Siamese crocodile

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Also known as: Crocodylus siamensis

Siamese crocodile, (Crocodylus siamensis), medium-sized crocodile inhabiting freshwater streams, lakes, and swamps in parts of Southeast Asia. It is one of the least-known crocodile species, because its population (which numbers between 500 and 1,000 wild individuals) is one of the smallest in number among crocodile species and is scattered across parts of Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Peninsular Malaysia, and the island of Borneo. Many ecologists consider the species to be one of the most-endangered crocodilians on Earth, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) has listed the Siamese crocodile as a critically endangered species since 1996.

Natural history

The crocodile’s maximum length and weight extend up to 4 meters (13.1 feet) and 350 kg (772 pounds), respectively, adult males being somewhat longer and heavier than adult females. Most adults, however, are less than 3.5 meters (11.5 feet) long. The scales on the top and sides of the body are olive or green, and the underside of the animal is somewhat lighter-colored. The top of the crocodile’s head displays a crest of bone behind each eye, and its broad snout contains two flattened nostrils, which are less pronounced and less elevated than in other crocodilians.

Taxonomy

Critically Endangered Species

Siamese crocodiles are predatory, hunting both on land and in the water. They have a varied diet that is primarily made up of vertebrates (including snakes, fish, frogs, birds, and mammals), but they also scavenge carrion. The species is generally not aggressive, and only a small number of attacks on people have been reported, which were possibly provoked. Adult Siamese crocodiles are thought to have few natural predators; the largest source of the crocodile’s historical mortality has come from commercial hunting, with hunters harvesting the animal’s meat and eggs for food and selling the hides to handbag and shoe manufacturers.

Mating occurs during the beginning of the region’s rainy season, which lasts from April to October. Breeding females build nests made of cast-off plant debris and other vegetation, fashioning it into floating mats in the water or covered burrows on the riverbanks. Females lay between 15 and 50 eggs in the nest, and the eggs hatch some 70–80 days later. During this period, the mother will guard and incubate the eggs, and she will move her newly emerged young to the water in her jaws. It is unknown, however, whether the mother cares for her offspring after this point. Although captive Siamese crocodiles become sexually mature at about age 10, the timing of maturity in the wild is unknown. The crocodile’s maximum life span appears to be unknown, with one source asserting that it can live for 22 years in the wild.

Conservation status

Population studies note that wild Siamese crocodile numbers have fallen by an estimated 80 percent since the middle of the 20th century. This decline is largely because of unrestrained hunting. However, loss of their wetland habitat caused by the construction of hydroelectric dams and drowning due to ensnarement in fishing gear have also contributed to the population decline. Studies report that remnant wild populations throughout the crocodile’s range are small and widely separated from one another; the largest breeding populations occur in Cambodia and Laos.

Captive Siamese crocodiles, however, number in the hundreds of thousands on crocodile farms in Southeast Asia, but most of these are hybridized individuals, which threaten the long-term genetic integrity of the species. Studies report that the species has been interbred with Australian estuarine crocodiles (Crocodylus porosus) and with Cuban crocodiles (C. rhombifer) both in the wild and on crocodile farms .

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John P. Rafferty