{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}Animal vs The most extreme wild animal fights part 3|Animal vs The most extreme wild animal fights part 3{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

white tiger vs black bear, tigon vs kodiak bear, western diamond back rattlesnake vs bald eagle, monitor lizard vs honey badger, moose vs kodiak bear, black rhino vs water buffalo, wolverine vs clouded leopard, american bison vs gaur, jaguar vs black bear, bull cattle vs cougar, horse vs gray wolf, european bison vs cape buffalo, lion vs jaguar, wolverine vs mandrill, bull shark vs american crocodile, lion pride vs giraffe, saltwater crocodile vs walrus, snow leopard vs hyena, golden eagle vs king cobra, liger vs polar bear, leopard vs sloth bear, and liger vs tigon.

The Saltwater or Estuarine Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) is the largest of all living crocodilians and reptiles. | It is found in suitable habitat throughout Southeast Asia and northern Australia. | Saltwater crocodiles are known in the Northern Territory of Australia as salties. | The Alligator Rivers are misnamed after the resemblance of the saltie to alligators as compared to freshwater crocodiles, which also inhabit the Northern Territory. | An adult male saltwater crocodile can grow 18 feet (545 centimeters) long, and weighs roughly 770 kilograms (1,700 pounds). | Females are much smaller than males, with typical female body lengths in the range of 7 to 10 ft (210 to 300cm). | The largest females measure about 420 cm (14 feet). | The saltwater crocodile has fewer armor plates on its neck than other crocodilians, and its broad body contrasts with that of most other lean crocodiles, leading to early unverified assumptions that the reptile was an alligator. | The largest size saltwater crocodiles can reach is the subject of considerable controversy. | The longest crocodile ever measured snout-to-tail was the skin of a deceased crocodile, which was 20. |3 ft (620 cm) long. | Since skins tend to shrink slightly after removal from the carcass, this crocodiles living length was estimated at 27 feet and it probably weighed well over 4,000 pounds. | Incomplete remains (the skull of a crocodile shot in Orrissa) have been claimed to come from a 25 ft (760 cm) crocodile, but scholarly examination suggested a length no greater than 23 ft (7 m). | There have been numerous claims of crocodiles in the 30-foot range: the individual shot in the Bay of Bengal in 1840, reported at 10 m (33 ft); another killed in 1823 at Jala Jala on Luzon reported at 820 cm (27 ft); a reported 25 ft crocodile killed in the Hooghly River in the Alipore District of Calcutta. | However, examinations of these animals skulls actually indicated animals ranging from 6 to 660 cm (20 to 22 ft). | The life expectancy of a Saltwater crocodile is approximately 70 years. | With recent restoration in saltwater crocodile habitat and reduced poaching, it is possible that 23 ft (7 m) or larger crocodiles are alive today. | Guinness has accepted a claim of a 23 ft (7 m) male Saltwater Crocodile living within Bhitarkanika Park in the state of Orissa, India, although no verified measurements have been made. | A crocodile shot in Queensland in 1957 was reported to be 28 ft (860 cm) long, but no verified measurements were made and no remains of this crocodile exist. | A replica of this crocodile has been made as a tourist attraction. | Many other unconfirmed reports of 26+ ft (8+ m) crocodiles have been made but these are highly suspect. | Saltwater crocodiles are severely depleted in numbers through much of their range, with sightings in areas such as Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam becoming extremely rare and the species may in fact even be extinct in one or more of these countries. | However, it is also the least likely of crocodilians to become globally extinct due to its wide distribution and almost pre-colonial population sizes in Northern Australia and New Guinea. | In India this crocodile is extremely rare in most areas but is very common in the north eastern part of the country (mainly Orissa and the Sunderbans). | The population is sporadic in Indonesia and Malaysia with some areas harboring large populations (Borneo, for example) and others with very small, at risk populations (e. |g. |, the Philippines). | The saltwater crocodile is also present in very limited portions of the South Pacific, with an average population in the Solomon Islands, a very small and soon to be extinct population in Vanuatu (where the population officially stands at only three) and a decent but at-risk population (which may be rebounding) in Palau. | Saltwater crocodiles once ranged as far west as the east coast of Africa at the Seychelles Islands. | These crocodiles were once believed to be a population of Nile crocodiles, but they were later proven to be Crocodylus porosus. | Saltwater crocodiles generally spend the tropical wet season in freshwater swamps and rivers, moving downstream to estuaries in the dry season, and sometimes traveling far out to sea. | Crocodiles compete fiercely with each other for territory, with dominant males in particular occupying the most eligible stretches of freshwater creeks and streams. | Junior crocodiles are thus forced into the more marginal river systems and sometimes into the ocean. | This explains the large distribution of the animal (ranging from the east coast of India to northern Australia) as well as its being found in odd places on occasion (such as the Sea of Japan). | Saltwater crocodiles can swim 15 to 18 miles per hour in short bursts, but when cruising go 2 to 3 mph. | The saltwater crocodile is an opportunistic apex predator capable of taking animals up to the size of an adult male water buffalo, either in the water or on dry land. | They have also been known to attack humans. | Juveniles are restricted to smaller items such as insects, amphibians, crustaceans, small reptiles and fish. | The larger the animal grows, the greater the variety of items it includes in the diet, although relatively small prey make up an important part of the diet even in adults. | Saltwater crocodiles can eat monkeys, kangaroo, wild boar, dingos, goannas, birds, domestic livestock, pets, water buffalo, gaur, leopards, sharks, and humans, among other large animals as well. | Domestic Cattle, horse, water buffalo and gaur, all of which may weigh over a ton, are considered the largest prey taken by male crocodiles. | Generally very lethargic – a trait which helps it survive months at a time without food – it typically loiters in the water or basks in the sun through much of the day, preferring to hunt at night. | Capable of explosive bursts of speed when launching an attack from the water, many species of crocodile are also capable of fast land-movement. | Many crocodiles are capable of explosive charges that can carry them nearly as fast as a running human. | The 23 species of crocodilian can travel over land using the belly crawl, the walk, the high-walk, and the gallop. | However, stories of crocodiles being faster than a race horse for short distances across the ground are little more than urban legend. | As an ambush predator, it usually waits for its prey to get close to the waters edge before striking without warning and using its great strength to drag the animal back into the water. | Most prey animals are killed by the great jaw pressure of the crocodile, although some animals may be incidentally drowned. | It is an immensely powerful animal, having the strength to drag a fully grown water buffalo into a river, or crush a full-grown bovids skull between its jaws. | In its most deadly attack, called the death roll, it grabs onto the animal and rolls powerfully. | This is designed to initially throw any struggling large animal off balance making it easier to drag it into the water. | The death roll is also used for tearing apart large animals once they are dead. | Although Saltwater crocodiles are very dangerous animals, attacks on humans are infrequent. | Most attacks by adult salties are fatal, given the animals size and strength. | In Australia, attacks are rare and usually make headlines when they do occur. | There are, on average, no more than one or two fatal attacks reported per year in the country. | The low level of attacks is most likely due to the extensive effort by local wildlife officials to post crocodile warning signs at nearly every billabong, river, lake and even at some beaches and also due to the relatively well-informed nature of the local citizens. | In the Aboriginal community of Arnhem Land, which occupies roughly half of the top end of the Northern Territory, attacks may go unreported and may be more common. | In the remaining portion of the crocodiles range, where very few attacks are reported and theres none of the precautions taken in Australia, attacks have been estimated to number up to the thousands annually. | Dr. | Adam Britton, a researcher with Big Gecko, has been studying crocodilian intelligence. | In so doing, he has compiled a collection of Australian saltwater crocodile calls, and associated them with behaviors. | His position is that while crocodilian brains are much smaller than those of mammals (as low as point 05% of body weight in the saltwater crocodile), they are capable of learning hard tasks with very little conditioning. | He also infers that the crocodile calls hint at a deeper language ability than currently accepted. | He suggests that saltwater crocodiles are clever animals that can possibly learn faster than lab rats. | They have also learned to track the migratory route of their prey as the climate changes. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}Deinosuchus vs Dunkleosteus|Deinosuchus vs Dunkleosteus{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

Who would win, a 40 foot gator or a 33 foot armored fish with jaws that can penetrate its prey with a bite force 2 times the bite force of a saltwater crocodile?!!

The Saltwater or Estuarine Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) is the largest of all living crocodilians and reptiles. | It is found in suitable habitat throughout Southeast Asia and northern Australia. | Saltwater crocodiles are known in the Northern Territory of Australia as salties. | The Alligator Rivers are misnamed after the resemblance of the saltie to alligators as compared to freshwater crocodiles, which also inhabit the Northern Territory. | An adult male saltwater crocodile can grow 18 feet (545 centimeters) long, and weighs roughly 770 kilograms (1,700 pounds). | Females are much smaller than males, with typical female body lengths in the range of 7 to 10 ft (210 to 300cm). | The largest females measure about 420 cm (14 feet). | The saltwater crocodile has fewer armor plates on its neck than other crocodilians, and its broad body contrasts with that of most other lean crocodiles, leading to early unverified assumptions that the reptile was an alligator. | The largest size saltwater crocodiles can reach is the subject of considerable controversy. | The longest crocodile ever measured snout-to-tail was the skin of a deceased crocodile, which was 20. |3 ft (620 cm) long. | Since skins tend to shrink slightly after removal from the carcass, this crocodiles living length was estimated at 27 feet and it probably weighed well over 4,000 pounds. | Incomplete remains (the skull of a crocodile shot in Orrissa) have been claimed to come from a 25 ft (760 cm) crocodile, but scholarly examination suggested a length no greater than 23 ft (7 m). | There have been numerous claims of crocodiles in the 30-foot range: the individual shot in the Bay of Bengal in 1840, reported at 10 m (33 ft); another killed in 1823 at Jala Jala on Luzon reported at 820 cm (27 ft); a reported 25 ft crocodile killed in the Hooghly River in the Alipore District of Calcutta. | However, examinations of these animals skulls actually indicated animals ranging from 6 to 660 cm (20 to 22 ft). | The life expectancy of a Saltwater crocodile is approximately 70 years. | With recent restoration in saltwater crocodile habitat and reduced poaching, it is possible that 23 ft (7 m) or larger crocodiles are alive today. | Guinness has accepted a claim of a 23 ft (7 m) male Saltwater Crocodile living within Bhitarkanika Park in the state of Orissa, India, although no verified measurements have been made. | A crocodile shot in Queensland in 1957 was reported to be 28 ft (860 cm) long, but no verified measurements were made and no remains of this crocodile exist. | A replica of this crocodile has been made as a tourist attraction. | Many other unconfirmed reports of 26+ ft (8+ m) crocodiles have been made but these are highly suspect. | Saltwater crocodiles are severely depleted in numbers through much of their range, with sightings in areas such as Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam becoming extremely rare and the species may in fact even be extinct in one or more of these countries. | However, it is also the least likely of crocodilians to become globally extinct due to its wide distribution and almost pre-colonial population sizes in Northern Australia and New Guinea. | In India this crocodile is extremely rare in most areas but is very common in the north eastern part of the country (mainly Orissa and the Sunderbans). | The population is sporadic in Indonesia and Malaysia with some areas harboring large populations (Borneo, for example) and others with very small, at risk populations (e. |g. |, the Philippines). | The saltwater crocodile is also present in very limited portions of the South Pacific, with an average population in the Solomon Islands, a very small and soon to be extinct population in Vanuatu (where the population officially stands at only three) and a decent but at-risk population (which may be rebounding) in Palau. | Saltwater crocodiles once ranged as far west as the east coast of Africa at the Seychelles Islands. | These crocodiles were once believed to be a population of Nile crocodiles, but they were later proven to be Crocodylus porosus. | Saltwater crocodiles generally spend the tropical wet season in freshwater swamps and rivers, moving downstream to estuaries in the dry season, and sometimes traveling far out to sea. | Crocodiles compete fiercely with each other for territory, with dominant males in particular occupying the most eligible stretches of freshwater creeks and streams. | Junior crocodiles are thus forced into the more marginal river systems and sometimes into the ocean. | This explains the large distribution of the animal (ranging from the east coast of India to northern Australia) as well as its being found in odd places on occasion (such as the Sea of Japan). | Saltwater crocodiles can swim 15 to 18 miles per hour in short bursts, but when cruising go 2 to 3 mph. | The saltwater crocodile is an opportunistic apex predator capable of taking animals up to the size of an adult male water buffalo, either in the water or on dry land. | They have also been known to attack humans. | Juveniles are restricted to smaller items such as insects, amphibians, crustaceans, small reptiles and fish. | The larger the animal grows, the greater the variety of items it includes in the diet, although relatively small prey make up an important part of the diet even in adults. | Saltwater crocodiles can eat monkeys, kangaroo, wild boar, dingos, goannas, birds, domestic livestock, pets, water buffalo, gaur, leopards, sharks, and humans, among other large animals as well. | Domestic Cattle, horse, water buffalo and gaur, all of which may weigh over a ton, are considered the largest prey taken by male crocodiles. | Generally very lethargic – a trait which helps it survive months at a time without food – it typically loiters in the water or basks in the sun through much of the day, preferring to hunt at night. | Capable of explosive bursts of speed when launching an attack from the water, many species of crocodile are also capable of fast land-movement. | Many crocodiles are capable of explosive charges that can carry them nearly as fast as a running human. | The 23 species of crocodilian can travel over land using the belly crawl, the walk, the high-walk, and the gallop. | However, stories of crocodiles being faster than a race horse for short distances across the ground are little more than urban legend. | As an ambush predator, it usually waits for its prey to get close to the waters edge before striking without warning and using its great strength to drag the animal back into the water. | Most prey animals are killed by the great jaw pressure of the crocodile, although some animals may be incidentally drowned. | It is an immensely powerful animal, having the strength to drag a fully grown water buffalo into a river, or crush a full-grown bovids skull between its jaws. | In its most deadly attack, called the death roll, it grabs onto the animal and rolls powerfully. | This is designed to initially throw any struggling large animal off balance making it easier to drag it into the water. | The death roll is also used for tearing apart large animals once they are dead. | Although Saltwater crocodiles are very dangerous animals, attacks on humans are infrequent. | Most attacks by adult salties are fatal, given the animals size and strength. | In Australia, attacks are rare and usually make headlines when they do occur. | There are, on average, no more than one or two fatal attacks reported per year in the country. | The low level of attacks is most likely due to the extensive effort by local wildlife officials to post crocodile warning signs at nearly every billabong, river, lake and even at some beaches and also due to the relatively well-informed nature of the local citizens. | In the Aboriginal community of Arnhem Land, which occupies roughly half of the top end of the Northern Territory, attacks may go unreported and may be more common. | In the remaining portion of the crocodiles range, where very few attacks are reported and theres none of the precautions taken in Australia, attacks have been estimated to number up to the thousands annually. | Dr. | Adam Britton, a researcher with Big Gecko, has been studying crocodilian intelligence. | In so doing, he has compiled a collection of Australian saltwater crocodile calls, and associated them with behaviors. | His position is that while crocodilian brains are much smaller than those of mammals (as low as point 05% of body weight in the saltwater crocodile), they are capable of learning hard tasks with very little conditioning. | He also infers that the crocodile calls hint at a deeper language ability than currently accepted. | He suggests that saltwater crocodiles are clever animals that can possibly learn faster than lab rats. | They have also learned to track the migratory route of their prey as the climate changes. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}Australian Saltwater Crocodiles II|Australian Saltwater Crocodiles II{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

Picture Video of the Australian Saltwater Crocodile. ozmagic.homestead.com Produced by Gary Crockett Music by Andreas Vollenweider www.vollenweider.com Thanks to Koorana Crocodile Farm Rockhampton Australia Copyright Gary Crockett 8th May 2009

The Saltwater or Estuarine Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) is the largest of all living crocodilians and reptiles. | It is found in suitable habitat throughout Southeast Asia and northern Australia. | Saltwater crocodiles are known in the Northern Territory of Australia as salties. | The Alligator Rivers are misnamed after the resemblance of the saltie to alligators as compared to freshwater crocodiles, which also inhabit the Northern Territory. | An adult male saltwater crocodile can grow 18 feet (545 centimeters) long, and weighs roughly 770 kilograms (1,700 pounds). | Females are much smaller than males, with typical female body lengths in the range of 7 to 10 ft (210 to 300cm). | The largest females measure about 420 cm (14 feet). | The saltwater crocodile has fewer armor plates on its neck than other crocodilians, and its broad body contrasts with that of most other lean crocodiles, leading to early unverified assumptions that the reptile was an alligator. | The largest size saltwater crocodiles can reach is the subject of considerable controversy. | The longest crocodile ever measured snout-to-tail was the skin of a deceased crocodile, which was 20. |3 ft (620 cm) long. | Since skins tend to shrink slightly after removal from the carcass, this crocodiles living length was estimated at 27 feet and it probably weighed well over 4,000 pounds. | Incomplete remains (the skull of a crocodile shot in Orrissa) have been claimed to come from a 25 ft (760 cm) crocodile, but scholarly examination suggested a length no greater than 23 ft (7 m). | There have been numerous claims of crocodiles in the 30-foot range: the individual shot in the Bay of Bengal in 1840, reported at 10 m (33 ft); another killed in 1823 at Jala Jala on Luzon reported at 820 cm (27 ft); a reported 25 ft crocodile killed in the Hooghly River in the Alipore District of Calcutta. | However, examinations of these animals skulls actually indicated animals ranging from 6 to 660 cm (20 to 22 ft). | The life expectancy of a Saltwater crocodile is approximately 70 years. | With recent restoration in saltwater crocodile habitat and reduced poaching, it is possible that 23 ft (7 m) or larger crocodiles are alive today. | Guinness has accepted a claim of a 23 ft (7 m) male Saltwater Crocodile living within Bhitarkanika Park in the state of Orissa, India, although no verified measurements have been made. | A crocodile shot in Queensland in 1957 was reported to be 28 ft (860 cm) long, but no verified measurements were made and no remains of this crocodile exist. | A replica of this crocodile has been made as a tourist attraction. | Many other unconfirmed reports of 26+ ft (8+ m) crocodiles have been made but these are highly suspect. | Saltwater crocodiles are severely depleted in numbers through much of their range, with sightings in areas such as Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam becoming extremely rare and the species may in fact even be extinct in one or more of these countries. | However, it is also the least likely of crocodilians to become globally extinct due to its wide distribution and almost pre-colonial population sizes in Northern Australia and New Guinea. | In India this crocodile is extremely rare in most areas but is very common in the north eastern part of the country (mainly Orissa and the Sunderbans). | The population is sporadic in Indonesia and Malaysia with some areas harboring large populations (Borneo, for example) and others with very small, at risk populations (e. |g. |, the Philippines). | The saltwater crocodile is also present in very limited portions of the South Pacific, with an average population in the Solomon Islands, a very small and soon to be extinct population in Vanuatu (where the population officially stands at only three) and a decent but at-risk population (which may be rebounding) in Palau. | Saltwater crocodiles once ranged as far west as the east coast of Africa at the Seychelles Islands. | These crocodiles were once believed to be a population of Nile crocodiles, but they were later proven to be Crocodylus porosus. | Saltwater crocodiles generally spend the tropical wet season in freshwater swamps and rivers, moving downstream to estuaries in the dry season, and sometimes traveling far out to sea. | Crocodiles compete fiercely with each other for territory, with dominant males in particular occupying the most eligible stretches of freshwater creeks and streams. | Junior crocodiles are thus forced into the more marginal river systems and sometimes into the ocean. | This explains the large distribution of the animal (ranging from the east coast of India to northern Australia) as well as its being found in odd places on occasion (such as the Sea of Japan). | Saltwater crocodiles can swim 15 to 18 miles per hour in short bursts, but when cruising go 2 to 3 mph. | The saltwater crocodile is an opportunistic apex predator capable of taking animals up to the size of an adult male water buffalo, either in the water or on dry land. | They have also been known to attack humans. | Juveniles are restricted to smaller items such as insects, amphibians, crustaceans, small reptiles and fish. | The larger the animal grows, the greater the variety of items it includes in the diet, although relatively small prey make up an important part of the diet even in adults. | Saltwater crocodiles can eat monkeys, kangaroo, wild boar, dingos, goannas, birds, domestic livestock, pets, water buffalo, gaur, leopards, sharks, and humans, among other large animals as well. | Domestic Cattle, horse, water buffalo and gaur, all of which may weigh over a ton, are considered the largest prey taken by male crocodiles. | Generally very lethargic – a trait which helps it survive months at a time without food – it typically loiters in the water or basks in the sun through much of the day, preferring to hunt at night. | Capable of explosive bursts of speed when launching an attack from the water, many species of crocodile are also capable of fast land-movement. | Many crocodiles are capable of explosive charges that can carry them nearly as fast as a running human. | The 23 species of crocodilian can travel over land using the belly crawl, the walk, the high-walk, and the gallop. | However, stories of crocodiles being faster than a race horse for short distances across the ground are little more than urban legend. | As an ambush predator, it usually waits for its prey to get close to the waters edge before striking without warning and using its great strength to drag the animal back into the water. | Most prey animals are killed by the great jaw pressure of the crocodile, although some animals may be incidentally drowned. | It is an immensely powerful animal, having the strength to drag a fully grown water buffalo into a river, or crush a full-grown bovids skull between its jaws. | In its most deadly attack, called the death roll, it grabs onto the animal and rolls powerfully. | This is designed to initially throw any struggling large animal off balance making it easier to drag it into the water. | The death roll is also used for tearing apart large animals once they are dead. | Although Saltwater crocodiles are very dangerous animals, attacks on humans are infrequent. | Most attacks by adult salties are fatal, given the animals size and strength. | In Australia, attacks are rare and usually make headlines when they do occur. | There are, on average, no more than one or two fatal attacks reported per year in the country. | The low level of attacks is most likely due to the extensive effort by local wildlife officials to post crocodile warning signs at nearly every billabong, river, lake and even at some beaches and also due to the relatively well-informed nature of the local citizens. | In the Aboriginal community of Arnhem Land, which occupies roughly half of the top end of the Northern Territory, attacks may go unreported and may be more common. | In the remaining portion of the crocodiles range, where very few attacks are reported and theres none of the precautions taken in Australia, attacks have been estimated to number up to the thousands annually. | Dr. | Adam Britton, a researcher with Big Gecko, has been studying crocodilian intelligence. | In so doing, he has compiled a collection of Australian saltwater crocodile calls, and associated them with behaviors. | His position is that while crocodilian brains are much smaller than those of mammals (as low as point 05% of body weight in the saltwater crocodile), they are capable of learning hard tasks with very little conditioning. | He also infers that the crocodile calls hint at a deeper language ability than currently accepted. | He suggests that saltwater crocodiles are clever animals that can possibly learn faster than lab rats. | They have also learned to track the migratory route of their prey as the climate changes. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}Mikey P. feeding a giant Crocodile|Mikey P. feeding a giant Crocodile{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

Mikey P., from WAPE, feeding Maximo, a 15′ saltwater crocodile at the St. Augustine Alligator Farm Zoological Park. www.alligatorfarm.us

The Saltwater or Estuarine Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) is the largest of all living crocodilians and reptiles. | It is found in suitable habitat throughout Southeast Asia and northern Australia. | Saltwater crocodiles are known in the Northern Territory of Australia as salties. | The Alligator Rivers are misnamed after the resemblance of the saltie to alligators as compared to freshwater crocodiles, which also inhabit the Northern Territory. | An adult male saltwater crocodile can grow 18 feet (545 centimeters) long, and weighs roughly 770 kilograms (1,700 pounds). | Females are much smaller than males, with typical female body lengths in the range of 7 to 10 ft (210 to 300cm). | The largest females measure about 420 cm (14 feet). | The saltwater crocodile has fewer armor plates on its neck than other crocodilians, and its broad body contrasts with that of most other lean crocodiles, leading to early unverified assumptions that the reptile was an alligator. | The largest size saltwater crocodiles can reach is the subject of considerable controversy. | The longest crocodile ever measured snout-to-tail was the skin of a deceased crocodile, which was 20. |3 ft (620 cm) long. | Since skins tend to shrink slightly after removal from the carcass, this crocodiles living length was estimated at 27 feet and it probably weighed well over 4,000 pounds. | Incomplete remains (the skull of a crocodile shot in Orrissa) have been claimed to come from a 25 ft (760 cm) crocodile, but scholarly examination suggested a length no greater than 23 ft (7 m). | There have been numerous claims of crocodiles in the 30-foot range: the individual shot in the Bay of Bengal in 1840, reported at 10 m (33 ft); another killed in 1823 at Jala Jala on Luzon reported at 820 cm (27 ft); a reported 25 ft crocodile killed in the Hooghly River in the Alipore District of Calcutta. | However, examinations of these animals skulls actually indicated animals ranging from 6 to 660 cm (20 to 22 ft). | The life expectancy of a Saltwater crocodile is approximately 70 years. | With recent restoration in saltwater crocodile habitat and reduced poaching, it is possible that 23 ft (7 m) or larger crocodiles are alive today. | Guinness has accepted a claim of a 23 ft (7 m) male Saltwater Crocodile living within Bhitarkanika Park in the state of Orissa, India, although no verified measurements have been made. | A crocodile shot in Queensland in 1957 was reported to be 28 ft (860 cm) long, but no verified measurements were made and no remains of this crocodile exist. | A replica of this crocodile has been made as a tourist attraction. | Many other unconfirmed reports of 26+ ft (8+ m) crocodiles have been made but these are highly suspect. | Saltwater crocodiles are severely depleted in numbers through much of their range, with sightings in areas such as Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam becoming extremely rare and the species may in fact even be extinct in one or more of these countries. | However, it is also the least likely of crocodilians to become globally extinct due to its wide distribution and almost pre-colonial population sizes in Northern Australia and New Guinea. | In India this crocodile is extremely rare in most areas but is very common in the north eastern part of the country (mainly Orissa and the Sunderbans). | The population is sporadic in Indonesia and Malaysia with some areas harboring large populations (Borneo, for example) and others with very small, at risk populations (e. |g. |, the Philippines). | The saltwater crocodile is also present in very limited portions of the South Pacific, with an average population in the Solomon Islands, a very small and soon to be extinct population in Vanuatu (where the population officially stands at only three) and a decent but at-risk population (which may be rebounding) in Palau. | Saltwater crocodiles once ranged as far west as the east coast of Africa at the Seychelles Islands. | These crocodiles were once believed to be a population of Nile crocodiles, but they were later proven to be Crocodylus porosus. | Saltwater crocodiles generally spend the tropical wet season in freshwater swamps and rivers, moving downstream to estuaries in the dry season, and sometimes traveling far out to sea. | Crocodiles compete fiercely with each other for territory, with dominant males in particular occupying the most eligible stretches of freshwater creeks and streams. | Junior crocodiles are thus forced into the more marginal river systems and sometimes into the ocean. | This explains the large distribution of the animal (ranging from the east coast of India to northern Australia) as well as its being found in odd places on occasion (such as the Sea of Japan). | Saltwater crocodiles can swim 15 to 18 miles per hour in short bursts, but when cruising go 2 to 3 mph. | The saltwater crocodile is an opportunistic apex predator capable of taking animals up to the size of an adult male water buffalo, either in the water or on dry land. | They have also been known to attack humans. | Juveniles are restricted to smaller items such as insects, amphibians, crustaceans, small reptiles and fish. | The larger the animal grows, the greater the variety of items it includes in the diet, although relatively small prey make up an important part of the diet even in adults. | Saltwater crocodiles can eat monkeys, kangaroo, wild boar, dingos, goannas, birds, domestic livestock, pets, water buffalo, gaur, leopards, sharks, and humans, among other large animals as well. | Domestic Cattle, horse, water buffalo and gaur, all of which may weigh over a ton, are considered the largest prey taken by male crocodiles. | Generally very lethargic – a trait which helps it survive months at a time without food – it typically loiters in the water or basks in the sun through much of the day, preferring to hunt at night. | Capable of explosive bursts of speed when launching an attack from the water, many species of crocodile are also capable of fast land-movement. | Many crocodiles are capable of explosive charges that can carry them nearly as fast as a running human. | The 23 species of crocodilian can travel over land using the belly crawl, the walk, the high-walk, and the gallop. | However, stories of crocodiles being faster than a race horse for short distances across the ground are little more than urban legend. | As an ambush predator, it usually waits for its prey to get close to the waters edge before striking without warning and using its great strength to drag the animal back into the water. | Most prey animals are killed by the great jaw pressure of the crocodile, although some animals may be incidentally drowned. | It is an immensely powerful animal, having the strength to drag a fully grown water buffalo into a river, or crush a full-grown bovids skull between its jaws. | In its most deadly attack, called the death roll, it grabs onto the animal and rolls powerfully. | This is designed to initially throw any struggling large animal off balance making it easier to drag it into the water. | The death roll is also used for tearing apart large animals once they are dead. | Although Saltwater crocodiles are very dangerous animals, attacks on humans are infrequent. | Most attacks by adult salties are fatal, given the animals size and strength. | In Australia, attacks are rare and usually make headlines when they do occur. | There are, on average, no more than one or two fatal attacks reported per year in the country. | The low level of attacks is most likely due to the extensive effort by local wildlife officials to post crocodile warning signs at nearly every billabong, river, lake and even at some beaches and also due to the relatively well-informed nature of the local citizens. | In the Aboriginal community of Arnhem Land, which occupies roughly half of the top end of the Northern Territory, attacks may go unreported and may be more common. | In the remaining portion of the crocodiles range, where very few attacks are reported and theres none of the precautions taken in Australia, attacks have been estimated to number up to the thousands annually. | Dr. | Adam Britton, a researcher with Big Gecko, has been studying crocodilian intelligence. | In so doing, he has compiled a collection of Australian saltwater crocodile calls, and associated them with behaviors. | His position is that while crocodilian brains are much smaller than those of mammals (as low as point 05% of body weight in the saltwater crocodile), they are capable of learning hard tasks with very little conditioning. | He also infers that the crocodile calls hint at a deeper language ability than currently accepted. | He suggests that saltwater crocodiles are clever animals that can possibly learn faster than lab rats. | They have also learned to track the migratory route of their prey as the climate changes. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}winding up saltwater crocodile for the camera|winding up saltwater crocodile for the camera{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

it doesnt take much

The Saltwater or Estuarine Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) is the largest of all living crocodilians and reptiles. | It is found in suitable habitat throughout Southeast Asia and northern Australia. | Saltwater crocodiles are known in the Northern Territory of Australia as salties. | The Alligator Rivers are misnamed after the resemblance of the saltie to alligators as compared to freshwater crocodiles, which also inhabit the Northern Territory. | An adult male saltwater crocodile can grow 18 feet (545 centimeters) long, and weighs roughly 770 kilograms (1,700 pounds). | Females are much smaller than males, with typical female body lengths in the range of 7 to 10 ft (210 to 300cm). | The largest females measure about 420 cm (14 feet). | The saltwater crocodile has fewer armor plates on its neck than other crocodilians, and its broad body contrasts with that of most other lean crocodiles, leading to early unverified assumptions that the reptile was an alligator. | The largest size saltwater crocodiles can reach is the subject of considerable controversy. | The longest crocodile ever measured snout-to-tail was the skin of a deceased crocodile, which was 20. |3 ft (620 cm) long. | Since skins tend to shrink slightly after removal from the carcass, this crocodiles living length was estimated at 27 feet and it probably weighed well over 4,000 pounds. | Incomplete remains (the skull of a crocodile shot in Orrissa) have been claimed to come from a 25 ft (760 cm) crocodile, but scholarly examination suggested a length no greater than 23 ft (7 m). | There have been numerous claims of crocodiles in the 30-foot range: the individual shot in the Bay of Bengal in 1840, reported at 10 m (33 ft); another killed in 1823 at Jala Jala on Luzon reported at 820 cm (27 ft); a reported 25 ft crocodile killed in the Hooghly River in the Alipore District of Calcutta. | However, examinations of these animals skulls actually indicated animals ranging from 6 to 660 cm (20 to 22 ft). | The life expectancy of a Saltwater crocodile is approximately 70 years. | With recent restoration in saltwater crocodile habitat and reduced poaching, it is possible that 23 ft (7 m) or larger crocodiles are alive today. | Guinness has accepted a claim of a 23 ft (7 m) male Saltwater Crocodile living within Bhitarkanika Park in the state of Orissa, India, although no verified measurements have been made. | A crocodile shot in Queensland in 1957 was reported to be 28 ft (860 cm) long, but no verified measurements were made and no remains of this crocodile exist. | A replica of this crocodile has been made as a tourist attraction. | Many other unconfirmed reports of 26+ ft (8+ m) crocodiles have been made but these are highly suspect. | Saltwater crocodiles are severely depleted in numbers through much of their range, with sightings in areas such as Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam becoming extremely rare and the species may in fact even be extinct in one or more of these countries. | However, it is also the least likely of crocodilians to become globally extinct due to its wide distribution and almost pre-colonial population sizes in Northern Australia and New Guinea. | In India this crocodile is extremely rare in most areas but is very common in the north eastern part of the country (mainly Orissa and the Sunderbans). | The population is sporadic in Indonesia and Malaysia with some areas harboring large populations (Borneo, for example) and others with very small, at risk populations (e. |g. |, the Philippines). | The saltwater crocodile is also present in very limited portions of the South Pacific, with an average population in the Solomon Islands, a very small and soon to be extinct population in Vanuatu (where the population officially stands at only three) and a decent but at-risk population (which may be rebounding) in Palau. | Saltwater crocodiles once ranged as far west as the east coast of Africa at the Seychelles Islands. | These crocodiles were once believed to be a population of Nile crocodiles, but they were later proven to be Crocodylus porosus. | Saltwater crocodiles generally spend the tropical wet season in freshwater swamps and rivers, moving downstream to estuaries in the dry season, and sometimes traveling far out to sea. | Crocodiles compete fiercely with each other for territory, with dominant males in particular occupying the most eligible stretches of freshwater creeks and streams. | Junior crocodiles are thus forced into the more marginal river systems and sometimes into the ocean. | This explains the large distribution of the animal (ranging from the east coast of India to northern Australia) as well as its being found in odd places on occasion (such as the Sea of Japan). | Saltwater crocodiles can swim 15 to 18 miles per hour in short bursts, but when cruising go 2 to 3 mph. | The saltwater crocodile is an opportunistic apex predator capable of taking animals up to the size of an adult male water buffalo, either in the water or on dry land. | They have also been known to attack humans. | Juveniles are restricted to smaller items such as insects, amphibians, crustaceans, small reptiles and fish. | The larger the animal grows, the greater the variety of items it includes in the diet, although relatively small prey make up an important part of the diet even in adults. | Saltwater crocodiles can eat monkeys, kangaroo, wild boar, dingos, goannas, birds, domestic livestock, pets, water buffalo, gaur, leopards, sharks, and humans, among other large animals as well. | Domestic Cattle, horse, water buffalo and gaur, all of which may weigh over a ton, are considered the largest prey taken by male crocodiles. | Generally very lethargic – a trait which helps it survive months at a time without food – it typically loiters in the water or basks in the sun through much of the day, preferring to hunt at night. | Capable of explosive bursts of speed when launching an attack from the water, many species of crocodile are also capable of fast land-movement. | Many crocodiles are capable of explosive charges that can carry them nearly as fast as a running human. | The 23 species of crocodilian can travel over land using the belly crawl, the walk, the high-walk, and the gallop. | However, stories of crocodiles being faster than a race horse for short distances across the ground are little more than urban legend. | As an ambush predator, it usually waits for its prey to get close to the waters edge before striking without warning and using its great strength to drag the animal back into the water. | Most prey animals are killed by the great jaw pressure of the crocodile, although some animals may be incidentally drowned. | It is an immensely powerful animal, having the strength to drag a fully grown water buffalo into a river, or crush a full-grown bovids skull between its jaws. | In its most deadly attack, called the death roll, it grabs onto the animal and rolls powerfully. | This is designed to initially throw any struggling large animal off balance making it easier to drag it into the water. | The death roll is also used for tearing apart large animals once they are dead. | Although Saltwater crocodiles are very dangerous animals, attacks on humans are infrequent. | Most attacks by adult salties are fatal, given the animals size and strength. | In Australia, attacks are rare and usually make headlines when they do occur. | There are, on average, no more than one or two fatal attacks reported per year in the country. | The low level of attacks is most likely due to the extensive effort by local wildlife officials to post crocodile warning signs at nearly every billabong, river, lake and even at some beaches and also due to the relatively well-informed nature of the local citizens. | In the Aboriginal community of Arnhem Land, which occupies roughly half of the top end of the Northern Territory, attacks may go unreported and may be more common. | In the remaining portion of the crocodiles range, where very few attacks are reported and theres none of the precautions taken in Australia, attacks have been estimated to number up to the thousands annually. | Dr. | Adam Britton, a researcher with Big Gecko, has been studying crocodilian intelligence. | In so doing, he has compiled a collection of Australian saltwater crocodile calls, and associated them with behaviors. | His position is that while crocodilian brains are much smaller than those of mammals (as low as point 05% of body weight in the saltwater crocodile), they are capable of learning hard tasks with very little conditioning. | He also infers that the crocodile calls hint at a deeper language ability than currently accepted. | He suggests that saltwater crocodiles are clever animals that can possibly learn faster than lab rats. | They have also learned to track the migratory route of their prey as the climate changes. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}saltwater crocodile ” being prepared for show”|saltwater crocodile ” being prepared for show”{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

this is me getting kursid ready for a 5 am start in the morning

The Saltwater or Estuarine Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) is the largest of all living crocodilians and reptiles. | It is found in suitable habitat throughout Southeast Asia and northern Australia. | Saltwater crocodiles are known in the Northern Territory of Australia as salties. | The Alligator Rivers are misnamed after the resemblance of the saltie to alligators as compared to freshwater crocodiles, which also inhabit the Northern Territory. | An adult male saltwater crocodile can grow 18 feet (545 centimeters) long, and weighs roughly 770 kilograms (1,700 pounds). | Females are much smaller than males, with typical female body lengths in the range of 7 to 10 ft (210 to 300cm). | The largest females measure about 420 cm (14 feet). | The saltwater crocodile has fewer armor plates on its neck than other crocodilians, and its broad body contrasts with that of most other lean crocodiles, leading to early unverified assumptions that the reptile was an alligator. | The largest size saltwater crocodiles can reach is the subject of considerable controversy. | The longest crocodile ever measured snout-to-tail was the skin of a deceased crocodile, which was 20. |3 ft (620 cm) long. | Since skins tend to shrink slightly after removal from the carcass, this crocodiles living length was estimated at 27 feet and it probably weighed well over 4,000 pounds. | Incomplete remains (the skull of a crocodile shot in Orrissa) have been claimed to come from a 25 ft (760 cm) crocodile, but scholarly examination suggested a length no greater than 23 ft (7 m). | There have been numerous claims of crocodiles in the 30-foot range: the individual shot in the Bay of Bengal in 1840, reported at 10 m (33 ft); another killed in 1823 at Jala Jala on Luzon reported at 820 cm (27 ft); a reported 25 ft crocodile killed in the Hooghly River in the Alipore District of Calcutta. | However, examinations of these animals skulls actually indicated animals ranging from 6 to 660 cm (20 to 22 ft). | The life expectancy of a Saltwater crocodile is approximately 70 years. | With recent restoration in saltwater crocodile habitat and reduced poaching, it is possible that 23 ft (7 m) or larger crocodiles are alive today. | Guinness has accepted a claim of a 23 ft (7 m) male Saltwater Crocodile living within Bhitarkanika Park in the state of Orissa, India, although no verified measurements have been made. | A crocodile shot in Queensland in 1957 was reported to be 28 ft (860 cm) long, but no verified measurements were made and no remains of this crocodile exist. | A replica of this crocodile has been made as a tourist attraction. | Many other unconfirmed reports of 26+ ft (8+ m) crocodiles have been made but these are highly suspect. | Saltwater crocodiles are severely depleted in numbers through much of their range, with sightings in areas such as Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam becoming extremely rare and the species may in fact even be extinct in one or more of these countries. | However, it is also the least likely of crocodilians to become globally extinct due to its wide distribution and almost pre-colonial population sizes in Northern Australia and New Guinea. | In India this crocodile is extremely rare in most areas but is very common in the north eastern part of the country (mainly Orissa and the Sunderbans). | The population is sporadic in Indonesia and Malaysia with some areas harboring large populations (Borneo, for example) and others with very small, at risk populations (e. |g. |, the Philippines). | The saltwater crocodile is also present in very limited portions of the South Pacific, with an average population in the Solomon Islands, a very small and soon to be extinct population in Vanuatu (where the population officially stands at only three) and a decent but at-risk population (which may be rebounding) in Palau. | Saltwater crocodiles once ranged as far west as the east coast of Africa at the Seychelles Islands. | These crocodiles were once believed to be a population of Nile crocodiles, but they were later proven to be Crocodylus porosus. | Saltwater crocodiles generally spend the tropical wet season in freshwater swamps and rivers, moving downstream to estuaries in the dry season, and sometimes traveling far out to sea. | Crocodiles compete fiercely with each other for territory, with dominant males in particular occupying the most eligible stretches of freshwater creeks and streams. | Junior crocodiles are thus forced into the more marginal river systems and sometimes into the ocean. | This explains the large distribution of the animal (ranging from the east coast of India to northern Australia) as well as its being found in odd places on occasion (such as the Sea of Japan). | Saltwater crocodiles can swim 15 to 18 miles per hour in short bursts, but when cruising go 2 to 3 mph. | The saltwater crocodile is an opportunistic apex predator capable of taking animals up to the size of an adult male water buffalo, either in the water or on dry land. | They have also been known to attack humans. | Juveniles are restricted to smaller items such as insects, amphibians, crustaceans, small reptiles and fish. | The larger the animal grows, the greater the variety of items it includes in the diet, although relatively small prey make up an important part of the diet even in adults. | Saltwater crocodiles can eat monkeys, kangaroo, wild boar, dingos, goannas, birds, domestic livestock, pets, water buffalo, gaur, leopards, sharks, and humans, among other large animals as well. | Domestic Cattle, horse, water buffalo and gaur, all of which may weigh over a ton, are considered the largest prey taken by male crocodiles. | Generally very lethargic – a trait which helps it survive months at a time without food – it typically loiters in the water or basks in the sun through much of the day, preferring to hunt at night. | Capable of explosive bursts of speed when launching an attack from the water, many species of crocodile are also capable of fast land-movement. | Many crocodiles are capable of explosive charges that can carry them nearly as fast as a running human. | The 23 species of crocodilian can travel over land using the belly crawl, the walk, the high-walk, and the gallop. | However, stories of crocodiles being faster than a race horse for short distances across the ground are little more than urban legend. | As an ambush predator, it usually waits for its prey to get close to the waters edge before striking without warning and using its great strength to drag the animal back into the water. | Most prey animals are killed by the great jaw pressure of the crocodile, although some animals may be incidentally drowned. | It is an immensely powerful animal, having the strength to drag a fully grown water buffalo into a river, or crush a full-grown bovids skull between its jaws. | In its most deadly attack, called the death roll, it grabs onto the animal and rolls powerfully. | This is designed to initially throw any struggling large animal off balance making it easier to drag it into the water. | The death roll is also used for tearing apart large animals once they are dead. | Although Saltwater crocodiles are very dangerous animals, attacks on humans are infrequent. | Most attacks by adult salties are fatal, given the animals size and strength. | In Australia, attacks are rare and usually make headlines when they do occur. | There are, on average, no more than one or two fatal attacks reported per year in the country. | The low level of attacks is most likely due to the extensive effort by local wildlife officials to post crocodile warning signs at nearly every billabong, river, lake and even at some beaches and also due to the relatively well-informed nature of the local citizens. | In the Aboriginal community of Arnhem Land, which occupies roughly half of the top end of the Northern Territory, attacks may go unreported and may be more common. | In the remaining portion of the crocodiles range, where very few attacks are reported and theres none of the precautions taken in Australia, attacks have been estimated to number up to the thousands annually. | Dr. | Adam Britton, a researcher with Big Gecko, has been studying crocodilian intelligence. | In so doing, he has compiled a collection of Australian saltwater crocodile calls, and associated them with behaviors. | His position is that while crocodilian brains are much smaller than those of mammals (as low as point 05% of body weight in the saltwater crocodile), they are capable of learning hard tasks with very little conditioning. | He also infers that the crocodile calls hint at a deeper language ability than currently accepted. | He suggests that saltwater crocodiles are clever animals that can possibly learn faster than lab rats. | They have also learned to track the migratory route of their prey as the climate changes. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

{{VIDEO |Videos |Video Clip: |||}Guinness World Record- Longest crocodile in the world!!!!!!!|Guinness World Record- Longest crocodile in the world!!!!!!!{ VIDEO | Videos| Video Clip| Movie}}

A quick shot of the saltwater crocodile in Bhitarkanika Wildlife Sanctuary . Certified by Guinness World Records as the longest crocodile in the world. It swam off as we got close.

The Saltwater or Estuarine Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) is the largest of all living crocodilians and reptiles. | It is found in suitable habitat throughout Southeast Asia and northern Australia. | Saltwater crocodiles are known in the Northern Territory of Australia as salties. | The Alligator Rivers are misnamed after the resemblance of the saltie to alligators as compared to freshwater crocodiles, which also inhabit the Northern Territory. | An adult male saltwater crocodile can grow 18 feet (545 centimeters) long, and weighs roughly 770 kilograms (1,700 pounds). | Females are much smaller than males, with typical female body lengths in the range of 7 to 10 ft (210 to 300cm). | The largest females measure about 420 cm (14 feet). | The saltwater crocodile has fewer armor plates on its neck than other crocodilians, and its broad body contrasts with that of most other lean crocodiles, leading to early unverified assumptions that the reptile was an alligator. | The largest size saltwater crocodiles can reach is the subject of considerable controversy. | The longest crocodile ever measured snout-to-tail was the skin of a deceased crocodile, which was 20. |3 ft (620 cm) long. | Since skins tend to shrink slightly after removal from the carcass, this crocodiles living length was estimated at 27 feet and it probably weighed well over 4,000 pounds. | Incomplete remains (the skull of a crocodile shot in Orrissa) have been claimed to come from a 25 ft (760 cm) crocodile, but scholarly examination suggested a length no greater than 23 ft (7 m). | There have been numerous claims of crocodiles in the 30-foot range: the individual shot in the Bay of Bengal in 1840, reported at 10 m (33 ft); another killed in 1823 at Jala Jala on Luzon reported at 820 cm (27 ft); a reported 25 ft crocodile killed in the Hooghly River in the Alipore District of Calcutta. | However, examinations of these animals skulls actually indicated animals ranging from 6 to 660 cm (20 to 22 ft). | The life expectancy of a Saltwater crocodile is approximately 70 years. | With recent restoration in saltwater crocodile habitat and reduced poaching, it is possible that 23 ft (7 m) or larger crocodiles are alive today. | Guinness has accepted a claim of a 23 ft (7 m) male Saltwater Crocodile living within Bhitarkanika Park in the state of Orissa, India, although no verified measurements have been made. | A crocodile shot in Queensland in 1957 was reported to be 28 ft (860 cm) long, but no verified measurements were made and no remains of this crocodile exist. | A replica of this crocodile has been made as a tourist attraction. | Many other unconfirmed reports of 26+ ft (8+ m) crocodiles have been made but these are highly suspect. | Saltwater crocodiles are severely depleted in numbers through much of their range, with sightings in areas such as Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam becoming extremely rare and the species may in fact even be extinct in one or more of these countries. | However, it is also the least likely of crocodilians to become globally extinct due to its wide distribution and almost pre-colonial population sizes in Northern Australia and New Guinea. | In India this crocodile is extremely rare in most areas but is very common in the north eastern part of the country (mainly Orissa and the Sunderbans). | The population is sporadic in Indonesia and Malaysia with some areas harboring large populations (Borneo, for example) and others with very small, at risk populations (e. |g. |, the Philippines). | The saltwater crocodile is also present in very limited portions of the South Pacific, with an average population in the Solomon Islands, a very small and soon to be extinct population in Vanuatu (where the population officially stands at only three) and a decent but at-risk population (which may be rebounding) in Palau. | Saltwater crocodiles once ranged as far west as the east coast of Africa at the Seychelles Islands. | These crocodiles were once believed to be a population of Nile crocodiles, but they were later proven to be Crocodylus porosus. | Saltwater crocodiles generally spend the tropical wet season in freshwater swamps and rivers, moving downstream to estuaries in the dry season, and sometimes traveling far out to sea. | Crocodiles compete fiercely with each other for territory, with dominant males in particular occupying the most eligible stretches of freshwater creeks and streams. | Junior crocodiles are thus forced into the more marginal river systems and sometimes into the ocean. | This explains the large distribution of the animal (ranging from the east coast of India to northern Australia) as well as its being found in odd places on occasion (such as the Sea of Japan). | Saltwater crocodiles can swim 15 to 18 miles per hour in short bursts, but when cruising go 2 to 3 mph. | The saltwater crocodile is an opportunistic apex predator capable of taking animals up to the size of an adult male water buffalo, either in the water or on dry land. | They have also been known to attack humans. | Juveniles are restricted to smaller items such as insects, amphibians, crustaceans, small reptiles and fish. | The larger the animal grows, the greater the variety of items it includes in the diet, although relatively small prey make up an important part of the diet even in adults. | Saltwater crocodiles can eat monkeys, kangaroo, wild boar, dingos, goannas, birds, domestic livestock, pets, water buffalo, gaur, leopards, sharks, and humans, among other large animals as well. | Domestic Cattle, horse, water buffalo and gaur, all of which may weigh over a ton, are considered the largest prey taken by male crocodiles. | Generally very lethargic – a trait which helps it survive months at a time without food – it typically loiters in the water or basks in the sun through much of the day, preferring to hunt at night. | Capable of explosive bursts of speed when launching an attack from the water, many species of crocodile are also capable of fast land-movement. | Many crocodiles are capable of explosive charges that can carry them nearly as fast as a running human. | The 23 species of crocodilian can travel over land using the belly crawl, the walk, the high-walk, and the gallop. | However, stories of crocodiles being faster than a race horse for short distances across the ground are little more than urban legend. | As an ambush predator, it usually waits for its prey to get close to the waters edge before striking without warning and using its great strength to drag the animal back into the water. | Most prey animals are killed by the great jaw pressure of the crocodile, although some animals may be incidentally drowned. | It is an immensely powerful animal, having the strength to drag a fully grown water buffalo into a river, or crush a full-grown bovids skull between its jaws. | In its most deadly attack, called the death roll, it grabs onto the animal and rolls powerfully. | This is designed to initially throw any struggling large animal off balance making it easier to drag it into the water. | The death roll is also used for tearing apart large animals once they are dead. | Although Saltwater crocodiles are very dangerous animals, attacks on humans are infrequent. | Most attacks by adult salties are fatal, given the animals size and strength. | In Australia, attacks are rare and usually make headlines when they do occur. | There are, on average, no more than one or two fatal attacks reported per year in the country. | The low level of attacks is most likely due to the extensive effort by local wildlife officials to post crocodile warning signs at nearly every billabong, river, lake and even at some beaches and also due to the relatively well-informed nature of the local citizens. | In the Aboriginal community of Arnhem Land, which occupies roughly half of the top end of the Northern Territory, attacks may go unreported and may be more common. | In the remaining portion of the crocodiles range, where very few attacks are reported and theres none of the precautions taken in Australia, attacks have been estimated to number up to the thousands annually. | Dr. | Adam Britton, a researcher with Big Gecko, has been studying crocodilian intelligence. | In so doing, he has compiled a collection of Australian saltwater crocodile calls, and associated them with behaviors. | His position is that while crocodilian brains are much smaller than those of mammals (as low as point 05% of body weight in the saltwater crocodile), they are capable of learning hard tasks with very little conditioning. | He also infers that the crocodile calls hint at a deeper language ability than currently accepted. | He suggests that saltwater crocodiles are clever animals that can possibly learn faster than lab rats. | They have also learned to track the migratory route of their prey as the climate changes. ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||