{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}my American alligator eating 3 mice 6/26/08|my American alligator eating 3 mice 6/26/08{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

my American alligator eating 3 mice 6/26/08

{An alligator is a crocodilian in the genus Alligator of the family Alligatoridae. | The name alligator is an anglicized form of the Spanish el lagarto (the lizard), the name by which early Spanish explorers and settlers in Florida called the alligator. | There are two living alligator species: the American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and the Chinese Alligator (Alligator sinensis). | The Alligator has been described as a living fossil from the Age of Reptiles, having survived on earth for 200 million years. | An average American alligators weight and length is 800 lbs (360 kg) and 13 feet (4 m) long. | According to the Everglades National Park website, the largest alligator ever recorded in Florida was 17 feet 5 inches long (5-6m), although according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission web site the Florida state record for length is a 14 foot 5/8 inch male from Lake Monroe in Seminole County. | The Florida record for weight is a 1,043 pound (13 feet 10 1/2 inches long) male from Orange Lake in Alachua County. | The largest alligator ever recorded in Alabama measured 12 feet 08 inches (3-4 m). | The largest alligator ever recorded measured 19 feet 3 inches (580 cm) and was found on Marsh Island, Louisiana. | Few of the giant specimens were weighed, but the larger ones could have exceeded a ton in weight. | The Chinese Alligator is smaller, rarely exceeding 7 feet (2 m) in length. | An alligators lifespan is usually estimated in the range of 50 years or more. | A specimen named Muja has resided in the Belgrade Zoo in Serbia since 1937, making it at least 71 years old. | Another specimen, ?abul?tis, in Riga Zoo, Latvia died in 2007 being more than 72 years old. | Alligators are native to only two countries: the United States and China. | American Alligators are found in the subtropical southeast US: all of Florida and Louisiana; the southern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi; coastal South and North Carolina; Southeastern Texas and in extreme southeastern Oklahoma and Arkansas. | The majority of American Alligators inhabit Florida and Louisiana, with over a million alligators in each state. | American Alligators live in freshwater environments, such as ponds, marshes, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and swamps, as well as brackish environments. | Southern Florida is the only place where both alligators and crocodiles live side by side. | The Chinese alligator currently is found only in the Yangtze River valley and is extremely endangered, with only a few dozen believed to be left in the wild. | Indeed, far more Chinese alligators live in zoos around the world than can be found in the wild. | For example, Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southern Louisiana has several in captivity in an attempt to preserve the species. | Miami-Dade County Zoo in Miami,FL also has a breeding pair of Chinese alligators. | Large male alligators are solitary, territorial animals. | Smaller alligators can often be found in large numbers in close proximity to each other. | The largest of the species (both males and females), will defend prime territory; smaller alligators have a higher tolerance of other alligators within a similar size class. | Although alligators have heavy bodies and slow metabolisms, they are capable of short bursts of speed, especially in very short lunges. | Alligators main prey are smaller animals that they can kill and eat with a single bite. | Alligators may kill larger prey by grabbing it and dragging it in the water to drown. | Alligators consume food that cannot be eaten in one bite by allowing it to rot or by biting and then spinning or convulsing wildly until bite-size pieces are torn off. | This is referred to as the death roll. | A hard-wired response developed over millions of years of evolution, even juvenile alligators execute death rolls when presented with chunks of meat. | Critical to the alligators ability to initiate a death roll, the tail must flex to a significant angle relative to its body. | Immobilizing an alligators tail incapacitates its ability to begin a death roll. | Most of the muscle in an alligators jaw is intended for biting and gripping prey. | The muscles that close the jaws are exceptionally powerful, however the muscles for opening their jaws are relatively weak in comparison. | As a result, an adult man can hold an alligators jaw shut with his bare hands. | In general, a strip of duct tape is enough to prevent an adult alligator from opening its jaws and is one of the most common methods used when alligators are to be captured and/or transported. | Alligators are generally timid towards humans and tend to walk or swim away if one approaches. | Unfortunately, this has led some people to the practice of approaching alligators and their nests in a way that may provoke the animals into attacking. | There are federal laws that prohibit feeding of the alligators in several locations where they can be found; however, some people choose to ignore these. | If fed, the alligators will eventually lose their fear of humans and may, in turn, choose to approach human settlements rather than moving away. | When young they eat fish, insects, snails, crustaceans, and worms. | As they grow, they take progressively larger prey items, including larger fish such as gar, turtles, various mammals, birds, antelope and other reptiles. | Their stomachs also often contain gastroliths. | They will even consume carrion if they are sufficiently hungry. | Adult alligators can take razorbacks and deer and are well known to kill and eat smaller alligators. | In some cases, larger alligators have been known to hunt the Florida panther and bears, making it the apex predator throughout its distribution. | As humans encroach onto their habitat, attacks on humans are few but not unknown. | Alligators, unlike the large crocodiles, do not immediately regard a human upon encounter as prey, but may still attack in self-defense if provoked. | Alligators generally mature at a length of six feet (180 cm). | The mating season is in spring. | The female builds a nest of vegetation where the decomposition of the vegetation provides the heat needed to incubate the eggs. | The sex of the offspring is determined by the temperature in the nest and is fixed within 7 to 21 days of the start of incubation. | Incubation temperatures of 30 °C (86 °F) or lower produce a clutch of females; those of 34 °C (93 °F) or higher produce entirely males. | Nests constructed on levees are hotter than those constructed on wet marsh and, thus, the former tend to produce males and the latter, females. | The natural sex ratio at hatching is five females to one male. | Females hatched from eggs incubated at 30 °C weigh significantly more than males hatched from eggs incubated at 34 °C. | The mother will defend the nest from predators and will assist the hatchlings to water. | She will provide protection to the young for about a year if they remain in the area. | The largest threat to the young are adult alligators. | Predation by adults on young can account for a mortality rate of up to fifty percent in the first year. | In the past, immediately following the outlawing of alligator hunting, populations rebounded quickly due to the suppressed number of adults preying upon the new recruits, increasing survival among the young alligators. | The mother keeps the young for one year. | Alligator farming is a big and growing industry in Florida, Texas and Louisiana. | These states produce a combined annual total of some 45,000 alligator hides. | Alligator hides bring good prices and hides in the 6-7 foot (1-2 m) range have sold for $300 each, though the price can fluctuate considerably from year to year. | The market for alligator meat is growing and approximately 300,000 pounds (140 000 kg) of meat is produced annually. | According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, raw alligator meat contains roughly 200 calories per 3oz (85 g) serving size, of which 27 calories come from fat. | While alligators are often confused with crocodiles, they belong to two quite separate taxonomic families. | Every type of crocodile, except the American crocodile, is usually larger and heavier than alligators, has fewer teeth, and has a shorter life-span. | Alligators differ from crocodiles principally in having wider and shorter heads, with more obtuse snouts; in having the fourth, enlarged tooth of the under jaw received, not into an external notch, but into a pit formed for it within the upper one; in lacking a jagged fringe which appears on the hind legs and feet of the crocodile; in having the toes of the hind feet webbed not more than half way to the tips; and an intolerance to salinity. | Alligators strongly prefer fresh water, while crocodiles can tolerate salt water due to specialized glands for filtering out salt. | In general, crocodiles tend to be more dangerous to humans than alligators. | Both species of alligator also tend to be darker in color, often nearly black but color is very dependent on the water. | Algae-laden waters produce greener alligators; alligators from waters with a lot of tannic acid from overhanging trees are often darker (although the Chinese alligator has some light patterning. |) Also, in alligators only the upper teeth can be seen with the jaws closed, in contrast to true crocodiles, in which upper and lower teeth can be seen. | However, many individuals bear jaw deformities which complicate this means of identification. | Alligators are not nearly as dangerous and not as daring as crocodiles, for crocodiles sometimes prey on other crocodiles; and alligators rarely prey on other alligators. | As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped. | Crocodiles have a longer narrower snout, with eyes farther forward. | Also, if one looks at an alligator and then a crocodile, one will notice a difference in their mouths: only the upper teeth are visible when an alligators mouth is closed, while a crocodiles mouth will reveal both upper and lower teeth, as their fourth tooth sticks out from the lower jaw, rather than fitting neatly into the upper jaw. | Crocodiles also tend to have green eyes, while alligators have brown ones. | Another distinction can be drawn between the jaws of the two animals. | Crocodiles jaws are much more narrow and are used to tear and grip on prey. | By contrast, alligators jaws are meant to crush bones, and can deliver a bite force of up to 3000 psi 20 MPa, although some evidence exists that larger species of crocodile may in fact possess a bite force of 5000 psi. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||}

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}Reptiles, Amphibians, Invertebrates & Small Pets : American Alligator Facts|Reptiles, Amphibians, Invertebrates & Small Pets : American Alligator Facts{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

American alligators are found in the southeastern United States and have skin covered in rough, bony scales. Discover facts about American alligators with information from a published biologist in this free video on alligators and reptiles. Expert: Dr. Alan Richmond Bio: Dr. Alan Richmond is the lecturer and curator of biology at the University of Massachusetts. He is a well-published biologist and has a special interest in reptiles and amphibians. Filmmaker: Demand Media

{An alligator is a crocodilian in the genus Alligator of the family Alligatoridae. | The name alligator is an anglicized form of the Spanish el lagarto (the lizard), the name by which early Spanish explorers and settlers in Florida called the alligator. | There are two living alligator species: the American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and the Chinese Alligator (Alligator sinensis). | The Alligator has been described as a living fossil from the Age of Reptiles, having survived on earth for 200 million years. | An average American alligators weight and length is 800 lbs (360 kg) and 13 feet (4 m) long. | According to the Everglades National Park website, the largest alligator ever recorded in Florida was 17 feet 5 inches long (5-6m), although according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission web site the Florida state record for length is a 14 foot 5/8 inch male from Lake Monroe in Seminole County. | The Florida record for weight is a 1,043 pound (13 feet 10 1/2 inches long) male from Orange Lake in Alachua County. | The largest alligator ever recorded in Alabama measured 12 feet 08 inches (3-4 m). | The largest alligator ever recorded measured 19 feet 3 inches (580 cm) and was found on Marsh Island, Louisiana. | Few of the giant specimens were weighed, but the larger ones could have exceeded a ton in weight. | The Chinese Alligator is smaller, rarely exceeding 7 feet (2 m) in length. | An alligators lifespan is usually estimated in the range of 50 years or more. | A specimen named Muja has resided in the Belgrade Zoo in Serbia since 1937, making it at least 71 years old. | Another specimen, ?abul?tis, in Riga Zoo, Latvia died in 2007 being more than 72 years old. | Alligators are native to only two countries: the United States and China. | American Alligators are found in the subtropical southeast US: all of Florida and Louisiana; the southern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi; coastal South and North Carolina; Southeastern Texas and in extreme southeastern Oklahoma and Arkansas. | The majority of American Alligators inhabit Florida and Louisiana, with over a million alligators in each state. | American Alligators live in freshwater environments, such as ponds, marshes, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and swamps, as well as brackish environments. | Southern Florida is the only place where both alligators and crocodiles live side by side. | The Chinese alligator currently is found only in the Yangtze River valley and is extremely endangered, with only a few dozen believed to be left in the wild. | Indeed, far more Chinese alligators live in zoos around the world than can be found in the wild. | For example, Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southern Louisiana has several in captivity in an attempt to preserve the species. | Miami-Dade County Zoo in Miami,FL also has a breeding pair of Chinese alligators. | Large male alligators are solitary, territorial animals. | Smaller alligators can often be found in large numbers in close proximity to each other. | The largest of the species (both males and females), will defend prime territory; smaller alligators have a higher tolerance of other alligators within a similar size class. | Although alligators have heavy bodies and slow metabolisms, they are capable of short bursts of speed, especially in very short lunges. | Alligators main prey are smaller animals that they can kill and eat with a single bite. | Alligators may kill larger prey by grabbing it and dragging it in the water to drown. | Alligators consume food that cannot be eaten in one bite by allowing it to rot or by biting and then spinning or convulsing wildly until bite-size pieces are torn off. | This is referred to as the death roll. | A hard-wired response developed over millions of years of evolution, even juvenile alligators execute death rolls when presented with chunks of meat. | Critical to the alligators ability to initiate a death roll, the tail must flex to a significant angle relative to its body. | Immobilizing an alligators tail incapacitates its ability to begin a death roll. | Most of the muscle in an alligators jaw is intended for biting and gripping prey. | The muscles that close the jaws are exceptionally powerful, however the muscles for opening their jaws are relatively weak in comparison. | As a result, an adult man can hold an alligators jaw shut with his bare hands. | In general, a strip of duct tape is enough to prevent an adult alligator from opening its jaws and is one of the most common methods used when alligators are to be captured and/or transported. | Alligators are generally timid towards humans and tend to walk or swim away if one approaches. | Unfortunately, this has led some people to the practice of approaching alligators and their nests in a way that may provoke the animals into attacking. | There are federal laws that prohibit feeding of the alligators in several locations where they can be found; however, some people choose to ignore these. | If fed, the alligators will eventually lose their fear of humans and may, in turn, choose to approach human settlements rather than moving away. | When young they eat fish, insects, snails, crustaceans, and worms. | As they grow, they take progressively larger prey items, including larger fish such as gar, turtles, various mammals, birds, antelope and other reptiles. | Their stomachs also often contain gastroliths. | They will even consume carrion if they are sufficiently hungry. | Adult alligators can take razorbacks and deer and are well known to kill and eat smaller alligators. | In some cases, larger alligators have been known to hunt the Florida panther and bears, making it the apex predator throughout its distribution. | As humans encroach onto their habitat, attacks on humans are few but not unknown. | Alligators, unlike the large crocodiles, do not immediately regard a human upon encounter as prey, but may still attack in self-defense if provoked. | Alligators generally mature at a length of six feet (180 cm). | The mating season is in spring. | The female builds a nest of vegetation where the decomposition of the vegetation provides the heat needed to incubate the eggs. | The sex of the offspring is determined by the temperature in the nest and is fixed within 7 to 21 days of the start of incubation. | Incubation temperatures of 30 °C (86 °F) or lower produce a clutch of females; those of 34 °C (93 °F) or higher produce entirely males. | Nests constructed on levees are hotter than those constructed on wet marsh and, thus, the former tend to produce males and the latter, females. | The natural sex ratio at hatching is five females to one male. | Females hatched from eggs incubated at 30 °C weigh significantly more than males hatched from eggs incubated at 34 °C. | The mother will defend the nest from predators and will assist the hatchlings to water. | She will provide protection to the young for about a year if they remain in the area. | The largest threat to the young are adult alligators. | Predation by adults on young can account for a mortality rate of up to fifty percent in the first year. | In the past, immediately following the outlawing of alligator hunting, populations rebounded quickly due to the suppressed number of adults preying upon the new recruits, increasing survival among the young alligators. | The mother keeps the young for one year. | Alligator farming is a big and growing industry in Florida, Texas and Louisiana. | These states produce a combined annual total of some 45,000 alligator hides. | Alligator hides bring good prices and hides in the 6-7 foot (1-2 m) range have sold for $300 each, though the price can fluctuate considerably from year to year. | The market for alligator meat is growing and approximately 300,000 pounds (140 000 kg) of meat is produced annually. | According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, raw alligator meat contains roughly 200 calories per 3oz (85 g) serving size, of which 27 calories come from fat. | While alligators are often confused with crocodiles, they belong to two quite separate taxonomic families. | Every type of crocodile, except the American crocodile, is usually larger and heavier than alligators, has fewer teeth, and has a shorter life-span. | Alligators differ from crocodiles principally in having wider and shorter heads, with more obtuse snouts; in having the fourth, enlarged tooth of the under jaw received, not into an external notch, but into a pit formed for it within the upper one; in lacking a jagged fringe which appears on the hind legs and feet of the crocodile; in having the toes of the hind feet webbed not more than half way to the tips; and an intolerance to salinity. | Alligators strongly prefer fresh water, while crocodiles can tolerate salt water due to specialized glands for filtering out salt. | In general, crocodiles tend to be more dangerous to humans than alligators. | Both species of alligator also tend to be darker in color, often nearly black but color is very dependent on the water. | Algae-laden waters produce greener alligators; alligators from waters with a lot of tannic acid from overhanging trees are often darker (although the Chinese alligator has some light patterning. |) Also, in alligators only the upper teeth can be seen with the jaws closed, in contrast to true crocodiles, in which upper and lower teeth can be seen. | However, many individuals bear jaw deformities which complicate this means of identification. | Alligators are not nearly as dangerous and not as daring as crocodiles, for crocodiles sometimes prey on other crocodiles; and alligators rarely prey on other alligators. | As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped. | Crocodiles have a longer narrower snout, with eyes farther forward. | Also, if one looks at an alligator and then a crocodile, one will notice a difference in their mouths: only the upper teeth are visible when an alligators mouth is closed, while a crocodiles mouth will reveal both upper and lower teeth, as their fourth tooth sticks out from the lower jaw, rather than fitting neatly into the upper jaw. | Crocodiles also tend to have green eyes, while alligators have brown ones. | Another distinction can be drawn between the jaws of the two animals. | Crocodiles jaws are much more narrow and are used to tear and grip on prey. | By contrast, alligators jaws are meant to crush bones, and can deliver a bite force of up to 3000 psi 20 MPa, although some evidence exists that larger species of crocodile may in fact possess a bite force of 5000 psi. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||}

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}Albino American Alligator from Graziani Reptiles|Albino American Alligator from Graziani Reptiles{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

Albino American Alligator or “White Dragon” as Greg Graziani called it, was a show stopper at the “Fire Show” in Orlando, FL. Jackie and Greg are now breeding Alligator Morphs along with their core Ball Python business.

{An alligator is a crocodilian in the genus Alligator of the family Alligatoridae. | The name alligator is an anglicized form of the Spanish el lagarto (the lizard), the name by which early Spanish explorers and settlers in Florida called the alligator. | There are two living alligator species: the American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and the Chinese Alligator (Alligator sinensis). | The Alligator has been described as a living fossil from the Age of Reptiles, having survived on earth for 200 million years. | An average American alligators weight and length is 800 lbs (360 kg) and 13 feet (4 m) long. | According to the Everglades National Park website, the largest alligator ever recorded in Florida was 17 feet 5 inches long (5-6m), although according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission web site the Florida state record for length is a 14 foot 5/8 inch male from Lake Monroe in Seminole County. | The Florida record for weight is a 1,043 pound (13 feet 10 1/2 inches long) male from Orange Lake in Alachua County. | The largest alligator ever recorded in Alabama measured 12 feet 08 inches (3-4 m). | The largest alligator ever recorded measured 19 feet 3 inches (580 cm) and was found on Marsh Island, Louisiana. | Few of the giant specimens were weighed, but the larger ones could have exceeded a ton in weight. | The Chinese Alligator is smaller, rarely exceeding 7 feet (2 m) in length. | An alligators lifespan is usually estimated in the range of 50 years or more. | A specimen named Muja has resided in the Belgrade Zoo in Serbia since 1937, making it at least 71 years old. | Another specimen, ?abul?tis, in Riga Zoo, Latvia died in 2007 being more than 72 years old. | Alligators are native to only two countries: the United States and China. | American Alligators are found in the subtropical southeast US: all of Florida and Louisiana; the southern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi; coastal South and North Carolina; Southeastern Texas and in extreme southeastern Oklahoma and Arkansas. | The majority of American Alligators inhabit Florida and Louisiana, with over a million alligators in each state. | American Alligators live in freshwater environments, such as ponds, marshes, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and swamps, as well as brackish environments. | Southern Florida is the only place where both alligators and crocodiles live side by side. | The Chinese alligator currently is found only in the Yangtze River valley and is extremely endangered, with only a few dozen believed to be left in the wild. | Indeed, far more Chinese alligators live in zoos around the world than can be found in the wild. | For example, Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southern Louisiana has several in captivity in an attempt to preserve the species. | Miami-Dade County Zoo in Miami,FL also has a breeding pair of Chinese alligators. | Large male alligators are solitary, territorial animals. | Smaller alligators can often be found in large numbers in close proximity to each other. | The largest of the species (both males and females), will defend prime territory; smaller alligators have a higher tolerance of other alligators within a similar size class. | Although alligators have heavy bodies and slow metabolisms, they are capable of short bursts of speed, especially in very short lunges. | Alligators main prey are smaller animals that they can kill and eat with a single bite. | Alligators may kill larger prey by grabbing it and dragging it in the water to drown. | Alligators consume food that cannot be eaten in one bite by allowing it to rot or by biting and then spinning or convulsing wildly until bite-size pieces are torn off. | This is referred to as the death roll. | A hard-wired response developed over millions of years of evolution, even juvenile alligators execute death rolls when presented with chunks of meat. | Critical to the alligators ability to initiate a death roll, the tail must flex to a significant angle relative to its body. | Immobilizing an alligators tail incapacitates its ability to begin a death roll. | Most of the muscle in an alligators jaw is intended for biting and gripping prey. | The muscles that close the jaws are exceptionally powerful, however the muscles for opening their jaws are relatively weak in comparison. | As a result, an adult man can hold an alligators jaw shut with his bare hands. | In general, a strip of duct tape is enough to prevent an adult alligator from opening its jaws and is one of the most common methods used when alligators are to be captured and/or transported. | Alligators are generally timid towards humans and tend to walk or swim away if one approaches. | Unfortunately, this has led some people to the practice of approaching alligators and their nests in a way that may provoke the animals into attacking. | There are federal laws that prohibit feeding of the alligators in several locations where they can be found; however, some people choose to ignore these. | If fed, the alligators will eventually lose their fear of humans and may, in turn, choose to approach human settlements rather than moving away. | When young they eat fish, insects, snails, crustaceans, and worms. | As they grow, they take progressively larger prey items, including larger fish such as gar, turtles, various mammals, birds, antelope and other reptiles. | Their stomachs also often contain gastroliths. | They will even consume carrion if they are sufficiently hungry. | Adult alligators can take razorbacks and deer and are well known to kill and eat smaller alligators. | In some cases, larger alligators have been known to hunt the Florida panther and bears, making it the apex predator throughout its distribution. | As humans encroach onto their habitat, attacks on humans are few but not unknown. | Alligators, unlike the large crocodiles, do not immediately regard a human upon encounter as prey, but may still attack in self-defense if provoked. | Alligators generally mature at a length of six feet (180 cm). | The mating season is in spring. | The female builds a nest of vegetation where the decomposition of the vegetation provides the heat needed to incubate the eggs. | The sex of the offspring is determined by the temperature in the nest and is fixed within 7 to 21 days of the start of incubation. | Incubation temperatures of 30 °C (86 °F) or lower produce a clutch of females; those of 34 °C (93 °F) or higher produce entirely males. | Nests constructed on levees are hotter than those constructed on wet marsh and, thus, the former tend to produce males and the latter, females. | The natural sex ratio at hatching is five females to one male. | Females hatched from eggs incubated at 30 °C weigh significantly more than males hatched from eggs incubated at 34 °C. | The mother will defend the nest from predators and will assist the hatchlings to water. | She will provide protection to the young for about a year if they remain in the area. | The largest threat to the young are adult alligators. | Predation by adults on young can account for a mortality rate of up to fifty percent in the first year. | In the past, immediately following the outlawing of alligator hunting, populations rebounded quickly due to the suppressed number of adults preying upon the new recruits, increasing survival among the young alligators. | The mother keeps the young for one year. | Alligator farming is a big and growing industry in Florida, Texas and Louisiana. | These states produce a combined annual total of some 45,000 alligator hides. | Alligator hides bring good prices and hides in the 6-7 foot (1-2 m) range have sold for $300 each, though the price can fluctuate considerably from year to year. | The market for alligator meat is growing and approximately 300,000 pounds (140 000 kg) of meat is produced annually. | According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, raw alligator meat contains roughly 200 calories per 3oz (85 g) serving size, of which 27 calories come from fat. | While alligators are often confused with crocodiles, they belong to two quite separate taxonomic families. | Every type of crocodile, except the American crocodile, is usually larger and heavier than alligators, has fewer teeth, and has a shorter life-span. | Alligators differ from crocodiles principally in having wider and shorter heads, with more obtuse snouts; in having the fourth, enlarged tooth of the under jaw received, not into an external notch, but into a pit formed for it within the upper one; in lacking a jagged fringe which appears on the hind legs and feet of the crocodile; in having the toes of the hind feet webbed not more than half way to the tips; and an intolerance to salinity. | Alligators strongly prefer fresh water, while crocodiles can tolerate salt water due to specialized glands for filtering out salt. | In general, crocodiles tend to be more dangerous to humans than alligators. | Both species of alligator also tend to be darker in color, often nearly black but color is very dependent on the water. | Algae-laden waters produce greener alligators; alligators from waters with a lot of tannic acid from overhanging trees are often darker (although the Chinese alligator has some light patterning. |) Also, in alligators only the upper teeth can be seen with the jaws closed, in contrast to true crocodiles, in which upper and lower teeth can be seen. | However, many individuals bear jaw deformities which complicate this means of identification. | Alligators are not nearly as dangerous and not as daring as crocodiles, for crocodiles sometimes prey on other crocodiles; and alligators rarely prey on other alligators. | As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped. | Crocodiles have a longer narrower snout, with eyes farther forward. | Also, if one looks at an alligator and then a crocodile, one will notice a difference in their mouths: only the upper teeth are visible when an alligators mouth is closed, while a crocodiles mouth will reveal both upper and lower teeth, as their fourth tooth sticks out from the lower jaw, rather than fitting neatly into the upper jaw. | Crocodiles also tend to have green eyes, while alligators have brown ones. | Another distinction can be drawn between the jaws of the two animals. | Crocodiles jaws are much more narrow and are used to tear and grip on prey. | By contrast, alligators jaws are meant to crush bones, and can deliver a bite force of up to 3000 psi 20 MPa, although some evidence exists that larger species of crocodile may in fact possess a bite force of 5000 psi. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||}

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}cool like that|cool like that{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

american alligator and spec caiman chilling

{An alligator is a crocodilian in the genus Alligator of the family Alligatoridae. | The name alligator is an anglicized form of the Spanish el lagarto (the lizard), the name by which early Spanish explorers and settlers in Florida called the alligator. | There are two living alligator species: the American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and the Chinese Alligator (Alligator sinensis). | The Alligator has been described as a living fossil from the Age of Reptiles, having survived on earth for 200 million years. | An average American alligators weight and length is 800 lbs (360 kg) and 13 feet (4 m) long. | According to the Everglades National Park website, the largest alligator ever recorded in Florida was 17 feet 5 inches long (5-6m), although according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission web site the Florida state record for length is a 14 foot 5/8 inch male from Lake Monroe in Seminole County. | The Florida record for weight is a 1,043 pound (13 feet 10 1/2 inches long) male from Orange Lake in Alachua County. | The largest alligator ever recorded in Alabama measured 12 feet 08 inches (3-4 m). | The largest alligator ever recorded measured 19 feet 3 inches (580 cm) and was found on Marsh Island, Louisiana. | Few of the giant specimens were weighed, but the larger ones could have exceeded a ton in weight. | The Chinese Alligator is smaller, rarely exceeding 7 feet (2 m) in length. | An alligators lifespan is usually estimated in the range of 50 years or more. | A specimen named Muja has resided in the Belgrade Zoo in Serbia since 1937, making it at least 71 years old. | Another specimen, ?abul?tis, in Riga Zoo, Latvia died in 2007 being more than 72 years old. | Alligators are native to only two countries: the United States and China. | American Alligators are found in the subtropical southeast US: all of Florida and Louisiana; the southern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi; coastal South and North Carolina; Southeastern Texas and in extreme southeastern Oklahoma and Arkansas. | The majority of American Alligators inhabit Florida and Louisiana, with over a million alligators in each state. | American Alligators live in freshwater environments, such as ponds, marshes, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and swamps, as well as brackish environments. | Southern Florida is the only place where both alligators and crocodiles live side by side. | The Chinese alligator currently is found only in the Yangtze River valley and is extremely endangered, with only a few dozen believed to be left in the wild. | Indeed, far more Chinese alligators live in zoos around the world than can be found in the wild. | For example, Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southern Louisiana has several in captivity in an attempt to preserve the species. | Miami-Dade County Zoo in Miami,FL also has a breeding pair of Chinese alligators. | Large male alligators are solitary, territorial animals. | Smaller alligators can often be found in large numbers in close proximity to each other. | The largest of the species (both males and females), will defend prime territory; smaller alligators have a higher tolerance of other alligators within a similar size class. | Although alligators have heavy bodies and slow metabolisms, they are capable of short bursts of speed, especially in very short lunges. | Alligators main prey are smaller animals that they can kill and eat with a single bite. | Alligators may kill larger prey by grabbing it and dragging it in the water to drown. | Alligators consume food that cannot be eaten in one bite by allowing it to rot or by biting and then spinning or convulsing wildly until bite-size pieces are torn off. | This is referred to as the death roll. | A hard-wired response developed over millions of years of evolution, even juvenile alligators execute death rolls when presented with chunks of meat. | Critical to the alligators ability to initiate a death roll, the tail must flex to a significant angle relative to its body. | Immobilizing an alligators tail incapacitates its ability to begin a death roll. | Most of the muscle in an alligators jaw is intended for biting and gripping prey. | The muscles that close the jaws are exceptionally powerful, however the muscles for opening their jaws are relatively weak in comparison. | As a result, an adult man can hold an alligators jaw shut with his bare hands. | In general, a strip of duct tape is enough to prevent an adult alligator from opening its jaws and is one of the most common methods used when alligators are to be captured and/or transported. | Alligators are generally timid towards humans and tend to walk or swim away if one approaches. | Unfortunately, this has led some people to the practice of approaching alligators and their nests in a way that may provoke the animals into attacking. | There are federal laws that prohibit feeding of the alligators in several locations where they can be found; however, some people choose to ignore these. | If fed, the alligators will eventually lose their fear of humans and may, in turn, choose to approach human settlements rather than moving away. | When young they eat fish, insects, snails, crustaceans, and worms. | As they grow, they take progressively larger prey items, including larger fish such as gar, turtles, various mammals, birds, antelope and other reptiles. | Their stomachs also often contain gastroliths. | They will even consume carrion if they are sufficiently hungry. | Adult alligators can take razorbacks and deer and are well known to kill and eat smaller alligators. | In some cases, larger alligators have been known to hunt the Florida panther and bears, making it the apex predator throughout its distribution. | As humans encroach onto their habitat, attacks on humans are few but not unknown. | Alligators, unlike the large crocodiles, do not immediately regard a human upon encounter as prey, but may still attack in self-defense if provoked. | Alligators generally mature at a length of six feet (180 cm). | The mating season is in spring. | The female builds a nest of vegetation where the decomposition of the vegetation provides the heat needed to incubate the eggs. | The sex of the offspring is determined by the temperature in the nest and is fixed within 7 to 21 days of the start of incubation. | Incubation temperatures of 30 °C (86 °F) or lower produce a clutch of females; those of 34 °C (93 °F) or higher produce entirely males. | Nests constructed on levees are hotter than those constructed on wet marsh and, thus, the former tend to produce males and the latter, females. | The natural sex ratio at hatching is five females to one male. | Females hatched from eggs incubated at 30 °C weigh significantly more than males hatched from eggs incubated at 34 °C. | The mother will defend the nest from predators and will assist the hatchlings to water. | She will provide protection to the young for about a year if they remain in the area. | The largest threat to the young are adult alligators. | Predation by adults on young can account for a mortality rate of up to fifty percent in the first year. | In the past, immediately following the outlawing of alligator hunting, populations rebounded quickly due to the suppressed number of adults preying upon the new recruits, increasing survival among the young alligators. | The mother keeps the young for one year. | Alligator farming is a big and growing industry in Florida, Texas and Louisiana. | These states produce a combined annual total of some 45,000 alligator hides. | Alligator hides bring good prices and hides in the 6-7 foot (1-2 m) range have sold for $300 each, though the price can fluctuate considerably from year to year. | The market for alligator meat is growing and approximately 300,000 pounds (140 000 kg) of meat is produced annually. | According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, raw alligator meat contains roughly 200 calories per 3oz (85 g) serving size, of which 27 calories come from fat. | While alligators are often confused with crocodiles, they belong to two quite separate taxonomic families. | Every type of crocodile, except the American crocodile, is usually larger and heavier than alligators, has fewer teeth, and has a shorter life-span. | Alligators differ from crocodiles principally in having wider and shorter heads, with more obtuse snouts; in having the fourth, enlarged tooth of the under jaw received, not into an external notch, but into a pit formed for it within the upper one; in lacking a jagged fringe which appears on the hind legs and feet of the crocodile; in having the toes of the hind feet webbed not more than half way to the tips; and an intolerance to salinity. | Alligators strongly prefer fresh water, while crocodiles can tolerate salt water due to specialized glands for filtering out salt. | In general, crocodiles tend to be more dangerous to humans than alligators. | Both species of alligator also tend to be darker in color, often nearly black but color is very dependent on the water. | Algae-laden waters produce greener alligators; alligators from waters with a lot of tannic acid from overhanging trees are often darker (although the Chinese alligator has some light patterning. |) Also, in alligators only the upper teeth can be seen with the jaws closed, in contrast to true crocodiles, in which upper and lower teeth can be seen. | However, many individuals bear jaw deformities which complicate this means of identification. | Alligators are not nearly as dangerous and not as daring as crocodiles, for crocodiles sometimes prey on other crocodiles; and alligators rarely prey on other alligators. | As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped. | Crocodiles have a longer narrower snout, with eyes farther forward. | Also, if one looks at an alligator and then a crocodile, one will notice a difference in their mouths: only the upper teeth are visible when an alligators mouth is closed, while a crocodiles mouth will reveal both upper and lower teeth, as their fourth tooth sticks out from the lower jaw, rather than fitting neatly into the upper jaw. | Crocodiles also tend to have green eyes, while alligators have brown ones. | Another distinction can be drawn between the jaws of the two animals. | Crocodiles jaws are much more narrow and are used to tear and grip on prey. | By contrast, alligators jaws are meant to crush bones, and can deliver a bite force of up to 3000 psi 20 MPa, although some evidence exists that larger species of crocodile may in fact possess a bite force of 5000 psi. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||}

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}The American Alligator|The American Alligator{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

This is a video of the american alligator from the bbc’s Life in Cold Blood documentary series.

{An alligator is a crocodilian in the genus Alligator of the family Alligatoridae. | The name alligator is an anglicized form of the Spanish el lagarto (the lizard), the name by which early Spanish explorers and settlers in Florida called the alligator. | There are two living alligator species: the American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and the Chinese Alligator (Alligator sinensis). | The Alligator has been described as a living fossil from the Age of Reptiles, having survived on earth for 200 million years. | An average American alligators weight and length is 800 lbs (360 kg) and 13 feet (4 m) long. | According to the Everglades National Park website, the largest alligator ever recorded in Florida was 17 feet 5 inches long (5-6m), although according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission web site the Florida state record for length is a 14 foot 5/8 inch male from Lake Monroe in Seminole County. | The Florida record for weight is a 1,043 pound (13 feet 10 1/2 inches long) male from Orange Lake in Alachua County. | The largest alligator ever recorded in Alabama measured 12 feet 08 inches (3-4 m). | The largest alligator ever recorded measured 19 feet 3 inches (580 cm) and was found on Marsh Island, Louisiana. | Few of the giant specimens were weighed, but the larger ones could have exceeded a ton in weight. | The Chinese Alligator is smaller, rarely exceeding 7 feet (2 m) in length. | An alligators lifespan is usually estimated in the range of 50 years or more. | A specimen named Muja has resided in the Belgrade Zoo in Serbia since 1937, making it at least 71 years old. | Another specimen, ?abul?tis, in Riga Zoo, Latvia died in 2007 being more than 72 years old. | Alligators are native to only two countries: the United States and China. | American Alligators are found in the subtropical southeast US: all of Florida and Louisiana; the southern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi; coastal South and North Carolina; Southeastern Texas and in extreme southeastern Oklahoma and Arkansas. | The majority of American Alligators inhabit Florida and Louisiana, with over a million alligators in each state. | American Alligators live in freshwater environments, such as ponds, marshes, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and swamps, as well as brackish environments. | Southern Florida is the only place where both alligators and crocodiles live side by side. | The Chinese alligator currently is found only in the Yangtze River valley and is extremely endangered, with only a few dozen believed to be left in the wild. | Indeed, far more Chinese alligators live in zoos around the world than can be found in the wild. | For example, Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southern Louisiana has several in captivity in an attempt to preserve the species. | Miami-Dade County Zoo in Miami,FL also has a breeding pair of Chinese alligators. | Large male alligators are solitary, territorial animals. | Smaller alligators can often be found in large numbers in close proximity to each other. | The largest of the species (both males and females), will defend prime territory; smaller alligators have a higher tolerance of other alligators within a similar size class. | Although alligators have heavy bodies and slow metabolisms, they are capable of short bursts of speed, especially in very short lunges. | Alligators main prey are smaller animals that they can kill and eat with a single bite. | Alligators may kill larger prey by grabbing it and dragging it in the water to drown. | Alligators consume food that cannot be eaten in one bite by allowing it to rot or by biting and then spinning or convulsing wildly until bite-size pieces are torn off. | This is referred to as the death roll. | A hard-wired response developed over millions of years of evolution, even juvenile alligators execute death rolls when presented with chunks of meat. | Critical to the alligators ability to initiate a death roll, the tail must flex to a significant angle relative to its body. | Immobilizing an alligators tail incapacitates its ability to begin a death roll. | Most of the muscle in an alligators jaw is intended for biting and gripping prey. | The muscles that close the jaws are exceptionally powerful, however the muscles for opening their jaws are relatively weak in comparison. | As a result, an adult man can hold an alligators jaw shut with his bare hands. | In general, a strip of duct tape is enough to prevent an adult alligator from opening its jaws and is one of the most common methods used when alligators are to be captured and/or transported. | Alligators are generally timid towards humans and tend to walk or swim away if one approaches. | Unfortunately, this has led some people to the practice of approaching alligators and their nests in a way that may provoke the animals into attacking. | There are federal laws that prohibit feeding of the alligators in several locations where they can be found; however, some people choose to ignore these. | If fed, the alligators will eventually lose their fear of humans and may, in turn, choose to approach human settlements rather than moving away. | When young they eat fish, insects, snails, crustaceans, and worms. | As they grow, they take progressively larger prey items, including larger fish such as gar, turtles, various mammals, birds, antelope and other reptiles. | Their stomachs also often contain gastroliths. | They will even consume carrion if they are sufficiently hungry. | Adult alligators can take razorbacks and deer and are well known to kill and eat smaller alligators. | In some cases, larger alligators have been known to hunt the Florida panther and bears, making it the apex predator throughout its distribution. | As humans encroach onto their habitat, attacks on humans are few but not unknown. | Alligators, unlike the large crocodiles, do not immediately regard a human upon encounter as prey, but may still attack in self-defense if provoked. | Alligators generally mature at a length of six feet (180 cm). | The mating season is in spring. | The female builds a nest of vegetation where the decomposition of the vegetation provides the heat needed to incubate the eggs. | The sex of the offspring is determined by the temperature in the nest and is fixed within 7 to 21 days of the start of incubation. | Incubation temperatures of 30 °C (86 °F) or lower produce a clutch of females; those of 34 °C (93 °F) or higher produce entirely males. | Nests constructed on levees are hotter than those constructed on wet marsh and, thus, the former tend to produce males and the latter, females. | The natural sex ratio at hatching is five females to one male. | Females hatched from eggs incubated at 30 °C weigh significantly more than males hatched from eggs incubated at 34 °C. | The mother will defend the nest from predators and will assist the hatchlings to water. | She will provide protection to the young for about a year if they remain in the area. | The largest threat to the young are adult alligators. | Predation by adults on young can account for a mortality rate of up to fifty percent in the first year. | In the past, immediately following the outlawing of alligator hunting, populations rebounded quickly due to the suppressed number of adults preying upon the new recruits, increasing survival among the young alligators. | The mother keeps the young for one year. | Alligator farming is a big and growing industry in Florida, Texas and Louisiana. | These states produce a combined annual total of some 45,000 alligator hides. | Alligator hides bring good prices and hides in the 6-7 foot (1-2 m) range have sold for $300 each, though the price can fluctuate considerably from year to year. | The market for alligator meat is growing and approximately 300,000 pounds (140 000 kg) of meat is produced annually. | According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, raw alligator meat contains roughly 200 calories per 3oz (85 g) serving size, of which 27 calories come from fat. | While alligators are often confused with crocodiles, they belong to two quite separate taxonomic families. | Every type of crocodile, except the American crocodile, is usually larger and heavier than alligators, has fewer teeth, and has a shorter life-span. | Alligators differ from crocodiles principally in having wider and shorter heads, with more obtuse snouts; in having the fourth, enlarged tooth of the under jaw received, not into an external notch, but into a pit formed for it within the upper one; in lacking a jagged fringe which appears on the hind legs and feet of the crocodile; in having the toes of the hind feet webbed not more than half way to the tips; and an intolerance to salinity. | Alligators strongly prefer fresh water, while crocodiles can tolerate salt water due to specialized glands for filtering out salt. | In general, crocodiles tend to be more dangerous to humans than alligators. | Both species of alligator also tend to be darker in color, often nearly black but color is very dependent on the water. | Algae-laden waters produce greener alligators; alligators from waters with a lot of tannic acid from overhanging trees are often darker (although the Chinese alligator has some light patterning. |) Also, in alligators only the upper teeth can be seen with the jaws closed, in contrast to true crocodiles, in which upper and lower teeth can be seen. | However, many individuals bear jaw deformities which complicate this means of identification. | Alligators are not nearly as dangerous and not as daring as crocodiles, for crocodiles sometimes prey on other crocodiles; and alligators rarely prey on other alligators. | As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped. | Crocodiles have a longer narrower snout, with eyes farther forward. | Also, if one looks at an alligator and then a crocodile, one will notice a difference in their mouths: only the upper teeth are visible when an alligators mouth is closed, while a crocodiles mouth will reveal both upper and lower teeth, as their fourth tooth sticks out from the lower jaw, rather than fitting neatly into the upper jaw. | Crocodiles also tend to have green eyes, while alligators have brown ones. | Another distinction can be drawn between the jaws of the two animals. | Crocodiles jaws are much more narrow and are used to tear and grip on prey. | By contrast, alligators jaws are meant to crush bones, and can deliver a bite force of up to 3000 psi 20 MPa, although some evidence exists that larger species of crocodile may in fact possess a bite force of 5000 psi. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||}

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}Snappy|Snappy{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

Baby American alligator eating mouse.

{An alligator is a crocodilian in the genus Alligator of the family Alligatoridae. | The name alligator is an anglicized form of the Spanish el lagarto (the lizard), the name by which early Spanish explorers and settlers in Florida called the alligator. | There are two living alligator species: the American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and the Chinese Alligator (Alligator sinensis). | The Alligator has been described as a living fossil from the Age of Reptiles, having survived on earth for 200 million years. | An average American alligators weight and length is 800 lbs (360 kg) and 13 feet (4 m) long. | According to the Everglades National Park website, the largest alligator ever recorded in Florida was 17 feet 5 inches long (5-6m), although according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission web site the Florida state record for length is a 14 foot 5/8 inch male from Lake Monroe in Seminole County. | The Florida record for weight is a 1,043 pound (13 feet 10 1/2 inches long) male from Orange Lake in Alachua County. | The largest alligator ever recorded in Alabama measured 12 feet 08 inches (3-4 m). | The largest alligator ever recorded measured 19 feet 3 inches (580 cm) and was found on Marsh Island, Louisiana. | Few of the giant specimens were weighed, but the larger ones could have exceeded a ton in weight. | The Chinese Alligator is smaller, rarely exceeding 7 feet (2 m) in length. | An alligators lifespan is usually estimated in the range of 50 years or more. | A specimen named Muja has resided in the Belgrade Zoo in Serbia since 1937, making it at least 71 years old. | Another specimen, ?abul?tis, in Riga Zoo, Latvia died in 2007 being more than 72 years old. | Alligators are native to only two countries: the United States and China. | American Alligators are found in the subtropical southeast US: all of Florida and Louisiana; the southern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi; coastal South and North Carolina; Southeastern Texas and in extreme southeastern Oklahoma and Arkansas. | The majority of American Alligators inhabit Florida and Louisiana, with over a million alligators in each state. | American Alligators live in freshwater environments, such as ponds, marshes, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and swamps, as well as brackish environments. | Southern Florida is the only place where both alligators and crocodiles live side by side. | The Chinese alligator currently is found only in the Yangtze River valley and is extremely endangered, with only a few dozen believed to be left in the wild. | Indeed, far more Chinese alligators live in zoos around the world than can be found in the wild. | For example, Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southern Louisiana has several in captivity in an attempt to preserve the species. | Miami-Dade County Zoo in Miami,FL also has a breeding pair of Chinese alligators. | Large male alligators are solitary, territorial animals. | Smaller alligators can often be found in large numbers in close proximity to each other. | The largest of the species (both males and females), will defend prime territory; smaller alligators have a higher tolerance of other alligators within a similar size class. | Although alligators have heavy bodies and slow metabolisms, they are capable of short bursts of speed, especially in very short lunges. | Alligators main prey are smaller animals that they can kill and eat with a single bite. | Alligators may kill larger prey by grabbing it and dragging it in the water to drown. | Alligators consume food that cannot be eaten in one bite by allowing it to rot or by biting and then spinning or convulsing wildly until bite-size pieces are torn off. | This is referred to as the death roll. | A hard-wired response developed over millions of years of evolution, even juvenile alligators execute death rolls when presented with chunks of meat. | Critical to the alligators ability to initiate a death roll, the tail must flex to a significant angle relative to its body. | Immobilizing an alligators tail incapacitates its ability to begin a death roll. | Most of the muscle in an alligators jaw is intended for biting and gripping prey. | The muscles that close the jaws are exceptionally powerful, however the muscles for opening their jaws are relatively weak in comparison. | As a result, an adult man can hold an alligators jaw shut with his bare hands. | In general, a strip of duct tape is enough to prevent an adult alligator from opening its jaws and is one of the most common methods used when alligators are to be captured and/or transported. | Alligators are generally timid towards humans and tend to walk or swim away if one approaches. | Unfortunately, this has led some people to the practice of approaching alligators and their nests in a way that may provoke the animals into attacking. | There are federal laws that prohibit feeding of the alligators in several locations where they can be found; however, some people choose to ignore these. | If fed, the alligators will eventually lose their fear of humans and may, in turn, choose to approach human settlements rather than moving away. | When young they eat fish, insects, snails, crustaceans, and worms. | As they grow, they take progressively larger prey items, including larger fish such as gar, turtles, various mammals, birds, antelope and other reptiles. | Their stomachs also often contain gastroliths. | They will even consume carrion if they are sufficiently hungry. | Adult alligators can take razorbacks and deer and are well known to kill and eat smaller alligators. | In some cases, larger alligators have been known to hunt the Florida panther and bears, making it the apex predator throughout its distribution. | As humans encroach onto their habitat, attacks on humans are few but not unknown. | Alligators, unlike the large crocodiles, do not immediately regard a human upon encounter as prey, but may still attack in self-defense if provoked. | Alligators generally mature at a length of six feet (180 cm). | The mating season is in spring. | The female builds a nest of vegetation where the decomposition of the vegetation provides the heat needed to incubate the eggs. | The sex of the offspring is determined by the temperature in the nest and is fixed within 7 to 21 days of the start of incubation. | Incubation temperatures of 30 °C (86 °F) or lower produce a clutch of females; those of 34 °C (93 °F) or higher produce entirely males. | Nests constructed on levees are hotter than those constructed on wet marsh and, thus, the former tend to produce males and the latter, females. | The natural sex ratio at hatching is five females to one male. | Females hatched from eggs incubated at 30 °C weigh significantly more than males hatched from eggs incubated at 34 °C. | The mother will defend the nest from predators and will assist the hatchlings to water. | She will provide protection to the young for about a year if they remain in the area. | The largest threat to the young are adult alligators. | Predation by adults on young can account for a mortality rate of up to fifty percent in the first year. | In the past, immediately following the outlawing of alligator hunting, populations rebounded quickly due to the suppressed number of adults preying upon the new recruits, increasing survival among the young alligators. | The mother keeps the young for one year. | Alligator farming is a big and growing industry in Florida, Texas and Louisiana. | These states produce a combined annual total of some 45,000 alligator hides. | Alligator hides bring good prices and hides in the 6-7 foot (1-2 m) range have sold for $300 each, though the price can fluctuate considerably from year to year. | The market for alligator meat is growing and approximately 300,000 pounds (140 000 kg) of meat is produced annually. | According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, raw alligator meat contains roughly 200 calories per 3oz (85 g) serving size, of which 27 calories come from fat. | While alligators are often confused with crocodiles, they belong to two quite separate taxonomic families. | Every type of crocodile, except the American crocodile, is usually larger and heavier than alligators, has fewer teeth, and has a shorter life-span. | Alligators differ from crocodiles principally in having wider and shorter heads, with more obtuse snouts; in having the fourth, enlarged tooth of the under jaw received, not into an external notch, but into a pit formed for it within the upper one; in lacking a jagged fringe which appears on the hind legs and feet of the crocodile; in having the toes of the hind feet webbed not more than half way to the tips; and an intolerance to salinity. | Alligators strongly prefer fresh water, while crocodiles can tolerate salt water due to specialized glands for filtering out salt. | In general, crocodiles tend to be more dangerous to humans than alligators. | Both species of alligator also tend to be darker in color, often nearly black but color is very dependent on the water. | Algae-laden waters produce greener alligators; alligators from waters with a lot of tannic acid from overhanging trees are often darker (although the Chinese alligator has some light patterning. |) Also, in alligators only the upper teeth can be seen with the jaws closed, in contrast to true crocodiles, in which upper and lower teeth can be seen. | However, many individuals bear jaw deformities which complicate this means of identification. | Alligators are not nearly as dangerous and not as daring as crocodiles, for crocodiles sometimes prey on other crocodiles; and alligators rarely prey on other alligators. | As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped. | Crocodiles have a longer narrower snout, with eyes farther forward. | Also, if one looks at an alligator and then a crocodile, one will notice a difference in their mouths: only the upper teeth are visible when an alligators mouth is closed, while a crocodiles mouth will reveal both upper and lower teeth, as their fourth tooth sticks out from the lower jaw, rather than fitting neatly into the upper jaw. | Crocodiles also tend to have green eyes, while alligators have brown ones. | Another distinction can be drawn between the jaws of the two animals. | Crocodiles jaws are much more narrow and are used to tear and grip on prey. | By contrast, alligators jaws are meant to crush bones, and can deliver a bite force of up to 3000 psi 20 MPa, although some evidence exists that larger species of crocodile may in fact possess a bite force of 5000 psi. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||}

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}hand feeding a giant alligator|hand feeding a giant alligator{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

Ken Panse feeding a 14 foot American alligator at Gatorland, Orlando, Florida

{An alligator is a crocodilian in the genus Alligator of the family Alligatoridae. | The name alligator is an anglicized form of the Spanish el lagarto (the lizard), the name by which early Spanish explorers and settlers in Florida called the alligator. | There are two living alligator species: the American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and the Chinese Alligator (Alligator sinensis). | The Alligator has been described as a living fossil from the Age of Reptiles, having survived on earth for 200 million years. | An average American alligators weight and length is 800 lbs (360 kg) and 13 feet (4 m) long. | According to the Everglades National Park website, the largest alligator ever recorded in Florida was 17 feet 5 inches long (5-6m), although according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission web site the Florida state record for length is a 14 foot 5/8 inch male from Lake Monroe in Seminole County. | The Florida record for weight is a 1,043 pound (13 feet 10 1/2 inches long) male from Orange Lake in Alachua County. | The largest alligator ever recorded in Alabama measured 12 feet 08 inches (3-4 m). | The largest alligator ever recorded measured 19 feet 3 inches (580 cm) and was found on Marsh Island, Louisiana. | Few of the giant specimens were weighed, but the larger ones could have exceeded a ton in weight. | The Chinese Alligator is smaller, rarely exceeding 7 feet (2 m) in length. | An alligators lifespan is usually estimated in the range of 50 years or more. | A specimen named Muja has resided in the Belgrade Zoo in Serbia since 1937, making it at least 71 years old. | Another specimen, ?abul?tis, in Riga Zoo, Latvia died in 2007 being more than 72 years old. | Alligators are native to only two countries: the United States and China. | American Alligators are found in the subtropical southeast US: all of Florida and Louisiana; the southern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi; coastal South and North Carolina; Southeastern Texas and in extreme southeastern Oklahoma and Arkansas. | The majority of American Alligators inhabit Florida and Louisiana, with over a million alligators in each state. | American Alligators live in freshwater environments, such as ponds, marshes, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and swamps, as well as brackish environments. | Southern Florida is the only place where both alligators and crocodiles live side by side. | The Chinese alligator currently is found only in the Yangtze River valley and is extremely endangered, with only a few dozen believed to be left in the wild. | Indeed, far more Chinese alligators live in zoos around the world than can be found in the wild. | For example, Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southern Louisiana has several in captivity in an attempt to preserve the species. | Miami-Dade County Zoo in Miami,FL also has a breeding pair of Chinese alligators. | Large male alligators are solitary, territorial animals. | Smaller alligators can often be found in large numbers in close proximity to each other. | The largest of the species (both males and females), will defend prime territory; smaller alligators have a higher tolerance of other alligators within a similar size class. | Although alligators have heavy bodies and slow metabolisms, they are capable of short bursts of speed, especially in very short lunges. | Alligators main prey are smaller animals that they can kill and eat with a single bite. | Alligators may kill larger prey by grabbing it and dragging it in the water to drown. | Alligators consume food that cannot be eaten in one bite by allowing it to rot or by biting and then spinning or convulsing wildly until bite-size pieces are torn off. | This is referred to as the death roll. | A hard-wired response developed over millions of years of evolution, even juvenile alligators execute death rolls when presented with chunks of meat. | Critical to the alligators ability to initiate a death roll, the tail must flex to a significant angle relative to its body. | Immobilizing an alligators tail incapacitates its ability to begin a death roll. | Most of the muscle in an alligators jaw is intended for biting and gripping prey. | The muscles that close the jaws are exceptionally powerful, however the muscles for opening their jaws are relatively weak in comparison. | As a result, an adult man can hold an alligators jaw shut with his bare hands. | In general, a strip of duct tape is enough to prevent an adult alligator from opening its jaws and is one of the most common methods used when alligators are to be captured and/or transported. | Alligators are generally timid towards humans and tend to walk or swim away if one approaches. | Unfortunately, this has led some people to the practice of approaching alligators and their nests in a way that may provoke the animals into attacking. | There are federal laws that prohibit feeding of the alligators in several locations where they can be found; however, some people choose to ignore these. | If fed, the alligators will eventually lose their fear of humans and may, in turn, choose to approach human settlements rather than moving away. | When young they eat fish, insects, snails, crustaceans, and worms. | As they grow, they take progressively larger prey items, including larger fish such as gar, turtles, various mammals, birds, antelope and other reptiles. | Their stomachs also often contain gastroliths. | They will even consume carrion if they are sufficiently hungry. | Adult alligators can take razorbacks and deer and are well known to kill and eat smaller alligators. | In some cases, larger alligators have been known to hunt the Florida panther and bears, making it the apex predator throughout its distribution. | As humans encroach onto their habitat, attacks on humans are few but not unknown. | Alligators, unlike the large crocodiles, do not immediately regard a human upon encounter as prey, but may still attack in self-defense if provoked. | Alligators generally mature at a length of six feet (180 cm). | The mating season is in spring. | The female builds a nest of vegetation where the decomposition of the vegetation provides the heat needed to incubate the eggs. | The sex of the offspring is determined by the temperature in the nest and is fixed within 7 to 21 days of the start of incubation. | Incubation temperatures of 30 °C (86 °F) or lower produce a clutch of females; those of 34 °C (93 °F) or higher produce entirely males. | Nests constructed on levees are hotter than those constructed on wet marsh and, thus, the former tend to produce males and the latter, females. | The natural sex ratio at hatching is five females to one male. | Females hatched from eggs incubated at 30 °C weigh significantly more than males hatched from eggs incubated at 34 °C. | The mother will defend the nest from predators and will assist the hatchlings to water. | She will provide protection to the young for about a year if they remain in the area. | The largest threat to the young are adult alligators. | Predation by adults on young can account for a mortality rate of up to fifty percent in the first year. | In the past, immediately following the outlawing of alligator hunting, populations rebounded quickly due to the suppressed number of adults preying upon the new recruits, increasing survival among the young alligators. | The mother keeps the young for one year. | Alligator farming is a big and growing industry in Florida, Texas and Louisiana. | These states produce a combined annual total of some 45,000 alligator hides. | Alligator hides bring good prices and hides in the 6-7 foot (1-2 m) range have sold for $300 each, though the price can fluctuate considerably from year to year. | The market for alligator meat is growing and approximately 300,000 pounds (140 000 kg) of meat is produced annually. | According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, raw alligator meat contains roughly 200 calories per 3oz (85 g) serving size, of which 27 calories come from fat. | While alligators are often confused with crocodiles, they belong to two quite separate taxonomic families. | Every type of crocodile, except the American crocodile, is usually larger and heavier than alligators, has fewer teeth, and has a shorter life-span. | Alligators differ from crocodiles principally in having wider and shorter heads, with more obtuse snouts; in having the fourth, enlarged tooth of the under jaw received, not into an external notch, but into a pit formed for it within the upper one; in lacking a jagged fringe which appears on the hind legs and feet of the crocodile; in having the toes of the hind feet webbed not more than half way to the tips; and an intolerance to salinity. | Alligators strongly prefer fresh water, while crocodiles can tolerate salt water due to specialized glands for filtering out salt. | In general, crocodiles tend to be more dangerous to humans than alligators. | Both species of alligator also tend to be darker in color, often nearly black but color is very dependent on the water. | Algae-laden waters produce greener alligators; alligators from waters with a lot of tannic acid from overhanging trees are often darker (although the Chinese alligator has some light patterning. |) Also, in alligators only the upper teeth can be seen with the jaws closed, in contrast to true crocodiles, in which upper and lower teeth can be seen. | However, many individuals bear jaw deformities which complicate this means of identification. | Alligators are not nearly as dangerous and not as daring as crocodiles, for crocodiles sometimes prey on other crocodiles; and alligators rarely prey on other alligators. | As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped. | Crocodiles have a longer narrower snout, with eyes farther forward. | Also, if one looks at an alligator and then a crocodile, one will notice a difference in their mouths: only the upper teeth are visible when an alligators mouth is closed, while a crocodiles mouth will reveal both upper and lower teeth, as their fourth tooth sticks out from the lower jaw, rather than fitting neatly into the upper jaw. | Crocodiles also tend to have green eyes, while alligators have brown ones. | Another distinction can be drawn between the jaws of the two animals. | Crocodiles jaws are much more narrow and are used to tear and grip on prey. | By contrast, alligators jaws are meant to crush bones, and can deliver a bite force of up to 3000 psi 20 MPa, although some evidence exists that larger species of crocodile may in fact possess a bite force of 5000 psi. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||}

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}Snappy|Snappy{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

Baby American alligator eating mouse. ( i had to throw the mouse to him at the start of the video) Leave me a comment, Tell me what u think

{An alligator is a crocodilian in the genus Alligator of the family Alligatoridae. | The name alligator is an anglicized form of the Spanish el lagarto (the lizard), the name by which early Spanish explorers and settlers in Florida called the alligator. | There are two living alligator species: the American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and the Chinese Alligator (Alligator sinensis). | The Alligator has been described as a living fossil from the Age of Reptiles, having survived on earth for 200 million years. | An average American alligators weight and length is 800 lbs (360 kg) and 13 feet (4 m) long. | According to the Everglades National Park website, the largest alligator ever recorded in Florida was 17 feet 5 inches long (5-6m), although according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission web site the Florida state record for length is a 14 foot 5/8 inch male from Lake Monroe in Seminole County. | The Florida record for weight is a 1,043 pound (13 feet 10 1/2 inches long) male from Orange Lake in Alachua County. | The largest alligator ever recorded in Alabama measured 12 feet 08 inches (3-4 m). | The largest alligator ever recorded measured 19 feet 3 inches (580 cm) and was found on Marsh Island, Louisiana. | Few of the giant specimens were weighed, but the larger ones could have exceeded a ton in weight. | The Chinese Alligator is smaller, rarely exceeding 7 feet (2 m) in length. | An alligators lifespan is usually estimated in the range of 50 years or more. | A specimen named Muja has resided in the Belgrade Zoo in Serbia since 1937, making it at least 71 years old. | Another specimen, ?abul?tis, in Riga Zoo, Latvia died in 2007 being more than 72 years old. | Alligators are native to only two countries: the United States and China. | American Alligators are found in the subtropical southeast US: all of Florida and Louisiana; the southern parts of Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi; coastal South and North Carolina; Southeastern Texas and in extreme southeastern Oklahoma and Arkansas. | The majority of American Alligators inhabit Florida and Louisiana, with over a million alligators in each state. | American Alligators live in freshwater environments, such as ponds, marshes, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and swamps, as well as brackish environments. | Southern Florida is the only place where both alligators and crocodiles live side by side. | The Chinese alligator currently is found only in the Yangtze River valley and is extremely endangered, with only a few dozen believed to be left in the wild. | Indeed, far more Chinese alligators live in zoos around the world than can be found in the wild. | For example, Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southern Louisiana has several in captivity in an attempt to preserve the species. | Miami-Dade County Zoo in Miami,FL also has a breeding pair of Chinese alligators. | Large male alligators are solitary, territorial animals. | Smaller alligators can often be found in large numbers in close proximity to each other. | The largest of the species (both males and females), will defend prime territory; smaller alligators have a higher tolerance of other alligators within a similar size class. | Although alligators have heavy bodies and slow metabolisms, they are capable of short bursts of speed, especially in very short lunges. | Alligators main prey are smaller animals that they can kill and eat with a single bite. | Alligators may kill larger prey by grabbing it and dragging it in the water to drown. | Alligators consume food that cannot be eaten in one bite by allowing it to rot or by biting and then spinning or convulsing wildly until bite-size pieces are torn off. | This is referred to as the death roll. | A hard-wired response developed over millions of years of evolution, even juvenile alligators execute death rolls when presented with chunks of meat. | Critical to the alligators ability to initiate a death roll, the tail must flex to a significant angle relative to its body. | Immobilizing an alligators tail incapacitates its ability to begin a death roll. | Most of the muscle in an alligators jaw is intended for biting and gripping prey. | The muscles that close the jaws are exceptionally powerful, however the muscles for opening their jaws are relatively weak in comparison. | As a result, an adult man can hold an alligators jaw shut with his bare hands. | In general, a strip of duct tape is enough to prevent an adult alligator from opening its jaws and is one of the most common methods used when alligators are to be captured and/or transported. | Alligators are generally timid towards humans and tend to walk or swim away if one approaches. | Unfortunately, this has led some people to the practice of approaching alligators and their nests in a way that may provoke the animals into attacking. | There are federal laws that prohibit feeding of the alligators in several locations where they can be found; however, some people choose to ignore these. | If fed, the alligators will eventually lose their fear of humans and may, in turn, choose to approach human settlements rather than moving away. | When young they eat fish, insects, snails, crustaceans, and worms. | As they grow, they take progressively larger prey items, including larger fish such as gar, turtles, various mammals, birds, antelope and other reptiles. | Their stomachs also often contain gastroliths. | They will even consume carrion if they are sufficiently hungry. | Adult alligators can take razorbacks and deer and are well known to kill and eat smaller alligators. | In some cases, larger alligators have been known to hunt the Florida panther and bears, making it the apex predator throughout its distribution. | As humans encroach onto their habitat, attacks on humans are few but not unknown. | Alligators, unlike the large crocodiles, do not immediately regard a human upon encounter as prey, but may still attack in self-defense if provoked. | Alligators generally mature at a length of six feet (180 cm). | The mating season is in spring. | The female builds a nest of vegetation where the decomposition of the vegetation provides the heat needed to incubate the eggs. | The sex of the offspring is determined by the temperature in the nest and is fixed within 7 to 21 days of the start of incubation. | Incubation temperatures of 30 °C (86 °F) or lower produce a clutch of females; those of 34 °C (93 °F) or higher produce entirely males. | Nests constructed on levees are hotter than those constructed on wet marsh and, thus, the former tend to produce males and the latter, females. | The natural sex ratio at hatching is five females to one male. | Females hatched from eggs incubated at 30 °C weigh significantly more than males hatched from eggs incubated at 34 °C. | The mother will defend the nest from predators and will assist the hatchlings to water. | She will provide protection to the young for about a year if they remain in the area. | The largest threat to the young are adult alligators. | Predation by adults on young can account for a mortality rate of up to fifty percent in the first year. | In the past, immediately following the outlawing of alligator hunting, populations rebounded quickly due to the suppressed number of adults preying upon the new recruits, increasing survival among the young alligators. | The mother keeps the young for one year. | Alligator farming is a big and growing industry in Florida, Texas and Louisiana. | These states produce a combined annual total of some 45,000 alligator hides. | Alligator hides bring good prices and hides in the 6-7 foot (1-2 m) range have sold for $300 each, though the price can fluctuate considerably from year to year. | The market for alligator meat is growing and approximately 300,000 pounds (140 000 kg) of meat is produced annually. | According to the Florida Department of Agriculture, raw alligator meat contains roughly 200 calories per 3oz (85 g) serving size, of which 27 calories come from fat. | While alligators are often confused with crocodiles, they belong to two quite separate taxonomic families. | Every type of crocodile, except the American crocodile, is usually larger and heavier than alligators, has fewer teeth, and has a shorter life-span. | Alligators differ from crocodiles principally in having wider and shorter heads, with more obtuse snouts; in having the fourth, enlarged tooth of the under jaw received, not into an external notch, but into a pit formed for it within the upper one; in lacking a jagged fringe which appears on the hind legs and feet of the crocodile; in having the toes of the hind feet webbed not more than half way to the tips; and an intolerance to salinity. | Alligators strongly prefer fresh water, while crocodiles can tolerate salt water due to specialized glands for filtering out salt. | In general, crocodiles tend to be more dangerous to humans than alligators. | Both species of alligator also tend to be darker in color, often nearly black but color is very dependent on the water. | Algae-laden waters produce greener alligators; alligators from waters with a lot of tannic acid from overhanging trees are often darker (although the Chinese alligator has some light patterning. |) Also, in alligators only the upper teeth can be seen with the jaws closed, in contrast to true crocodiles, in which upper and lower teeth can be seen. | However, many individuals bear jaw deformities which complicate this means of identification. | Alligators are not nearly as dangerous and not as daring as crocodiles, for crocodiles sometimes prey on other crocodiles; and alligators rarely prey on other alligators. | As for appearance, one generally reliable rule is that alligators have U-shaped heads, while crocodiles are V-shaped. | Crocodiles have a longer narrower snout, with eyes farther forward. | Also, if one looks at an alligator and then a crocodile, one will notice a difference in their mouths: only the upper teeth are visible when an alligators mouth is closed, while a crocodiles mouth will reveal both upper and lower teeth, as their fourth tooth sticks out from the lower jaw, rather than fitting neatly into the upper jaw. | Crocodiles also tend to have green eyes, while alligators have brown ones. | Another distinction can be drawn between the jaws of the two animals. | Crocodiles jaws are much more narrow and are used to tear and grip on prey. | By contrast, alligators jaws are meant to crush bones, and can deliver a bite force of up to 3000 psi 20 MPa, although some evidence exists that larger species of crocodile may in fact possess a bite force of 5000 psi. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||}

Videos Gators on the Prairie Part 4

4 of 5: We made it to the observation tower after a jog/walk/hike on the La Chua Trail in Paynes Prairie. Lots of birds and gators. We saw wood storks, ibis, sandhill cranes, coots, blue herons and, of course, the American alligator.

Algae-laden waters produce greener alligators; alligators from waters with a lot of tannic acid from overhanging trees are often darker Also, in alligators only the upper teeth can be seen with the jaws closed, in contrast to true crocodiles, in which upper and lower teeth can be seen.