MARSH
MUGGER (Crocodylus palustris)
Crocodiles can be distinguished from alligators
by the large tooth at the front on each side of the
lower jaw, which fits into a corresponding notch in
the upper jaw, revealing that tooth even when the mouth
is closed. The difference is best seen when a mugger
is viewed from the side; the projecting tooth, together
with the wavy outline of its mouth, gives it a rather
nasty, smiling appearance.
They prefer swamps and oxbow lakes, although
is also seen in rivers. The mugger lies motionless,
basking for hours on the banks in the winter until they
almost become part of the scenery. Any unwary animal
which wanders within range is seized with surprising
speed and agility and then dragged into the water and
drowned. Internal nostrils opening deep in the throat
can be closed with valves, enabling the mugger to hold
struggling prey submerged without inhaling water itself.
The prey, which can be as large as deer, is then torn
apart and swallowed in chunks. Other food is mainly
fish and small aquatic creatures, and muggers also scavenge.
Sometimes they travel considerable distances
overland in search of food or while commuting from place
to place, but they spend much of their time motionless,
either in the water or on the banks, depending on the
season of the year. Their movements are governed to
some extent by the need to regulate their body temperature.
In the winter they bask in sun for most of the day to
bring their temperature up to a level at which their
bodies can function fast and efficiently enough to catch
prey. In summer they keep cool by lying in the water,
often with their mouths gaping wide open so that they
lose heat from the moist inner surfaces.
GHARIAL (Gavialis gangeticus)
The gharial is so called because of the
bulbous growth which large breeding males develop on
the end of their snouts, and which resembles a ghara
(Hindi for ‘pitcher’). it is quite distinct
from other crocodilians and belongs to a separate family,
Gavialidae, of which it is the only representative.
It is the rarest of all crocodilians, found only in
isolated pockets of the Ganges, the Brahmaputra and
the Mahanadi river systems, with a world population
of fewer than two hundred adults in the wild. The largest
single concentration of these, numbering about 60 ,
survives in the Narayani river, which flows in Chitwan.
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