Cuvier’s dwarf caiman

reptile
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Also known as: Cuvier’s smooth-fronted caiman, Paleosuchus palpebrosus, dwarf caiman
Also called:
Cuvier’s smooth-fronted caiman or dwarf caiman

Cuvier’s dwarf caiman, (Paleosuchus palpebrosus), small caiman species known for being the most diminutive living member of the alligator family (Alligatoridae) and the smallest crocodilian in the Americas. This caiman is found throughout the Amazon and Orinoco river basins in wet areas ranging from rivers to temporary pools in grassland habitats, from eastern Ecuador, Peru, and Colombia eastward to Brazil’s Atlantic coast and from northern Paraguay and Bolivia northward to Venezuela and Trinidad and Tobago. The species is named after French zoologist Georges Cuvier, who first described it in 1807.

Natural history

As crocodilians go, Cuvier’s dwarf caimans are tiny. Adult males and females average 1.6 meters (5.3 feet) and 1.2 meters (3.9 feet) in length, respectively, and weigh only about 6–7 kg (13.2–15.7 pounds). The top and sides of a fully grown adult are reddish brown to brownish black, the tail has banding that extends down its length, and the underside is lighter-colored. The snout is blunt and short, and it curves upward from the nostrils toward the top of the dome-shaped head. The caiman’s large, prominent brown eyes are set within bony processes on top of the head, and within each iris is a dark vertical slit. The mouth contains about 80 teeth, and the scales outside the lower jaws of many individuals are covered with dark bands or spots. The juvenile’s body is a lighter shade of brown, and its tail has more-prominent black banding.

Taxonomy

Cuvier's dwarf caiman (Paleosuchus palpebrosus). reptile

See also caiman.

Cuvier’s dwarf caiman usually basks in the sun or stays cool in an excavated burrow during the day and hunts at night. During the dry season, many individuals enter a state of dormancy within their burrows to escape prolonged hot and dry conditions. The caiman searches for food either alone or as one of a pair, moving through the landscape, which includes terrestrial as well as aquatic environments. Adults prey primarily on fish, but their diet can also include amphibians and small mammals as well as shellfish and other invertebrates. Juveniles focus on smaller prey—usually insects and crustaceans and small adult or juvenile amphibians—while supplementing their diet with fish. Even though Cuvier’s dwarf caimans are small, the osteoderms (bony plates in the skin) on their bodies and down the length of their tail deter most predators except for constrictor snakes (boa constrictors and anacondas) and jaguars. However, young caimans and eggs are more vulnerable, falling prey to birds, snakes, and smaller mammalian predators, such as opossums and rats.

Cuvier’s dwarf caimans are polygynous, meaning that the male breeds with multiple females during a single mating season. Courtship, which occurs at the end of the dry season, is an elaborate process in which the male grunts, roars, and makes other vocalizations while pointing his tail upward before he approaches a receptive female. After mating occurs, both the male and the female construct a nest—using soil, leaves, grasses, and twigs—within which the female caiman deposits a clutch of between 10 and 25 eggs. The female protects the nest throughout the incubation period, which lasts between 4 and 5 months. When young emerge from their eggs, they are covered in a mucus that allows them to remain within the nest a few days before they dry out. Hearing the vocalizations of her young, the mother caiman breaks down the nest at this time and leads the young to water. She protects her brood from predators until the young are ready to go off on their own, a few weeks later. Cuvier’s dwarf caimans reach sexual maturity when they have grown to about 1 meter (3.3 feet) in length, which occurs sometime between age 8 and 15. They can live up to 40 years in the wild and up to 60 years in captivity.

Conservation status

Cuvier’s dwarf caiman is listed as a species of least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) because of the species’ extensive geographic range and adaptability to changing environmental conditions. It is so numerous and widespread in northern South America that some ecologists have speculated that it may be the world’s most abundant crocodilian (see species abundance). Because of the small size of Cuvier’s dwarf caiman, it is not typically hunted for its hide, but it may be hunted in some areas for its meat. Although most populations are stable, there is evidence that some populations are threatened by habitat loss, hunting, pollution associated with mining activities, and vehicle strikes, especially close to areas of human habitation.

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John P. Rafferty