][49]

The bulk and mass of individual crocodiles can be fairly variable, some animals being relatively slender, while others being very robust; females are often bulkier than males of a similar length.[6][11] As an example of the body mass increase undergone by mature crocodiles, one of the larger crocodiles handled firsthand by Cott (1961) was 4.4 m (14 ft 5 in) and weighed 414.5 kg (914 lb), while the largest specimen measured by Graham and Beard (1973) was 4.8 m (15 ft 9 in) and weighed more than 680 kg (1,500 lb).[2][6][50] In attempts to parse the mean male and female lengths across the species, it was estimated that the mean adult length is reportedly 4 m (13 ft 1 in) in males, at which males would average about 280 kg (620 lb) in weight, while that of the female is 3.05 m (10 ft 0 in), at which females would average about 116 kg (256 lb).[6][9][51][52] This gives the Nile crocodile somewhat of a size advantage over the next largest non-marine predator on the African continent, the lion (Panthera leo), which averages 188 kg (414 lb) in males and 124 kg (273 lb) in females, and attains a maximum known weight of 313 kg (690 lb), far less than that of large male crocodiles.[2][53]

Evidence exists of Nile crocodiles from cooler climates, like the southern tip of Africa, being smaller, and may reach maximum lengths of only 4 m (13 ft 1 in). A smaller population from Mali, the Sahara Desert and elsewhere in West Africa reaches only 2 to 3 m (6 ft 7 in to 9 ft 10 in) in length,[54] but it is now largely recognized as a separate species, the West African crocodile.[23]

Distribution and habitat

The Nile crocodile is the most common crocodilian in Africa today and may be seen throughout much of the continent. Among crocodilians today, only the saltwater crocodile occurs over a broader geographic area,[55] although other species, especially the spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus) (due to its small size and extreme adaptability in habitat and flexibility in diet), seem to actually be more abundant.[56] This species’ historic range however, was even wider. They were found as far north as the Mediterranean coast in the Nile delta and across the Red Sea in Israel and Syria. The Nile crocodile has historically been recorded in areas where they are now regionally extinct. For example, Herodotus recorded the species inhabiting Lake Moeris in Egypt. Additionally, the Nile crocodile is known from fossil remains to have once inhabited Lake Edward on the border between the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda. They are thought to have become extinct in the Seychelles in the early 19th century (1810–1820).[11][29] Today, Nile crocodiles are widely found in, among others, Somalia, Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Egypt, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Gabon, Angola, South Africa, Malawi, Mozambique, Sudan, South Sudan, Botswana, and Cameroon.[25] The Nile crocodile's current range of distribution extends from the regional tributaries of the Nile in Sudan and Lake Nasser in Egypt to the Cunene of Angola, the Okavango Delta of Botswana and the Olifants River in South Africa.[57]

Isolated populations also exist in Madagascar which likely colonized the island after the extinction of voay.[58][59] In Madagascar, crocodiles occur in the western and southern parts from Sambirano to Tôlanaro. They have occasionally been spotted in Zanzibar and the Comoros in modern times but occur very rarely.[11]

The species was previously thought to extend in range into the whole of West and Central Africa,[60][61] but these populations are now typically recognized as a distinct species, the West African (or desert) crocodile.[23] The distributional boundaries between these species were poorly understood, but following several studies, they are now better known. West African crocodiles are found throughout much of West and Central Africa, ranging east to South Sudan and Uganda where the species may come into contact with the Nile crocodile. Nile crocodiles are absent from most of West and Central Africa, but range into the latter region in eastern and southern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and along the Central African coastal Atlantic region (as far north to Cameroon).[23][62] There is likely a level of habitat segregation between the two species, but this remains to be confirmed for certain.[24][63]

Nile crocodiles may be able to tolerate an extremely broad range of habitat types, including small brackish streams, fast flowing rivers, swamps, dams and tidal lakes and estuaries.[44] In East Africa, they are found mostly in rivers, lakes, marshes, and dams, favoring open, broad bodies of water over smaller ones. In Madagascar, the remnant population of Nile crocodiles has adapted to living within caves.[11] Although not a regular sea-going species as is the American crocodile and, especially, the saltwater crocodile, the Nile crocodile possesses salt glands like all true crocodiles (but not alligators and caimans) and does on occasion enter coastal and even marine waters.[64] They have been known to enter the sea in some areas, with one specimen having been recorded 11 km (6.8 mi) off St. Lucia Bay in 1917.[6][65]

Invasive species

Nile crocodiles are an invasive species in North America, and several specimens have been recently captured in southern Florida, though there are not yet signs that the population is reproducing in the wild.[66] Genetic studies of Nile crocodiles captured in the wild in Florida have revealed that the specimens are all closely related to each other, suggesting a single source of the introduction. This source remains unclear, as their genetics do not match samples collected from captives at various zoos and theme parks in Florida. When compared to Nile crocodiles from their native Africa, the Florida wild specimens are most closely related to South African Nile crocodiles.[67] It is unknown how many Nile crocodiles are currently at large in Florida.[68][69] It is likely that the animals were either brought there to be released, or that they are escapees.[70]

Behaviour

Adult Nile crocodile basking

Typically, Nile crocodiles are relatively inert creatures as are most crocodilians and other large cold-blooded creatures. More than half of the crocodiles observed by Cott (1961), if not disturbed, spent the hours from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm continuously basking with their jaws open if conditions were sunny. If their jaws are bound together in the extreme midday heat, Nile crocodiles may easily die from overheating.[6][71] Although they can remain practically motionless for hours on end whether basking or sitting in shallows, Nile crocodiles are said to be constantly aware of their surroundings and aware of the presence of other animals.[11] However, mouth-gaping (while essential to thermoregulation) may also serve as a threat display to other crocodiles, for example when specimens have been observed mouth-gaping at night when overheating is not a risk.[15] In Lake Turkana, it was found that crocodiles rarely bask at all through the day unlike crocodiles from most other areas, for unknown reasons, usually sitting motionless partially exposed at the surface in shallows with no apparent ill effect from the lack of basking on land.[50]

Crocodiles are deft and agile swimmers when motivated.

In South Africa, Nile crocodiles are more easily observed in winter because of the extensive amount of time they spend basking at this time of year. More time is spent in water in overcast, rainy or misty days.[72] In the southern reaches of their range, as a response to dry, cool conditions that they cannot survive externally, crocodiles may dig and take refuge in tunnels and engage in aestivation.[29] Pooley found in Royal Natal National Park that during aestivation, young crocodiles of 60 to 90 cm (24 to 35 in) total length would dig tunnels averaging 1.2 to 1.8 m (3 ft 11 in to 5 ft 11 in) in depth for most, some tunnels measuring more than 2.7 m (8 ft 10 in), the longest there being 3.65 m (12 ft 0 in). Crocodiles in aestivation are totally lethargic, entering a state similar to animals who hibernate. Only the largest individuals engaging in aestivation would leave the burrow to sun on warmest days, otherwise these crocodiles rarely left their burrows. Aestivation has been recorded from the months of May to August.[11][29]

Nile crocodiles normally dive for only a few minutes at a time, but can swim underwater for up to 30 minutes if threatened, and if they remain fully inactive they can hold their breath for up to two hours (which, as aforementioned, is due to the high levels of lactic acid in their blood).[19] They have a rich vocal range, and good hearing. Nile crocodiles normally crawl along on their bellies, but they can also "high walk" with their trunks raised above the ground. Smaller specimens can gallop, and even larger individuals are capable on occasion of surprising bursts of speed, briefly reaching up to 12 to 14 km/h (7.5 to 8.7 mph).[6][73] They can swim much faster by moving their bodies and tails in a sinuous fashion, and they can sustain this form of movement much longer than on land, with a maximum known swimming speed 30 to 35 km/h (19 to 22 mph), more than three times faster than any human.[74]

Drawing depicting the mythical relationship between plovers and crocodiles – no reliable observations exist of this purported symbiosis

Nile crocodiles have been widely known to have gastroliths in their stomachs, which are stones that are swallowed by animals for various purposes. Although it has been made quite clear that this is a deliberate behaviour for the species, the purpose is not definitively known. Gastroliths are not present in hatchling aged crocodiles, but increase quickly in presence within most crocodiles examined at 2–3.1 m (6 ft 7 in – 10 ft 2 in) and yet normally become extremely rare again in very large specimens, meaning that some animals may eventually expel them.[6][11] However, large specimens can have a large number of gastroliths. One crocodile measuring 3.84 m (12 ft 7 in) and weighing 239 kg (527 lb) had 5.1 kg (11 lb) of stones inside it, perhaps a record gastrolith weight for a crocodile.[6] Specimens shot near Mpondwe on the Semliki River had gastroliths in their stomach despite being shot miles away from any sources for stones, the same applies to the Kafue Flats, Upper Zambesi and Bangweulu Swamp, all of which often had stones inside them despite being nowhere near stony regions. Cott (1961) felt that gastroliths were most likely serving as ballast to provide stability and additional weight to sink in water, this bearing great probability over the theories that they assist in digestion and staving off hunger.[6][11] However, Alderton (1998) stated that a study utilizing radiology found that gastroliths were seen to internally aid the grounding down of food during digestion for a small Nile crocodile.[22]

Herodotus claimed that Nile crocodiles have a symbiotic relationship with certain birds, such as the Egyptian plover (Pluvianus aegyptius), which enter the crocodile's mouth and pick leeches feeding on the crocodile's blood, but there is no evidence of this interaction actually occurring in any crocodile species, and it is most likely mythical or allegorical fiction.[75] However, Guggisberg (1972) had seen examples of birds picking scraps of meat from the teeth of basking crocodiles (without entering the mouth) and prey from soil very near basking crocodiles, so felt it was not impossible that a bold, hungry bird may occasionally nearly enter a crocodile’s mouth but not likely as an habitual behaviour.[11]

Hunting and diet

Attacking a Burchell's zebra

Nile crocodiles are apex predators throughout their range. In the water, this species is an agile and rapid hunter relying on both movement and pressure sensors to catch any prey unfortunate enough to present itself inside or near the waterfront.[76] Out of water, however, the Nile crocodile can only rely on its limbs, as it gallops on solid ground, to chase prey.[77] No matter where they attack prey, this and other crocodilians take practically all of their food by ambush, needing to grab their prey in a matter of seconds in order to succeed.[11] They have an ectothermic metabolism, so can survive for long periods between meals—though when they do eat, they can eat up to half their body weight at a time. However, for such large animals, their stomachs are relatively small, not much larger than a basketball in an average-sized adult, so as a rule they are anything but voracious eaters.[13] Young crocodiles feed more actively than their elders according to studies in Uganda and Zambia. In general, at the smallest sizes (0.3–1 m (1 ft 0 in – 3 ft 3 in)), Nile crocodiles were most likely to have full stomachs (17.4% full per Cott); adults at 3–4 m (9 ft 10 in – 13 ft 1 in) in length were most likely to have empty stomachs (20.2%). Interestingly, in the largest size range studied by Cott, 4–5 m (13 ft 1 in – 16 ft 5 in), they were the second most likely to either have full stomachs (10%) or empty stomachs (20%).[6] Other studies have also shown a large number of adult Nile crocodiles with empty stomachs. For example, in Lake Turkana, Kenya, 48.4% of crocodiles had empty stomachs.[9] The stomachs of brooding females are always empty, meaning that they can survive several months without food.[11]

The Nile crocodile mostly hunts within the confines of waterways, either attacking aquatic prey or terrestrial animals when they come to the water to drink or to cross.[29] The crocodile mainly hunts land animals by almost fully submerging its body underwater. Occasionally, a crocodile quietly surfaces so that only its eyes (to check positioning) and nostrils are visible, and swims quietly and stealthily towards its mark. The attack is sudden and unpredictable. The crocodile lunges its body out of water in practically the blink of an eye and grasps its prey. On other occasions, more of its head and upper body is visible, especially when the terrestrial prey animal is on higher ground, to get a sense of the direction of the prey item as the top of an embankment or on a tree branch.[11] Crocodile teeth are not used for tearing up flesh, but to sink deep into it and hold on to the prey item. The immense bite force, which may be as high as 5,000 lbf (22,000 N) in large adults, ensures that the prey item can't escape through the grip.[78] Much prey taken is much smaller than the crocodile itself and such prey can be overpowered and swallowed with ease. When it comes to larger prey, success depends on the crocodile's body power and weight to pull the prey item back into the water, where it is either drowned or killed by sudden thrashes of the head or by tearing it up into pieces with the help of other crocodiles.[12]

Feeding on a dead wildebeest in the Masai Mara

Sub-adult and smaller adult Nile crocodiles use their bodies and tails to herd groups of fish toward a bank, and eat them with quick sideways jerks of their heads. Some crocodiles of the species may habitually use their tails to sweep terrestrial prey off-balance, sometimes forcing the prey specimen into the water where it can be more easily drowned.[11] They also cooperate, blocking migrating fish by forming a semicircle across the river.[29] The most dominant crocodile eats first. Their ability to lie concealed with most of their bodies underwater, combined with their speed over short distances, makes them effective opportunistic hunters of larger prey. They grab such prey in their powerful jaws, drag it into the water, and hold it underneath until it drowns. They will also scavenge or steal kills from other predators, such as lions and leopards (Panthera pardus).[6] Groups of Nile crocodiles may travel hundreds of meters from a waterway to feast on a carcass.[29] They also feed on dead hippopotamuses (Hippopotamus amphibius) as a group (sometimes including three or four dozen crocodiles), tolerating each other. In fact, probably much of the food from crocodile stomachs may come from scavenging carrion and the crocodiles could be viewed as performing a similar function at times as do vultures or hyenas on land.[11] Once their prey is dead, they rip off and swallow chunks of flesh. When groups are sharing a kill, they use each other for leverage, biting down hard and then twisting their bodies to tear off large pieces of meat in a "death roll". They may also get the necessary leverage by lodging their prey under branches or stones, before rolling and ripping.[11]

The Nile crocodile possesses unique predation behavior characterized by the ability of preying both within its natural habitat and out of it, which often results in unpredicted attacks on almost any other animal up to a couple of times of its size. Most hunting on land is done at night by lying in ambush near forest trails or roadsides, up to 50 m (170 feet) from the water's edge.[79] Since their speed and agility on land is rather outmatched by most terrestrial animals, they must use obscuring vegetation or terrain in order to have a chance of succeeding during land-based hunts.[11][79] In one case, an adult crocodile charged from the water up a bank to kill a bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus) and instead of dragging it into the water, was observed to pull the kill further on land into the cover of the bush.[80] Two sub-adult crocodiles were once seen carrying the carcass of a nyala (Tragelaphus angasii) across land in unison.[29] In South Africa, a game warden far from water sources in a savannah-scrub area reported that he saw a crocodile jump up and grab a donkey by the neck and then drag the prey off.[11][81]

Invertebrates

The type and size of the prey depends mostly on the size of the crocodile.[52] The diet of young crocodiles is made up largely of insects and other invertebrates since this is the only prey the same animals can easily take. Cott (1961) studied the food of hatchlings and juveniles very extensively in Uganda and Zambia (then called Rhodesia). In that study, more than a hundred species and genera (i.e. those could not be specified to species level) of insect were identified amongst the foods of crocodiles of this age. All told, he found that more than 70% of the diet of young crocodiles was made up of insects. Of the insects taken there, beetles made up 58% of the diet composition, with the most frequently identifying being water-based varieties such as Hydrophilus and Cybister. Giant water bugs were also frequently recorded, although several largely terrestrial varieties were also found in young crocodile’s stomachs, presumably having been caught in riparian vegetation by night, including Orthoptera, such as crickets, and Odonata, such as dragonflies. Arachnids such as Dolomedes water-spiders are taken but always secondarily to insects in Uganda and Zambia.[6][82]

Crabs are also largely taken by crocodiles under 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in), especially the genus Potamonautes, with different species being the primary crustacean food in different areas. Mollusks may occasionally be taken by young crocodiles (they are taken in larger numbers later in life in parts of Uganda and Zambia).[6] In the Okavango Delta, Botswana, the diet was similar but young crocodiles ate a broader range of insects and invertebrates, with beetles taken in similar numbers to other, similar prey, both aquatic and terrestrial. In Botswana, arachnids were more often found in young crocodiles than in Uganda and Zambia.[82] In Zimbabwe, the dietary composition was broadly similar to that in other areas.[52] However, in the Ugandan portion of Lake Victoria, true bugs and dragonflies both seem to outnumber beetles notably and up to a length of 1 to 2 m (3 ft 3 in to 6 ft 7 in) crocodiles had stomach contents that were made up 70–75% of insects.[83][84]

After Nile crocodiles reach 2 m (6 ft 7 in), the significance of most invertebrates in the diet decreases precipitously.[6][82] An exception to this is in Uganda and Zambia where sub-adults and adults of even large sizes, up to 3.84 m (12 ft 7 in), may eat very large numbers of snails. Nearly 70% of the crocodiles examined by Cott (1961) had some remains of snails inside their stomachs. Predation on amuplariid water snails was especially heavy in Bangweulu Swamp, Lake Mweru Wantipa and the Kafue Flats, where mollusk representing 89.1%, 87% and 84.7% of all prey in these locations, respectively. Gastropoda (4126 records per Cott) were taken much more than Lamellibranchiata (6 records). Notable favorites include Pila ovata, which lives just under water on rocky surfaces (mainly found in crocodiles from Uganda) and Lanistes ovum, which is found submerged among water plants and on detritus (mainly from stomachs in Zambia).[6]

Fish

Sub-adult with tilapia as its prey

During the time from when they’re roughly 1.5 to 2.2 m (4 ft 11 in to 7 ft 3 in) long (roughly 5 to 9 years old), Nile crocodiles seem to have the broadest diet of any age range. They take more or less much the same small prey as smaller crocodiles, including insects and arachnids, but also take many small to medium-sized vertebrates and quickly become capable taking down prey of up to their own weight. Especially fish become significant around this age and size. However, Cott (1961) found that the only size range where fish were numerically dominant over other types of food was from 2 to 3.05 m (6 ft 7 in to 10 ft 0 in). This size range consists of subadult males and a mixture of subadult and adult females.[6] In Lake Turkana, Kenya, fish were the only food in the stomachs of 45.4% of the crocodiles who did not have empty stomachs, in total 87.8% of the crocodiles who did not have empty stomachs there had fish in their stomachs. Graham (1968) noted that throughout East Africa, crocodile diets are driven by the regional availability of prey. The arid land surrounding Lake Turkana is a relatively barren region for diverse or numerous prey other than fish, so therefore fish are an exceptionally important food source to crocodiles there.[9][50] In Lake Kyoga and Lake Kwana, Uganda 73.1% of the crocodiles who did not have empty stomachs had fish in their stomachs.[85] At Lake St. Lucia in South Africa, many Nile crocodile congregate to feed on striped mullet (Mugil cephalus) as they make their seaward migration for spawning. Here, the crocodiles may line up in dozens across narrow straits of the estuary in order to effectively force the mullet into easy striking distance, with no observed in-fighting among these crocodile feeding congregations. At this time of plenty (before irrigation operations by humans led St. Lucia to have dangerously high saline levels), a 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in) crocodile could expect to eat 1.1 kg (2.4 lb) of mullet daily, an exceptionally large daily amount for a crocodile.[86]

Larger fish, like catfish and freshwater bass, are preferred by adults of more than 2.2 m (7 ft 3 in) in length. Particularly small fish are likely to be eaten only in case of sudden encounter, mostly in shallow dry season ponds where not much effort is needed to catch the small, agile prey.[18] Most observed fishing by crocodiles takes place in waters less than 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) deep and fish are often caught when they swim into contact with the crocodile’s head, even literally right into the reptile’s mouth.[9] Across much of their range, they will take any fish they encounter but largish and relatively sluggish mesopredator fish such as lungfish and Barbus carps seem to be most widely reported. Many other genera are taken widely and relatively regularly including Tilapia (which was the most significant prey genera in Lake Turkana), Clarias, Haplochromis and Mormyrus.[6][9][87] In Uganda and Zambia, lungfish comprised nearly two-thirds of the piscivorian diet for crocodiles.[6] Similarly, in Lake Baringo in Kenya, the lungfish is the crocodile’s main prey and the crocodile is the lungfish’s primary predator.[88] In the Okavango Delta, Botswana, the African pikes (Hepsetus sp.) were the leading prey group for sub-adults, comprising more than a fourth of the diet.[89] Extremely large fish, such as Nile perch (Lates niloticus), goliath tigerfish (Hydrocynus goliath) and even sharks, are taken on occasion, in addition to big catfish, such as Bagrus ssp. and Clarias gariepinus, which are preyed upon quite regularly in areas where they are common. In the Zambezi River and Lake St. Lucia, Nile crocodiles have been known to prey on bull sharks (Carcharhinus leucas) and sand tiger sharks (Carcharias taurus).[90][91][92] The largest fishes attacked in such cases may potentially weigh more than 45 kg (99 lb).[93][94]

When capturing large fish, they often drag the fish onto shore and swing their head around to smash the fish onto the ground until it is deceased or incapacitated. More modestly sized fish are generally swallowed whole.[9] The Nile crocodile has a reputation as a voracious and destructive feeder on freshwater fish, many of which are essential to the livelihoods of local fisherman and the industry of sport fishing. However, this is very much an unearned reputation. As cold-blooded creatures, Nile crocodiles need to eat far less compared to an equivalent weighted warm-blooded animal. It has been found that the crocodile of 2 to 3.05 m (6 ft 7 in to 10 ft 0 in) consumes an average 286 g (10.1 oz) of fish per day. In comparison, piscivorous water birds from Africa eat far more daily despite being a fraction of the body size of a crocodile, for example a cormorant eats up to 1.4 kg (3.1 lb) per day (about 70% of its own body weight) while a pelican consumes up to 3.1 kg (6.8 lb) per day (about 35% of its own weight).[6][11] The taking of commercially important fish, such as Tilapia, has been mentioned as a source of conflict between humans and crocodiles and used as justification for crocodile culling operations; however, even a primarily piscivorous crocodile needs relatively so little fish that they cannot deplete fish populations on their own without other (often anthropogenic) influences.[95] Additionally, crocodiles readily take dead or dying fish given the opportunity and are thus likely to incidentally improve the health of some fish species’ populations.[11]

Reptiles and amphibians

Captive adult Nile crocodiles feeding.

Frogs are regionally significant prey for small, young crocodiles in many regions, mainly those in the 0.5 to 1.5 m (1 ft 8 in to 4 ft 11 in) size range. The main amphibian prey species from Uganda and Zambia was the African common toad (Amietophrynus regularis) while in Botswana the main amphibian prey was the reed frog (Hyperolius viridiflavus).[6][82] Even the largest frog in the world, the goliath frog (Conraua goliath), has reportedly been preyed on by young Nile crocodiles.[96] In general, reptiles become relatively common only in the diet in larger juvenile specimens and subadults. Large reptiles, or armoured reptiles such as turtles were almost negligible in crocodiles under 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in) and most common in the stomachs of crocodiles over 3.5 m (11 ft 6 in) in length from Uganda and Zambia. Small species of reptiles are largely ignored as prey at this size. Freshwater turtles are often the most frequently recorded reptilian prey, unsurprisingly perhaps because most other reptiles other than a small handful of Lycodonomorphus water snakes are more terrestrial than water-based.[6]

In a study, the serrated hinged terrapin (Pelusios sinuatus) (also sometimes referred to as the "water tortoise") was more commonly reported in the stomach contents of adult crocodiles from Kruger National Park than any single mammal species.[97] Other turtle species commonly recorded among Nile crocodile prey include the Speke's hinge-back tortoise (Kinixys spekii) and east African black mud turtle (Pelusios subniger). Beyond their ready availability and respectable size, turtles are favored by big crocodiles due to their slowness which allows the cumbersome crocodiles to capture them more easily than swifter vertebrates.[11][98][99] While adults have a sufficient bite force to crush turtle shells, sometimes younger crocodiles are overly ambitious and one choked to death attempting to swallow a whole large river turtle.[22] A variety of snakes have been preyed on from relatively small innocuous species such as the common egg-eating snake (Dasypeltis scabra) to the largest African snakes species, the African rock python (Python sebae), which can exceed 6.1 m (20 ft 0 in) in length and weigh over 91 kg (201 lb). Venomous species, including the puff adder (Bitis arietans), the forest cobra (Naja melanoleuca) and the black mamba (Dendroaspis polylepis) have been recorded as Nile crocodile prey.[6][11] The only frequently recorded lizard prey are the large Nile monitor (Varanus niloticus), although this mesopredator may be eaten fairly regularly as they often share similar habitat preferences, whenever a crocodile is able to ambush the stealthy monitor, which is more agile on land than the bulkier crocodile.[6][11]

Birds

Pelicans have little to fear from crocodiles on land but are quite vulnerable while swimming to crocodiles lurking underwater.

Numerous birds including, storks, small wading birds, waterfowl, eagles and even small swift-flying birds may be snatched. As a whole, birds are quite secondary prey, rarely comprising more than 10–15% of crocodile’s diets although are taken fairly evenly across all crocodile size ranges excluding juveniles of less than 1 m (3 ft 3 in).[6][11][29] Birds most often taken are African darters (Anhinga rufa) and reed (Microcarbo africanus) and white-breasted cormorants (Phalacrocorax lucidus), followed by various waterfowl, including most breeding geese and ducks in Africa. Slow-swimming pelicans are also frequently vulnerable to crocodiles.[100] Nile crocodile apparently frequently station themselves underneath breeding colonies of darter and cormorants and presumably snatch up fledgling birds as they drop to the water before they can competently escape the saurian, as has been recorded with several other crocodilians.[6][11]

Wading birds, even large and relatively slow-moving types such as the goliath heron (Ardea goliath), tend to be highly cautious about avoiding deep water in crocodile occupied wetlands whereas cormorants and waterfowl forage over deeper water and are easier for crocodiles to ambush, with Egyptian geese (Alopochen aegyptiaca) and spur-winged geese (Plectropterus gambensis) recorded as being taken largely while flightless due to molting their flight feathers.[101][102][103][104][105] On the contrary, there are several records of them capturing wading birds. Guggisberg (1972) saw multiple cases of predation on marabou storks (Leptoptilos crumenifer) and around Lake Turkana several may frequent heronries to pick off fledglings.[9][11] In one case, a crocodile was filmed capturing a striated heron (Butorides striata) in mid-flight.[106] Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) are known to be grabbed while they dive for fish[107] as are possibly African fish eagles (Haliaeetus vocifer) while crowned eagles (Stephanoaetus coronatus) have reportedly been ambushed on land at carrion.[11][108] Crocodiles are occasionally successful in grabbing passerines such as weaver birds, including the abundant red-billed quelea (Quelea quelea), and swallows, having been observed to breach the water and in a matter of seconds sweep off a branch full of birds with remarkable success.[11][109][110][111] Larger land birds, such as bustards, guineafowl, ground hornbills (Bucorvus sp.) and ostriches (Struthio camelus), may be taken when they come to water to drink but like most birds are seldom harassed and a minor part of the diet.[11][112]

Mammals

Considering the fact that crocodiles defecate in water, making it impossible for scat analysis, and that the examination of stomach contents is fairly difficult for which capturing of the animals individually is required for analysis, it is hard to say anything about the percentage of any specific food item in a crocodile's diet. In addition, as an animal that feeds rarely, sometimes only a couple of times in a year, even the individual stomach content examinations sometimes prove to be unsuccessful. However, it is known that as crocodiles grow, it becomes difficult to rely solely on small and agile food items such as fish, this causes a shift in the diet as the animal matures, for energy conservation purposes, as in other predators.[6][9] Nonetheless, starting at around 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in), they can become capable mammalian hunters and their ability to overpower a wide range of mammals increases in sync with their size. Crocodiles of less than 3 m (9 ft 10 in) may take a variety of medium–sized mammals of up to equal their own mass, including various monkeys, duikers,[113] rodents, hares, pangolins,[6] bats, dik-dik, suni (Neotragus moschatus),[114] oribi (Ourebia ourebi)[115] and other small ungulates up to the size of a Thomson's gazelle (Eudorcas thomsonii).[50]

Rodents and shrews may enter the diet of juvenile crocodiles, i.e. 1 to 1.5 m (3 ft 3 in to 4 ft 11 in), and become commonplace in sub-adult and small adult crocodiles. Species recorded include the Natal multimammate mouse (Mastomys natalensis), African marsh rat (Dasymys incomtus), common rufous-nosed rat (Oenomys hypoxanthus) and the savanna swamp shrew (Crocidura longipes).[6][82] In many areas, the cane rats are a particular favorite mammalian food for crocodiles, particularly the relatively large greater cane rat (Thryonomys swinderianus). In Uganda and Zambia, the latter species are the leading overall mammalian prey type for crocodiles and one Kenyan crocodile of 2.7 m (8 ft 10 in) in length had 40 greater cane rats in its stomach.[6][11][116] Cape porcupines (Hystrix africaeaustralis) are known to have been preyed on several times in Kruger National Park, their quills apparently being an insufficient defense against the tough jaws and digestive system of crocodiles.[81][97] Small carnivores are readily taken opportunistically including both African clawless (Aonyx capensis)[117] and spotted-necked otters (Hydrictis maculicollis),[11] as well as water mongoose (Atilax paludinosus),[6] African wildcats (Felis silvestris lybica)[6] and servals (Leptailurus serval).[118]

Adult Nile crocodiles, i.e. at least 3.05 m (10 ft 0 in), are apex predators. While adults can and will consume nearly all types of prey consumed by the younger specimens, as adult crocodiles gain bulk they lose much of the necessary maneuverability to capture agile prey like fish nor are likely to meet their dietary needs by consuming small prey and may expel unnecessary amounts of energy, so take them secondarily to larger prey.[11][97] Primates of various sizes may be taken by sub-adult or adult crocodiles. In some areas, some number of baboons are taken, such as in Okavango Delta where chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) are eaten and Uganda where olive baboons (Papio anubis) are taken.[119][120] There are no records of them hunting apes (other than humans) but based on a strong reluctance to cross waters with crocodiles and a violent reaction to the visual stimuli of crocodiles, it is thought that chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and gorillas (Gorilla beringei) consider Nile crocodiles a serious threat.[121] Few details are known about the dietary habits of Nile crocodiles living in Madagascar, although they are considered potential predators of several lemur species.[122][123] Other non-ungulate prey known to be attacked by Nile crocodiles includes aardvarks (Orycteropus afer)[124] and African manatees (Trichechus senegalensis).[125]

Wildebeest crossing the Mara River, attacked by crocodiles

Among the mammals, the bulk of the prey for adults are antelopes. In particular, the genus Kobus is often amongst the most vulnerable because it forages primarily in wetland areas and seeks to evade more prolific mammalian predators (such as hyenas, lions, etc.) by traveling along waterways.[11][97] In some cases in Kruger National Park, antelope have been driven into water while being pursued by packs of African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus), who hunt by endurance engaging prey in a grueling chase until it is exhausted (a very successful hunting style), only to be killed by opportunistic crocodiles.[18] While not as extensively aquatic as the Kobus genus, the reedbucks and the impala (Aepyceros melampus) have both shown a partiality for grasslands adjoining wetlands and riparian zones and so are also very commonly recorded prey items. In Kruger National Park, over the course of 22 years of discontinuous observation, 60% of the large game kills observed as perpetrated by crocodiles consisted of impala, while more than 15% of observed kills were made up of waterbuck (Kobus ellipsiprymnus), the largest of the Kobus genus at more than 200 kg (440 lb) in weight.[81][97] Elsewhere, the waterbuck appears to be the most significant mammalian prey for large adult crocodiles, such as in Uganda and Zambia (although due to more sporadic general ungulate populations in those countries, ungulates are less common as prey than in some other countries) as well as in Hluhluwe–iMfolozi Park, South Africa.[6][126] Other antelopes recorded as prey including gazelles,[81] bushbuck (Tragelaphus scriptus),[97] sitatunga (Tragelaphus spekii),[11] kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros),[127] steenbok (Raphicerus campestris),[128] eland (Taurotragus oryx),[81] gemsbok (Oryx gazella),[129] sable (Hippotragus niger) and roan antelopes (Hippotragus equinus),[129] up to a half dozen types of duiker,[114] topi (Damaliscus lunatus),[130] hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus)[11] and both species of wildebeest (Connochaetes sp.).[131]

Other ungulates are taken by Nile crocodile more or less opportunistically. These may include Grévy's (Equus grevyi)[132] and plains zebras (Equus quagga),[133] pygmy hippopotamus (Choeropsis liberiensis),[134] warthogs (Phacochoerus africanus),[11] bushpigs (Potamochoerus larvatus)[97] and red river hogs (Potamochoerus porcus).[6] In Maasai Mara, Tanzania, large crocodiles congregate at river crossings utilized by migrating herds of Burchell’s zebras and blue wildebeests (Connochaetes taurinus), picking off hundreds of these large ungulates annually.[135] All domesticated ungulates and pet animals will on occasion be hunted by Nile crocodiles, up to the size of dromedary camels (Camelus dromedarius)[136] and cattle (Bos taurus)[137] In Tanzania, up to 54 head of cattle may be lost to crocodiles annually, increasing the human-crocodile conflict level. Goats (Capra aegagrus hircus), donkeys (Equus africanus asinus) and dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) may also rank amongst the most regularly recorded domesticated animals to be taken by Nile crocodiles.[11][138]

Particularly large adults, on occasion, take on even larger prey, such as giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis)[97][139] Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer)[97][139] and young African bush elephants (Loxodonta africana).[140][141] Even heavier prey, such as black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis), have been killed by crocodiles. In one case in the Tana River of Kenya, as observed by Max Fleishmann (communicated via letter to Theodore Roosevelt), a crocodile was able to bring down one of these huge herbivores by the help of muddy bank terrain, the adult female rhino’s poor decision to enter deeper water rather than retreat to land and finally having been joined in drowning the animal by one to two other crocodiles.[11][142] An additional case of predation on an adult black rhino was reportedly observed in northern Zambia.[11] A bull giraffe who lost his footing on a river bank in Kruger National Park was seen to be killed by a large crocodile, while in another case there a healthy bull buffalo was seen to be overpowered and killed by an average sized adult male crocodile measuring 4.25 m (13 ft 11 in) after a massive struggle, an incident less commonly seen at this size.[9][97] Since crocodiles are solitary hunters, the Nile crocodile is the only predator in Africa known to attack full grown buffaloes alone, compared to the preferred pride attack method of lions.[143]

Although crocodiles occasionally prey on hippopotamus calves, even large adult crocodiles rarely attack them because of the aggressive defense by mother hippos and the close protection of the herd, which pose a serious threat. Hippopotamus calves have observed to at times act brazenly around crocodiles, foraging without apparent concern and even bumping into the reptiles.[11] However, some large crocodiles have been recorded as predators of subadult hippos; anecdotally the infamous giant crocodile Gustave was reported to have been seen killing adult female hippos.[81][97][144] A 5 m (16 ft 5 in) specimen from Zambia was found to have eaten a "half-grown hippo".[6] At the no-longer-existent Ripon Falls in Uganda, one adult male hippopotamus was seen to be badly injured in a mating battle with a rival bull hippo and was then subsequently attacked by several crocodiles, causing it to retreat to a reedbed. When the male hippo returned to the water, it was drowned and killed by the group of crocodile amid "a truly terrifying commotion".[11] However, other than rare instances, adults of megafauna species such as hippopotamuses, rhinoceroses and elephants are not regular prey and will not typically be attacked, with the exception of giraffes, since their anatomy makes them vulnerable to attack while taking a drink.

Nile crocodiles on occasion prey on big cats, especially lions. Even large male cats are helpless if caught off-guard and hit with a crippling powerful crocodile bite.[81][145] Most confirmed attacks on lions and leopards occur within Kruger National Park, where in some studies "several" have reportedly been taken, as well as the adjacent Londolozi Private Game Reserve, where a male lion who took control with his brother of the oft-televised "Styx pride" was preyed upon by a crocodile.[97][113][131][146] However, felines are usually more intelligent and wary of their surroundings than prey species and are more difficult to catch since they usually avoid waters infested with crocodiles. In order to save energy, crocodiles do not prefer such agile animals, as most attacks will end before they can strike. This might explain why lions are targeted more frequently than the more agile leopards. Thus they usually attack agile prey in the absence of regular prey items.[6][11] Other large carnivores that dwell in Africa near the top of the food chain can also on occasion fall prey to crocodiles. Such predators that can find themselves victim to crocodiles include hyenas (3 out of 4 species reported as prey for Nile crocodiles, only the desert-dwelling brown (Hyaena brunnea) being excluded),[113][147] African wild dogs, jackals,[81][97] and cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus).[50]

Vegetation

In the Nile crocodile as well as in at least 13 other species of crocodilian, a variety of fruit (mostly fleshy) has been found in stomach content. While these are probably sometimes used as gastroliths, they are likely often ingested for their nutritional value. Based on these findings, it has also been suggested that crocodiles may act as seed dispersers.[148]

Interspecific predatory relationships

Living in the rich biosphere of Africa south of the Sahara, the Nile crocodile may come into contact with multiple other large predators. Its place in the ecosystems it inhabits is largely unique, as it is the only large tetrapod carnivore that spends the majority of its life in water and hunting prey associated with aquatic zones. Large mammalian predators in Africa are often social animals and obligated to feed almost exclusively on terrestrial zones.[18][97] The Nile crocodile is a strong example of an apex predator. Outside water, crocodiles can meet competition from other dominant savannah predators, notably big cats, which in Africa are represented by lions, cheetahs, and leopards. In general, big cats and crocodiles have a relationship of mutual avoidance. Occasionally, if regular food becomes scarce, both lions and the crocodile will steal kills on land from each other and, depending on size, will be dominant over one another. Both species may be attracted to carrion, and may occasional fight over both kills or carrion.[149] Most conflicts over food occur near the water and can literally lead to a tug-of-war over a carcass that can end either way, although seldom is there any serious fighting or bloodshed between the large carnivores.[6] Intimidation displays may also resolve these conflicts. However, when size differences are prominent, the predators may prey on each other.[150]

Reproduction

Float of crocodiles at Disney's Animal Kingdom

On average, sexual maturity is obtained from 12 to 16 years of age.[44] For males, the onset of sexual maturity occurs when they are about 3.3 m (10 ft 10 in) long and mass of 155 kg (342 lb), being fairly consistent.[151] On the other hand, that for females is rather more variable, and may be indicative of the health of a regional population based on size at sexual maturity. On average, according to Cott (1961), female sexual maturity occurs when they reach 2.2 to 3 m (7 ft 3 in to 9 ft 10 in) in length.[6] Similarly, a wide range of studies from southern Africa found that the average length for females at the onset of sexual maturity was 2.33 m (7 ft 8 in).[152] However, stunted sexual maturity appears to occur in populations at opposite extremes, both where crocodiles are thought to be overpopulated and where they are overly reduced to heavy hunting, sometimes with females laying eggs when they measure as small as 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) although it is questionable whether such clutches would bear healthy hatchlings.[50][153]

According to Bourquin (2008), the average breeding female in southern Africa is between 3 and 3.6 m (9 ft 10 in and 11 ft 10 in).[152] Earlier studies support that breeding is often inconsistent in females less than 3 m (9 ft 10 in) and clutch size is smaller, a female at 2.75 m (9 ft 0 in) reportedly never lays more than 35 eggs, while a female measuring 3.64 m (11 ft 11 in) can expect a clutch of up to 95 eggs.[6][11] In "stunted" newly mature females from Lake Turkana measuring 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in), the average clutch size was only 15.[9][50] Graham and Beard (1968) hypothesized that, while females do continue to grow as do males throughout life, that past a certain age and size that females much over 3.2 m (10 ft 6 in) in length in Lake Turkana no longer breed (supported by the physiology of the females examined here); however, subsequent studies in Botswana and South Africa have found evidence of nesting females at least 4.1 m (13 ft 5 in) in length.[50][152][154] In the Olifants River in South Africa, rainfall influenced the size of nesting females as only larger females (greater than 3 m (9 ft 10 in)) nested during the driest years. Breeding females along the Olifants were overall larger than those in Zimbabwe.[154] Most females nest only every two to three years while mature males may breed every year.[15][152]

During the mating season, males attract females by bellowing, slapping their snouts in the water, blowing water out of their noses, and making a variety of other noises. Among the larger males of a population, territorial clashes can lead to physical fighting between males especially if they are near the same size. Such clashes can be brutal affairs and can end in mortality but typically end with victor and loser still alive, the latter withdrawing into depth waters.[155][156] Once a female has been attracted, the pair warble and rub the undersides of their jaws together. Compared to the tender behaviour of the female accepting the male, copulation is rather rough (even described as "rape"-like by Graham & Beard (1968)) in which the male often roars and pins the female underwater.[50][156] Cott noted little detectable discrepancy in the mating habits of Nile crocodiles and American alligators.[6] In some regions, males have reportedly mated with several females, perhaps any female that enters his claimed territory, though in most regions annual monogamy appears to be most common in this species.[22]

Eggs

Females lay their eggs about one to two months after mating. The nesting season can fall in nearly every month of the year. In the northern extremes of the distribution (i.e. Somalia or Egypt), the nesting season is December through February while in the southern limits (i.e. South Africa or Tanzania) is in August through December. In crocodiles between these distributions egg-laying is in intermediate months, often focused between April and July. The dates correspond to about a month or two into the dry season within that given region. The benefits of this are presumably that nest flooding risk is considerably reduced at this time and the stage at which hatchlings begin their lives out of the egg falls roughly at the beginning of the rainy season, when water levels are still relatively low but insect prey is in recovery. Preferred nesting locations are sandy shores, dry stream beds, or riverbanks. The female digs a hole a few metres from the bank and up to 0.5 m (20 in) deep, and lays on average between 25 and 80 eggs. The number of eggs varies and depends partially on the size of the female.[50] The most significant prerequisites to a nesting site are soil with the depth to permit the female to dig out the nest mound, shading to which mother can retire during the heat of the day and access to water.[6] She finds a spot soft enough to allow her to dig a sideways slanted burrow. The mother Nile crocodile deposits the eggs in the terminal chamber and packs the sand or earth back over the nest pit. While, like all crocodilians, the Nile crocodile digs out a hole for a nest site, unlike most other modern crocodilians, female Nile crocodiles bury their eggs in sand or soil rather than incubate them in rotting vegetation.[11][157] The female may micturate sporadically on the soil to keep it moist, which prevents soil from hardening excessively.[11] After burying the eggs, the female then guards them for the three-month incubation period. Nests have been recorded seldom in concealed positions such as under a bush or in grasses, but normally in open spots on the bank. It is thought the Nile crocodile cannot nest under heavy forest cover as can two of the three other African crocodiles because they do not utilize rotting leaves (a very effective method of producing heat for the eggs) and thus require sunlight on sand or soil the surface of the egg chamber to provide the appropriate warmth for embryo development. In South Africa, the invasive plant Chromolaena odorata has recently exploded along banks traditionally used by crocodiles as nesting sites and caused nest failures by blocking sunlight over the nest chamber.[158]

When Nile crocodiles have been entirely free from disturbance in the past, they may nest gregariously with the nest lying so close together that after hatching time the rims of craters are almost contiguous. These communal nesting sites are not known to exist today, perhaps being most recently recorded at Ntoroko peninsula, Uganda where two such sites remaining until 1952. In one area, 17 craters were found in an area of 25 yd × 22 yd (75 ft × 66 ft), in another 24 in an area of 26 yd × 24 yd (78 ft × 72 ft). Communal nesting areas also reported from Lake Victoria (up until the 1930s) and also in the 20th century at Rahad River, Lake Turkana and Malawi.[6][159][160][161] The behaviour of the female Nile crocodile is considered unpredictable and may be driven by the regional extent of prior human disturbance and human persecution rather than natural variability. In some areas, the mother crocodiles will only leave the nest if she needs to cool off (thermoregulation) by taking a quick dip or seeking out a patch of shade.[11] Females will not leave nest site even if rocks throw at her back and several authors note her trance-like state while standing near nest, similar to crocodiles in aestivation but not like any other stage in their life-cycle. In such a trance, some mother Nile crocodiles may show no discernable reaction even if pelted with stones.[6][11] At other times, the female will fiercely attack anything approaching their eggs, sometimes joined by another crocodile which may be the sire of the young.[11][162] In other areas, the nesting female may disappear upon potential disturbance which may allow the presence of both the female and her buried nest to escape unwanted detection by predators.[15][50] Despite the attentive care of both parents, the nests are often raided by humans and monitor lizards or other animals while she is temporarily absent.[163]

At a reported incubation period of about 90 days, the stage is notably shorter than that of the American alligator (110–120 days) but slightly longer than that of the mugger crocodile.[6][155] Nile crocodiles have temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD), which means the sex of their hatchlings is determined not by genetics as is the case in mammals and birds, but by the average temperature during the middle third of their incubation period. If the temperature inside the nest is below 31.7 °C (89.1 °F), or above 34.5 °C (94.1 °F), the offspring will be female. Males can only be born if the temperature is within that narrow range.[164] The hatchlings start to make a high-pitched chirping noise before hatching, which is the signal for the mother to rip open the nest.[165][166] It is thought to be either difficult to impossible for hatchlings to escape the nest burrow without assistance, as the surface may become very heavy and packed above them.[6][50] The mother crocodile may pick up the eggs in her mouth, and roll them between their tongue and the upper palate to help crack the shell and release her offspring. Once the eggs hatch, the female may lead the hatchlings to water, or even carry them there in her mouth, as female American alligators have been observed doing.[6][11]

A grouping of yearling baby Nile crocodiles.

Hatchling Nile crocodiles are between 280 and 300 mm (11 and 12 in) long at first and weigh around 70 g (2.5 oz). The hatchlings grow approximately that length each year for the first several years.[167] The new mother will protect her offspring for up to two years, and if there are multiple nests in the same area, the mothers may form a crèche. During this time, the mothers may pick up their offspring either in their mouths or gular fold (throat pouch), to keep the babies safe. The mother will sometimes carry her young on her back to avoid the natural predators of the small crocodiles, which can be surprisingly bold even with the mother around. Nile crocodiles of under two years are much more rarely observed than larger specimens, and more seldom seen than the same age young in several other types of crocodilian. Young crocodiles are rather shy and evasive due to the formidable gaunlet of predators that they must face in sub-Saharan Africa, spending little time sunning and moving about nocturnally whenever possible. The two-year-and-younger crocodiles may spend a surprising amount of time on land, as evidenced by the range of terrestrial insects found in their stomachs, and their lifestyle may resemble a semi-aquatic mid-sized lizard more so than the very aquatic lives of older crocodiles.[11][152] At the end of the two years, the hatchlings will be about 1.2 m (3 ft 11 in) long, and will naturally depart the nest area, avoiding the territories of older and larger crocodiles.[11][152] After this stage, crocodiles may loosely associate with similarly sized crocodiles and many assuredly enter feeding congregations of crocodiles once they attain 2 m (6 ft 7 in), at which size predators and cannibal crocodiles become much less of a concern.[11] Crocodile longevity is not well established, but larger species like the Nile crocodile live longer, and may have a potential average life span of 70 to 100 years, though no crocodilian species commonly exceeds a lifespan of 50 to 60 years in captivity.[2]

Natural mortality of young Nile crocodiles

An estimated 10% of eggs will survive to hatch and a mere 1% of young that hatch will successfully reach adulthood.[6][50] The full range of causes for mortality of young Nile crocodiles is not well understood, as very young and small Nile crocodiles or well-concealed nests are only sporadically observed. Unseasonable flooding (during nesting which corresponds with the regional dry season) is not uncommon and has probably destroyed several nests, although statistical likelihood of such an event is not known.[11][50] The only aspect of mortality in this age range that is well studied is predation and this is most likely the primary cause of death while the saurians are still diminutive.[168] The single most virulent predator of nests is almost certainly the Nile monitor. This predator can destroy about 50% of studied Nile crocodile eggs on its own, often being successful (as are other nest predators) in light of the trance-like state that the mother crocodile enters while brooding or taking advantage of moments where she is distracted or needs to leave the nest. In comparison, perenties (Varanus giganteus) (the Australian ecological equivalent of the Nile monitor) succeeds in depredating about 90% of freshwater crocodile (Crocodylus johnsoni) eggs and about 25% of saltwater crocodile nests.[168] Mammalian predators can take nearly as heavy of a toll, especially large mongooses such the Egyptian mongoose (Herpestes ichneumon) in the north and the water mongoose in the south of crocodile’s range. Opportunistic mammals who attack Nile crocodile nests have included wild pigs, medium-sized wild cats and baboon troops. Like Nile monitors, mammalian predators probably locate crocodile nests by scent as the padded-down mound is easy to miss visually.[18][168] Marabou storks sometimes follow monitors to pirate crocodile eggs for themselves to consume, although can also dig out nests on their own with their massive, awl-like bills if they can visually discern the nest mound.[11][168]

Predators of Nile crocodiles eggs have ranged from insects such as the red flour beetle (Tribolium castaneum) to predators as large and formidable as spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta).[168] Unsurprisingly, once exposed to the elements as hatchlings, the young, small Nile crocodiles are even more vulnerable. Most of the predators of eggs also opportunistically eat young crocodiles, including monitors and marabous, plus almost all co-existing raptorial birds, including vultures, eagles, and large owls and buzzards. Many "large waders" are virulent predators of crocodile hatchlings, from dainty little egrets (Egretta garzetta) and compact hamerkops (Scopus umbretta) to towering saddle-billed storks (Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis), goliath herons and shoebills (Balaeniceps rex). Larger corvids and some non-wading water birds (i.e. pelicans) can also take some young Nile crocodiles. Mammalian carnivores take many hatchlings as well as large turtles and snakes, large predatory freshwater fish, such as the African tigerfish, the introduced largemouth bass, and possibly bull sharks, when they enter river systems. When crocodile nests are dug out and the young placed in water by the mother, in areas such as Royal Natal National Park predators can essentially enter a feeding frenzy.[168][169][170][171] It may take a few years before predation is no longer a major cause of mortality for young crocodiles. African fish eagles can take crocodile hatchlings up to a few months of age and honey badgers can prey on yearlings. Once they reach their juvenile stage, very large African rock pythons and big cats remain as the only predatory threat to young crocodiles.[2][11][172] Perhaps no predator is more deadly to young Nile crocodiles than larger crocodiles of their own species, as, like most crocodilians, they are cannibalistic. This species may be particularly dangerous to their own kind considering the aggressive disposition they tend to bear.[11][73][173] While the mother crocodile will react aggressively towards potential predators and has been recorded chasing and occasionally catching and killing such interlopers into her range, due to the sheer number of animals who feed on baby crocodiles and the large number of hatchlings, she is more often than not unsuccessful at deflecting such predators.[6][11][168]

Environmental status

Conservation organizations have determined that the main threats to Nile crocodiles, in turn, are loss of habitat, pollution, hunting, and human activities such as accidental entanglement in fishing nets.[25] Though the Nile crocodile has been hunted since ancient times,[174] the advent of the readily available firearm made it much easier to kill these potential dangerous reptiles.[11] The species began to be hunted on a much larger scale from the 1940s to the 1960s, primarily for high-quality leather, although also for meat with its purported curative properties. The population was severely depleted, and the species faced extinction. National laws, and international trade regulations have resulted in a resurgence in many areas, and the species as a whole is no longer wholly threatened with extinction. The status of Nile crocodiles was variable based on the regional prosperity and extent of conserved wetlands by the 1970s.[175] However, as is the case for many large animal species whether they are protected or not, persecution and poaching have continued apace and between the 1950s and 1980s, an estimated 3 million Nile crocodiles were slaughtered by humans for the leather trade.[22] In Lake Sibaya, South Africa, it was determined that in the 21st century, persecution continues as the direct cause for the inability of Nile crocodiles to recover after the leather trade last century.[176] Recovery for the species appears quite gradual and few areas have recovered to bear crocodile populations, i.e. largely insufficient to produce sustainable populations of young crocodiles, on par with times prior to the peak of leather trading.[153] Crocodile 'protection programs' are artificial environments where crocodiles exist safely and without the threat of extermination from hunters.[55]

Large adults in captivity, Djerba
Nile crocodiles in captivity, Israel
Nile crocodile in captivity, Madrid

An estimated 250,000 to 500,000 individuals occur in the wild today. The IUCN Red List assesses the Nile crocodile as "Least Concern (LR/lc)".[1] The CITES lists the Nile crocodile under Appendix I (threatened with extinction) in most of its range; and under Appendix II (not threatened, but trade must be controlled) in the remainder, which either allows ranching or sets an annual quota of skins taken from the wild. The Nile crocodile is also widely distributed, with strong, documented populations in many countries in eastern and southern Africa, including Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Zambia and Zimbabwe.[1][25] This species is farmed for its meat and leather in some parts of Africa. Successful sustainable-yield programs focused on ranching crocodiles for their skins have been successfully implemented in this area, and even countries with quotas are moving toward ranching. In 1993, 80,000 Nile crocodile skins were produced, the majority from ranches in Zimbabwe and South Africa.[153][177] Crocodile farming is one of the few burgeoning industries in Zimbabwe.[178] Unlike American alligator flesh, Nile crocodile meat is generally considered unappetizing although edible as tribes such as the Turkana may opportunistically feed on them. According to Graham and Beard (1968), Nile crocodile meat has an "indescribable" and unpleasant taste, greasy texture and a "repellent" smell.[50][179]

The conservation situation is more grim in central and west Africa presumably for both the Nile and west African crocodiles. The crocodile population in this area is much more sparse, and has not been adequately surveyed. While the natural population in these areas may be lower due to a less-than-ideal environment and competition with sympatric slender-snouted and dwarf crocodiles, extirpation may be a serious threat in some of these areas.[25][180] At some point in the 20th century, the Nile crocodile appeared to have been extirpated as a breeding species from Egypt, but has locally re-established in some areas such as the Aswan Dam.[22] Additional factors are a loss of wetland habitats, which is addition to direct dredging, damming and irrigation by humans, has retracted in the east, south and north of the crocodile’s range, possibly in correlation with global warming.[22][181] Retraction of wetlands due both to direct habitat destruction by humans and environmental factor possibly related to global warming is perhaps linked to the extinction of Nile crocodiles in the last few centuries in Syria, Israel and Tunisia.[22][25] In Lake St. Lucia, highly saline water has been pumped into the already brackish waters due to irrigation practices. Some deaths of crocodiles appeared to have been caused by these dangerous saline levels and this one-time stronghold for breeding crocodiles has experienced a major population decline.[22][182] In yet another historic crocodile stronghold, the Olifants River, which flows through Kruger National Park, numerous crocodile deaths have been reported. These are officially due to unknown causes but analysis has indicated that environmental pollutants caused by humans, particularly the burgeoning coal industry, are the primary cause. Much of the contamation of crocodiles occurs when they consume rancid fish themselves killed by pollutants.[183][184] Additional ecological surveys and establishing management programs are necessary to resolve these questions.

The Nile crocodile is the top predator in its environment, and is responsible for checking the population of mesopredator species, such as the barbel catfish and lungfish, that could overeat fish populations on which other species, including birds, rely. One of the fish predators seriously affected by the unchecked mesopredator fish populations (due again to crocodile declines) is humans, particularly with respect to tilapia, an important commercial fish that has declined due to excessive predation.[11] The Nile crocodile also consumes dead animals that would otherwise pollute the waters.

Attacks on humans

Makeshift barrier in Uganda to lessen the risk of crocodile attacks

Much of the hunting of and general animosity towards Nile crocodiles stems from their reputation as a man-eater, which is not entirely unjustified.[185] Despite most attacks going unreported, the Nile crocodile along with the saltwater crocodile is estimated to kill hundreds (possibly thousands) of people each year, which may be more than all other crocodilian species combined.[2][19][186] While these species are much more aggressive towards people than other living crocodilians (as is statistically supported by estimated numbers of crocodile attacks), Nile crocodiles are not particularly more likely to behave aggressively to humans or regard humans as potential prey than saltwater crocodiles. However, unlike other "man-eating" crocodile species, including the saltwater crocodile, the Nile crocodile lives within close proximity to human populations through most of its range, so contact is more frequent. This combined with the species’ large size renders a higher risk of attack.[2][16] Crocodiles as small as 2.1 m (6 ft 11 in) are capable of overpowering and successfully preying on small apes and hominids, presumably including children and smaller adult humans, but a majority of fatal attacks on humans are by crocodiles reportedly exceeding 3 m (9 ft 10 in) in length.[16]

In studies preceding the slaughter of crocodiles for the leather trade, when there were believed to be many more Nile crocodiles, a roughly estimated 1,000 human fatalities per annum by Nile crocodiles were posited with a roughly equal number of aborted attacks.[11][187] A more contemporary study claimed the number of attacks by Nile crocodiles per year as 275 to 745, of which 63% are fatal, as opposed to an estimated 30 attacks per year by saltwater crocodiles, of which 50% are fatal. With the Nile crocodile and the saltwater crocodile, the mean size of crocodiles involved in non-fatal attacks was about 3 m (9 ft 10 in) as opposed to a reported range of 2.5–5 m (8 ft 2 in – 16 ft 5 in) or larger for crocodiles responsible for fatal attacks. The average estimated size of Nile crocodiles involved in fatal attacks is 3.5 m (11 ft 6 in). Since a majority of fatal attacks are believed to be predatory in nature, the Nile crocodile can be considered the most prolific predator of humans among wild animals.[188] In comparison, lions, in the years from 1990 to 2006, were responsible for an estimated one-eighth as many fatal attacks on humans in Africa as were Nile crocodiles. Although Nile crocodiles are more than a dozen times more numerous than lions in the wild, probably fewer than a quarter of living Nile crocodiles are old and large enough to pose a danger to humans.[188][189][190] Other wild animals responsible for more annual human mortalities either attack humans in self-defense, as do venomous snakes,[191] or are deadly only as vectors of disease or infection, such as snails,[192] rats[193] and mosquitos.[194]

Regional reportage from numerous areas with large crocodile populations nearby indicate, per district or large village, that crocodiles often annually claim about a dozen or more lives per year. Miscellaneous examples of areas in the last few decades with a dozen or more fatal crocodile attacks annually include Korogwe District, Tanzania, Niassa Reserve, Mozambique and the area around Lower Zambezi National Park, Zambia.[195][196] Despite historic claims that the victims of Nile crocodile attacks are usually "women and children",[2] there is no detectable trends in this regard and any human, regardless of age, gender, or size is potentially vulnerable. Incautious human behavior unfortunately is the primary drive behind crocodile attacks.[16] Most fatal attacks occur when a person is standing a few feet away from water on a non-steep bank, are wading in shallow waters, actively swimming or have limbs dangling over a boat or pier. Many victims are caught while crouching and people in jobs that might require heavy usage of water including laundry workers, fisherman, game wardens and regional guides are more likely to be attacked. Many fisherman and other workers who are not poverty-stricken will go out of their way to avoid waterways known to harbor large crocodile populations.[11][50][197]

Most biologists who have engaged in months or even years of field work with Nile crocodiles, including Cott (1961), Graham and Beard (1968) and Guggisberg (1972), have found that with sufficient precautions, their own lives and the lives of their local guides were rarely, if ever, at risk in areas with many crocodiles.[6][11][50] However, Guggisberg accumulated several earlier writings that noted the lack of fear of crocodiles among Africans, driven in part perhaps by poverty and superstition, that caused many observed cases of an "appalling" lack of caution within view of large crocodiles, as opposed to the presence of bold lions which engendered an appropriate panic. Per Guggisberg, this disregard (essentially regarding the crocodile as a lowly creature and thus non-threatening to humans) may account for the seemingly higher frequency of deadly attacks by crocodiles than by large mammalian carnivores. Most locals are well aware of how to behave in crocodile-occupied areas and some of the writings quoted by Guggisberg from the 19th and 20th century may require being taken with a "grain of salt".[11][50]

Examples of large Nile crocodiles

Average male Nile crocodile size (green), at about 4.27 m (14 ft 0 in), along with size of the largest recorded specimen (grey), at 6.45 m (21 ft 2 in), compared to a human

In the past it has been claimed that the largest size that Nile crocodiles can attain is approximately 4.55 to 5 m (14 ft 11 in to 16 ft 5 in) and this can indeed be claimed as the top size normally expected in the species.[198] A relatively modest top length is additionally supported by mummified crocodiles from ancient Egypt which rarely even approach such a size. However most crocodile biologists in recent decades accept that Nile crocodiles can exceptionally exceed 5 m (16 ft 5 in) when not overhunted.[2][6][11][50] The maximum size that the species can attain is a matter of some controversy and reports of outsized Nile crocodiles are met with greater skepticism than those of saltwater crocodiles.[2][11] As is the case with many outsized animals, the collection of voucher skeletal remains of very big specimens is rather scanty, in part because the understandable difficulty of even transporting such remains, but leaves the possibility of mistakes (such as measuring along the curves which can falsely boost the measured length) and outright exaggerations amidst "hunting stories". 7-metre (23 ft) specimens and larger have been reported, but since gross overestimation of size is common, these reports are suspect. Also, most outsized crocodiles were killed by hunters and leather-collectors without field scientists present to verify and thus one may take these claims with healthy skepticism. In the past, explorers have claimed to have seen massive crocodiles in Africa and Madagascar they estimated from 7.62 to 9.15 m (25 ft 0 in to 30 ft 0 in), claims sometimes supported by native hunters and fisherman, however no measurements occurred and these are certain to be vast exaggerations.[11][18] Currently, via unequivocal, modern scientific verification, the saltwater crocodile is the only crocodilian verified to exceed 6.1 m (20 ft 0 in) .[199][200]

Prior to overhunting in the 20th century, other crocodilians may have also approached or exceeded 6.1 m (20 ft 0 in), such sizes being somewhat reliably reported in gharials and Orinoco crocodiles in very old reports before both species were decimated by hunting and habitat destruction and reported but unverified in black caimans and American crocodiles (although voucher skulls from the latter species show it does likely exceed such lengths in very rare cases). However, the Nile crocodile is the only modern crocodilian besides the saltwater crocodile where specimens over 4.5 m (14 ft 9 in) are merely uncommon rather than rare.[2][11][39] As a whole, giants are rarer today; before the heavy hunting of the 1940s and 1950s, a larger population base and more extensive wetland habitats meant more giants, as well as possibly diminishing of the genetic lines that fostered enormous sizes.[11][50] Following is a list of Nile crocodile specimens reportedly taken since 1900 that exceed 5.5 m (18 ft 1 in), well past the "expected" length for a Nile crocodile. The list includes only crocodiles that have been "measured", thus excluding outsized crocodiles that were merely based on eye-witness accounts. The only exception is "Gustave", a male crocodile mentioned due to his notoriety.

  • A specimen killed by T. Murray Smith on Lake Tanganyika, Tanzania was reportedly measured at 5.5 m (18 ft 1 in). Additionally, this specimen was stated to have a girth around its belly of 2.28 m (7 ft 6 in), to measured 71 cm (28 in) across the base of its jaw and possess a foreleg with a length of 56 cm (22 in).[11]
  • Another notable giant, caught alive by J.G. Kulmann in Venda, South Africa, measured 5.5 m (18 ft 1 in) in length and was claimed to have weighed 905.7 kg (1,997 lb), which if accurate would make the specimen much bulkier than expected at this length.[47]
  • A game warden shot a specimen in 1950 on the Semliki River, Kenya that measured 5.54 m (18 ft 2 in). Guinness Book of World Records considered this report reliable.[2][6]
  • Also on the Semliki River, a specimen was reportedly killed in June 1954 by Mr. Hippel that measured 5.59 m (18 ft 4 in). This giant is considered truly exceptional because it was verified that it was a female, making it almost a metre longer than any other known female and possibly the largest female crocodilian of any extant species.[6][11]
  • The largest Nile crocodile skull reported from known museum collections was one from Ethiopia measuring 68.6 cm (27.0 in), with a mandibular length of 87 cm (34 in). This specimen in life was about 5.6 m (18 ft 4 in) and came from Lake Chamo.[39]
  • A specimen killed by C. Yiannakis near Chipoka, Malawi was measured at 5.74 m (18 ft 10 in) and the record was accepted by Guinness Records.[2]
  • A specimen reportedly measuring 5.8 m (19 ft 0 in) was killed the Kafue River of Zambia by Hans Besser. Its weight was somewhere between 680 and 725 kg (1,499 and 1,598 lb) based on piecemeal scaling (weighing individual body parts one by one and adding them up), indicating it was relatively slender compared to many outsized crocodiles, which tend to be cumbersomely bulky.[11]
  • In the Okavango Swamp of Botswana, in November 1968, hunter Bobby Wilmot killed a monstrously-sized crocodile reported as a man-eater. It was found to have measured 5.87 m (19 ft 3 in) in total length and to have a belly girth of 2.13 m (7 ft 0 in). Its piecemeal weight totaled at approximately 816 kg (1,799 lb) and its head alone scaled 166 kg (366 lb). This crocodile’s stomach contents consisted of 2 goats, half a donkey and the clothed torso of a woman.[2][11]
  • Yet another giant reported from the Semliki River, although actually on the Ugandan side, was killed in September 1951 by a ranger from the Uganda Game and Fisheries Department. It measured 5.94 m (19 ft 6 in) in length and had a belly girth of 2.24 m (7 ft 4 in).[2][11]
  • Raymond Drury reported an exceptional crocodile from Madagascar obtaining 6 m (19 ft 8 in), although further details are lacking.[11]
  • A possibly still living Nile crocodile from Burundi that was nicknamed "Gustave" has taken on somewhat of a legendary reputation. This is largely because herpetologists that have tried to study him in detail and hunters to kill him have both been unsuccessful since the late 1990s. "Gustave" is estimated by locals and those with limited field exposure to him to be at least 6.1 m (20 ft 0 in) in length and reportedly on occasion attacks and consume humans and even hippopotamuses.[201][202]
  • A specimen, considered authentic by Guinness Records, killed by Erich Novotony in 1948 in the Emin Pasha Gulf of Lake Victoria, Tanzania was measured at 6.4 m (21 ft 0 in). This enormous crocodile reportedly weighed about 900 kg (2,000 lb).[2][11]
  • Douglas Jones reportedly killed an outsized Nile crocodile in the Juba River of Somalia that measured in a straight-line at just over 6.4 m (21 ft 0 in). This is considered a reliable report per Guinness Records.[2][11]
  • Per Guinness Records, the largest accurately measured Nile crocodile was shot near Mwanza, Tanzania in 1905 by the Duke of Mecklenburg. This specimen measured 6.45 m (21 ft 2 in). Furthermore, its weight was estimated at 1,090 kg (2,400 lb).[2]
  • Mary Kingsley reported that she had killed a 6.7 m (22 ft 0 in) crocodile in West Africa. Although Guggisberg (1972) considered her account believable, Guinness Records notably does not mention this specimen in compiling the largest known Nile crocodiles.[2][11]
  • In 1903, Hans Besser reported that he had killed a specimen in Zambia measuring 7.6 m (24 ft 11 in) despite missing "part of its tail", providing details that the body was 93 cm (37 in) high at the highest point on the back, girth at the belly of 4.26 m (14 ft 0 in) and a (mandibular?) skull length of 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in). Again, this somewhat outlandish proportioned crocodile was not mentioned by Guinness Records and can firmly be considered unverified and perhaps dubious since typically no voucher remains are known.[11]
  • Yet another unverified monster (also not considered inclusive in the Guinness Records run-down of largest crocodiles), possibly the largest Nile crocodile reported in literature from after 1900, was a specimen killed by Captain Riddick in Lake Kyoga, Uganda. He stated that this crocodile measured 7.93 m (26 ft 0 in) in total length. Unfortunately most details are lacking for this report.[11]

See also

References

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