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Gharial

The gharial (Gavialis gangeticus), also known as gavial or fish-eating crocodile, is a crocodilian in the family Gavialidae and among the longest of all living crocodilians. Mature females are 2.6 to 4.5 m (8 ft 6 in to 14 ft 9 in) long, and males 3 to 6 m (9 ft 10 in to 19 ft 8 in). Adult males have a distinct boss at the end of the snout, which resembles an earthenware pot known as a ghara, hence the name "gharial". The gharial is well adapted to catching fish because of its long, narrow snout and 110 sharp, interlocking teeth.

Gharial
Temporal range: Pleistocene–Present, 2.6–0 Ma[1]
Male gharial
Female and juvenile gharial
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauromorpha
Clade: Archosauriformes
Order: Crocodilia
Family: Gavialidae
Genus: Gavialis
Species:
G. gangeticus
Binomial name
Gavialis gangeticus
(Gmelin, 1789)
Range of gharial as of 2019 in black
Synonyms[3]
  • Lacerta gangetica Gmelin, 1789
  • Crocodilus gavial Bonnaterre, 1789
  • Crocodilus longirostris Schneider, 1801
  • Crocodilus arctirostris Daudin, 1802
  • Crocodilus gangeticus and C. tenuirostris Cuvier, 1807
  • Rhamphostoma Wagler, 1830
  • †Gharialis hysudricus Lydekker, 1886

The gharial probably evolved in the northern Indian subcontinent. Fossil gharial remains were excavated in Pliocene deposits in the Sivalik Hills and the Narmada River valley. It currently inhabits rivers in the plains of the northern part of the Indian subcontinent. It is the most thoroughly aquatic crocodilian, and leaves the water only for basking and building nests on moist sandbanks. Adults mate at the end of the cold season. Females congregate in spring to dig nests, in which they lay 20–95 eggs. They guard the nests and the young, which hatch before the onset of the monsoon. The hatchlings stay and forage in shallow water during their first year, but move to sites with deeper water as they grow.

The wild gharial population has declined drastically since the 1930s and is limited to only 2% of its historical range today. Conservation programmes initiated in India and Nepal focused on reintroducing captive-bred gharials since the early 1980s. Loss of habitat because of sand mining and conversion to agriculture, depletion of fish resources and detrimental fishing methods continue to threaten the population. It has been listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List since 2007.

The oldest known depictions of the gharial are about 4,000 years old and were found in the Indus Valley. Hindus regard it as the vehicle of the river deity Gaṅgā. Local people living near rivers attributed mystical and healing powers to the gharial, and used some of its body parts as ingredients of indigenous medicine.

Etymology edit

The name 'gharial' is derived from the Hindustani word 'ghara' for an earthen pot, in reference to the nasal protuberance on the adult male's snout. It is also called 'gavial'.[4] The name 'fish-eating crocodile' is a translation of its Bengali name 'mecho kumhir', with 'mecho' being derived from 'māch' meaning fish and 'kumhir' meaning crocodile.[5] The name 'Indian gharial' has occasionally been used for gharial populations in India.[6]

Taxonomy edit

Lacerta gangetica was the scientific name proposed by Johann Friedrich Gmelin in 1789.[7] Gmelin followed Carl Linnaeus who proposed Lacerta in 1758 to include other crocodiles and various lizards known at the time.[8]

The gharial was placed in the genus Crocodilus by subsequent naturalists:

The generic name Gavialis was proposed by Nicolaus Michael Oppel in 1811 for crocodiles with a cylindrical-shaped back. He placed this genus in the family Crocodilini.[13]Rhamphostoma was proposed by Johann Georg Wagler in 1830 who considered this genus to contain two species, Crocodilus gangeticus and C. tenuirostris.[14]

The family name Gavialidae was proposed by Arthur Adams in 1854 with Gavialis as the only genus in this family.[15]Gavialis gangetica was the scientific name used by Albert Günther in 1864 who considered L. gangetica, C. longirostris and C. tenuirostris as synonyms and Gavialis a monotypic taxon.[16] John Edward Gray reviewed zoological specimens in the collection of the Natural History Museum, London. He also considered the gharial monotypic in 1869. He placed it in the family Gavialidae together with the false gharial (Tomistoma schlegelii) because both have long, slender jaws and similar dentition.[3]

Gharialis hysudricus proposed by Richard Lydekker in 1886 was based on a fossil skull from the Sivalik Hills that was larger than gharial fossil skulls known at the time.[17] This name is considered to be a junior synonym of Gavialis gangeticus.[18]

Evolution edit

The evolution of the gharial and its relationship with and divergence from other crocodilians have been a subject of controversy.[19] Some authors assumed that the gharial evolved earlier than the other crocodilians because of its distinct skull shape and dentition, indicating a more advanced level of specialization.[20][21] Others suggested that it evolved much later than other crocodilians because of its low levels of blood protein divergence. As it shares this trait with the false gharial, it was suggested that they form a sister group.[22] In contrast, it was suggested that the gharial and all the other crocodilians form a sister group as the structure of its tail muscles is unique.[23] Sequencing of a ribosomal segment of mitochondrial DNAs of gharial and false gharial revealed that they share 22 unique nucleotides, a similarity of 94%, supporting the view that they are sister taxa.[24] Analyses of nuclear gene sequences of both species also support the view that they are sister taxa.[25][26] Molecular genetics and tip dating studies indicates a genetic divergence between the gharial and false gharial in the Eocene about 38 million years ago.[27]

The genus Gavialis probably originated in the region of India and Pakistan in the Early Miocene.[28] Fossil gharial remains excavated in the Sivalik Hills of Haryana and Himachal Pradesh are dated to between the Pliocene and the Early Pleistocene.[29] Fossil gharial remains were also found at two sites in the Ayeyarwady River valley in central Myanmar, which are dated to the Late Pleistocene.[30] During the Quaternary, Gavialis dispersed as far as Java via the Siva–Malayan route, which did not require saltwater crossings. Fossil remains of Gavialis bengawanicus found on Java were dated to the Early Pleistocene.[28]G. bengawanicus fossils found in Thailand's Nakhon Ratchasima Province support the hypothesis of gharial dispersal through riverine systems.[31] It represents the only valid extinct Gavialis species.[32]

Phylogeny edit

The below cladogram of the major extant crocodile groups is based on the latest molecular studies and shows the gharial's close relationship to the false gharial, and how the gavialids and crocodiles are more closely related than the alligatoroids:[25][33][34][27][35]

Here is a more detailed cladogram that shows the gharial's proposed placement within Gavialidae, including extinct members:[27]

Characteristics edit

 
Adult female gharial
 
Adult male gharial
 
Gharial skeleton

The gharial is olive-coloured, with adults being darker than young, which have dark brown cross bands and speckles.[36][37] Its back turns almost black at 20 years of age, but its belly is yellowish-white. It has four transverse rows of two scales on the neck, which continue along the back.[38] Scutes on the head, neck and back form a single continuous plate composed of 21 to 22 transverse series, and four longitudinal series. Scutes on the back are bony, but softer and feebly keeled on the sides. The outer edges of the forearms, legs, and feet have crests jutting out; fingers and toes are partly webbed.[36]

Its snout is very long and narrow, widened at the end, and with 27 to 29 upper teeth and 25 or 26 lower teeth on each side. The front teeth are the largest. The first, second, and third lower jaw teeth fit into spaces in the upper jaw. The extremely long mandibular symphysis extends to the 23rd or 24th tooth. The snout of adult gharials is 3.5 times longer than the width of the skull's base.[36] Because of this long snout the gharial is especially adapted to catching and eating fish.[4] The nasal bones are rather short and widely spaced from the premaxillae. The jugal bone is raised.[36] It becomes proportionally thicker with age.[39] Two individuals in the weight range of 103–121 kg (227–267 lb) had an average measured bite force of 1,784–2,006 N (401–451 lbf).[34]

Male gharials develop a hollow bulbous nasal protuberance at the tip of the snout upon reaching sexual maturity.[38] This protuberance resembles an earthen pot known locally as "ghara". The male's ghara starts growing over the nostrils at an age of 11.5 years and measures about 5 cm × 6 cm × 3.5 cm (2.0 in × 2.4 in × 1.4 in) at an age of 15.5 years. It enables the males to emit a hissing sound that can be heard 75 m (246 ft) away.[40] The gharial is the only living crocodilian with such visible sexual dimorphism.[39] Mature male gharials have larger skulls than females, exceeding a basal length of 715 mm (28.1 in) and a width of 287 mm (11.3 in).[41]

Female gharials reach sexual maturity at a body length of 2.6 m (8 ft 6 in) and grow up to 4.5 m (14 ft 9 in). Males mature at a body length of at least 3 m (9 ft 10 in) and grow up to a length of 6 m (19 ft 8 in).[42] Adult males weigh about 160 kg (350 lb) on average, but can reach a weight of up to 600 kg (1,300 lb).[4][43] It is among the largest of the living crocodilians, with the heaviest recorded male weighing 977 kg (2,154 lb).[44] A 6.55 m (21 ft 6 in) long gharial was claimed to have been killed in the Ghaghara River in Faizabad in August 1920, though no reliable measurements were taken.[45] Male gharials with an alleged length of 7.16 to 9.14 m (23 ft 6 in – 30 ft 0 in) were sighted around the turn of the 20th century in Indian rivers.[46]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Gharials in Karnali River, Nepal, with a mugger crocodile in the back
 
Gharial in National Chambal Sanctuary

The gharial once thrived in all the major river systems of the northern Indian subcontinent, from the Indus River in Pakistan, the Ganges in India, the Brahmaputra River in northeastern India and Bangladesh to the Irrawaddy River in Myanmar.[39] In the early 20th century, it was considered common in the Indus River and its Punjabi tributaries.[47][48] By the early 1980s, it was almost extinct in the Indus.[42] During surveys in 2008 and 2009, no gharial was sighted in the river.[4] It was also present in India's Godavari River but was hunted to extinction between the late 1940s and the 1960s.[49] It was considered extinct in the Koshi River since 1970.[50] In the 1940s, it was numerous in the Barak River in Assam, which held big fish at the time including golden mahseer (Tor putitora).[51] A few individuals were also sighted in tributaries of the Barak River in Assam, Mizoram and Manipur up to 1988, but surveys were not carried out.[52] In 1927, a gharial was shot in the Shweli River in Myanmar, a tributary of the Ayeyawady River.[53] This is the only authenticated record in the country attesting the survival of gharials into the 20th century. Whether gharials still live in the Shweli River today is possible but remained unclear in 2012.[30]

By 1976, its global range had decreased to only 2% of its historical range, and fewer than 200 gharials were estimated to survive.[39] It is locally extinct in Pakistan, Bhutan and Myanmar.[4] Since the early 1980s, the population has been reinforced with captive-bred gharials that were released into wild habitats in India and Nepal. In 2017, the global population was estimated to comprise at maximum 900 individuals, including about 600 mature adults in six major subpopulations along 1,100 km (680 mi) of river courses and another 50 mature adults in eight minor subpopulations along 1,200 km (750 mi) of river courses.[2]

In Nepal, small populations are present and slowly recovering in tributaries of the Ganges, such as the KarnaliBabai River system in Bardia National Park[44][54] and the Narayani–Rapti river system in Chitwan National Park.[55][56] In spring 2017, the Babai River was surveyed using an unmanned aerial vehicle, which detected 33 gharials on a stretch of 102 km (63 mi).[57]

In India, gharial populations are present in the:

  • Ramganga River in Corbett National Park, where five gharials were recorded in 1974. Captive-bred gharials were released since the late 1970s. The population is breeding since 2008, and increased to about 42 adults by 2013.[58][59] Most of them congregate along an 8 km (5.0 mi) long stretch of the Kalagarh Reservoir's shoreline. Surveys in 2015 revealed a population of 90 gharials including 59 breeding adults.[60]
  • Ganges, where 494 gharials were released between 2009 and 2012 in Hastinapur Wildlife Sanctuary.[61][62]
  • Girwa River in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary where the small breeding population was reinforced with captive reared gharials since 1979.[63] A total of 909 gharials were released until 2006, but only 16 nesting females were recorded in the same year.[2] In December 2008, 105 individuals were counted including 35 adults. In spring 2009, 27 nests were detected in seven sites.[64] The number of nest sites decreased from seven in 2017 to two in 2019, possibly due to the upgrowth of woody vegetation and reduced river flow near sandbanks.[65]
  • Gandaki River downstream the Triveni barrage west of Valmiki Tiger Reserve and adjacent to Sohagi Barwa Sanctuary.[66] The population increased from 15 gharials in 2010 to 54 individuals recorded in March 2015 on a stretch of 320 km (200 mi). 35 of these gharials were wild-born.[67]
  • Chambal River in National Chambal Sanctuary where 107 gharials were recorded in 1974. Captive-bred gharials were released since 1979, and the population increased to 1,095 gharials in 1992.[68] Between December 2007 and March 2008, 111 gharials were found dead.[69] A total of 948 gharials were counted during surveys in 2013 along the protected river stretch of 414 km (257 mi).[70] In 2017, this population was estimated at 617–761 mature individuals and more than 1250 individuals by two different survey teams; 411 nests were found.[71]
  • Parbati River, a tributary of the Chambal River, where gharials started using a few sand banks since about 2015; 29 gharials were observed in 2016 and 251 hatchlings counted at two nesting sites in 2017.[71]
  • Yamuna River where eight young gharials were detected in autumn 2012 near the confluence of the Ken and Yamuna Rivers. They were probably offspring of the breeding population in the Chambal River and had drifted downriver during monsoon floods.[72]
  • Son River where 164 captive-reared gharials were released between 1981 and 2011.[73]
  • Koshi River in Bihar where two gharials were sighted basking in late January 2019 during a survey targeting South Asian River Dolphins (Platanista gangetica) on a stretch of about 175 km (109 mi). This is the first record of wild gharials in the river since the 1970s.[74]
  • Mahanadi River in Odisha's Satkosia Gorge Sanctuary where about 700 gharials were released between 1977 and the early 1990s.[63][75] During a 1.5 year long survey in 2005–2006, only one male and one female gharial were detected moving together and sharing sand banks in the river.[76]

Between 1979 and 1993, less than 20 individuals were sighted in the upper reaches of the Brahmaputra River between Kaziranga National Park and Dibru-Saikhowa National Park. This population had declined due to commercial fishing, poaching, encroachment by local people in gharial breeding grounds and siltation of river beds following deforestation. In 1998, it was not considered to be viable.[77] About 30 gharials were observed in small lakes and tributaries of the Brahmaputra River in Assam between 2004 and 2007.[78]

In Bangladesh, gharials were recorded in Padma, Jamuna, Mahananda and Brahmaputra rivers between 2000 and 2015.[79]

Behaviour and ecology edit

 
 
Gharials in National Chambal Sanctuary

The gharial is the most thoroughly aquatic crocodilian.[42] It leaves the water only for basking on riverbanks.[6] Being cold-blooded, it seeks to cool down during hot times and to warm up when ambient temperature is cool.[80] Gharials bask daily in the cold season, foremost in the mornings, and prefer sandy and moist beaches. They change their basking pattern with increasing daily temperatures; they start basking earlier in the mornings, move back into the river when it is hot, and return to the beach later in the afternoon. Groups comprising an adult male, several females and subadults have been observed to bask together. Adult males dominate groups and tolerate immature males.[42] Large groups of young, subadult and adult gharials form in December and January to bask. Adult males and females associate by mid February.[81]

The gharial shares riverine habitat with the mugger crocodile (Crocodylus palustris) in parts of its range. They use the same nesting grounds, but differ in the selection of basking sites.[82] The gharial basks close to water on shallow, sandy beaches and lays eggs only in sandy soil near water. The mugger crocodile also basks on sandy beaches, but unlike the gharial climbs steep embankments and rocks, and moves farther away from beaches for both basking and nest building.[83] It also preys on fish, but has a broader prey base than the gharial including snakes, turtles, birds, mammals and dead animals.[84]

Feeding ecology edit

The gharial is well adapted to hunting fish underwater because of its sharp interlocking teeth and long narrow snout, which meets little resistance in the water. It does not chew its prey, but swallows it whole. Juvenile gharials were observed to jerk their heads back to manoeuvre fish into their gullets, sliding them in head first. Young gharials feed on insects, tadpoles, small fish and frogs. Adults also feed on small crustaceans. Remains of Indian softshell turtle (Nilssonia gangetica) were also found in gharial stomachs. Gharials tear apart large fish and pick up and swallow stones as gastroliths, probably to aid digestion or regulate buoyancy. Some gharial stomachs also contained jewellery.[42] Stones weighing about 4.5 kg (10 lb) were found in a gharial's stomach that was shot in the Sharda River in 1910.[85]

Reproduction edit

Females mature at a body length of around 2.6 m (8 ft 6 in).[42] Captive females breed at a body length of 3 m (9 ft 10 in).[86] Male gharials mature at 15–18 years of age, when they reach a body length of around 4 m (13 ft) and once the ghara is developed.[39] The ghara is apparently used to indicate sexual maturity, as a sound resonator when bubbling underwater or for other sexual behaviours.[87]

Courting and mating starts by mid-February at the end of the cold season. In the dry season, reproductive females observed in the Chambal River routinely move 80–120 km (50–75 mi) and join female breeding groups to dig nests together.[81] They select sites in riverside sand or silt banks located between 2.5 and 14.5 m (8 ft 2 in and 47 ft 7 in) away from the water and above a water level of 1 to 3.5 m (3 ft 3 in to 11 ft 6 in). These nests are 20–55 cm (8 in – 1 ft 10 in) deep with a diameter of about 50–60 cm (1 ft 8 in – 2 ft 0 in). Between end of March and early April, they lay 20–95 eggs.[42] A record clutch with 97 eggs was found in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary.[88] The eggs are the largest of all crocodilians and weigh an average of 160 g (5.6 oz).[39] Each egg is 85–90 mm (3.3–3.5 in) long and 65–70 mm (2.6–2.8 in) wide.[89] After 71 to 93 days of incubation, young gharials hatch in July just before the onset of the monsoon. Their sex is most likely determined by temperature, like in most reptiles.[42] Females dig up the hatchlings in response to hatching chirps, but do not assist them to reach the water.[39] They stay at nesting sites until monsoon floods arrive and return after monsoon.[81]

Captive male gharials observed in the 1980s did not participate in guarding nests. A captive male gharial was observed to show an interest in hatchlings and was allowed by the female to carry hatchlings on his back.[90] In the Chambal River, females were observed to stay close to nest sites and guard young gharials until the shoreline was flooded. VHF radio tracking of a junior male gharial revealed that he was the dominant male guarding nests at a communal nesting site for two years.[91]

Development edit

 
Young gharial in the breeding center at Kukrail Reserve Forest

Hatchlings range from 34–39.2 cm (13.4–15.4 in) in body length with a weight of 82–130 g (2.9–4.6 oz). In two years, they grow to a length of 80–116 cm (31–46 in) and of 130–158 cm (51–62 in) in three years.[42] Gharials hatched and raised in Nepal's Gharial Conservation and Breeding Center measured 140–167 cm (55–66 in) and weighed 5.6–10.5 kg (12–23 lb) at the age of 45 months in April 2013. They consumed up to 3.5 kg (7.7 lb) of fish per individual and month. By the age of 75 months, they had gained 5.9–19.5 kg (13–43 lb) in weight and grown 29–62 cm (11–24 in) reaching body lengths of 169–229 cm (67–90 in).[92]

Young gharials in their first year of age hide and forage in shallow water preferably in sites that are surrounded by debris of fallen trees.[42] A study along a 425 km (264 mi) stretch of the Chambal River revealed that juvenile gharials up to a body length of 120 cm (3 ft 11 in) prefer basking sites where the mid river water is 1–3 m (3 ft 3 in – 9 ft 10 in) deep. As their body size increases, they move to sites with deeper water. Subadult and adult gharials above a body length of 180 cm (5 ft 11 in) prefer sites where the water is deeper than 4 m (13 ft 1 in).[93]

Young gharials move forward by pushing the diagonally opposite legs synchronously. At a young age, they can also gallop but do so only in emergency situations. When they reach a length of about 75 cm (30 in) and a weight of about 1.5 kg (3.3 lb) at the age of 8–9 months, they change to an adult pattern of locomotion of pushing forward with hind and front legs simultaneously. Adults do not have the ability to walk on land in the semi-upright stance as other crocodilians. When basking on the beach, they often turn round so as to face the water.[6]

Threats edit

The gharial population is estimated to have declined from 5,000–10,000 individuals in 1946 to fewer than 250 individuals in 2006, a decline of 96–98% within three generations. Gharials were killed by fishermen, hunted for skins, trophies and indigenous medicine, and their eggs collected for consumption. The remaining individuals form several fragmented subpopulations. Hunting is no longer considered a significant threat. However, the wild population declined from an estimated 436 adult gharials in 1997 to fewer than 250 mature individuals in 2006. One reason for this decline is the increased use of gill nets for fishing in gharial habitat. The other major reason is the loss of riverine habitat as dams, barrages, irrigation canals and artificial embankments were built; siltation and sand-mining changed river courses; and land near rivers is used for agriculture and grazing by livestock.[2]

When 111 dead gharials were found in the Chambal River between December 2007 and March 2008, it was initially suspected that they had died either because of toxicants or the illegal use of fish nets, in which they became entrapped in and subsequently drowned.[69] Later post mortem pathological testing of tissue samples revealed high levels of heavy metals such as lead and cadmium, which together with stomach ulcers and protozoan parasites reported in most necropsies were thought to have caused their deaths.[94] Water pumps used for pumping water out of the Chambal River have proven to negatively impact the gharial population.[95]

Threats in unprotected stretches of the Karnali River include quarrying for boulders, sand mining and unlicensed fishing.[54]

Conservation edit

The gharial is listed on CITES Appendix I.[2] In India, it is protected under the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972.[39] In Nepal, it is fully protected under the National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act of 1973.[44]

Reintroduction programmes edit

 
Gharials in the Gharial Conservation and Breeding Center at Chitwan National Park

Since the late 1970s, the gharial conservation approach was focused on reintroduction. Rivers in protected areas in India and Nepal used to be restocked with captive bred juvenile gharials. Gharial eggs were incubated, hatched and juvenile gharials raised for two to three years and released when about one metre in length.[2]

In 1975, the Indian Crocodile Conservation Project was set up under the auspices of the Government of India, initially in Odisha's Satkosia Gorge Sanctuary. It was implemented with financial aid of the United Nations Development Fund and the Food and Agriculture Organization. The country's first gharial breeding center was built in Nandankanan Zoological Park. A male gharial was flown in from Frankfurt Zoological Garden to become one of the founding animals of the breeding program. In subsequent years, several protected areas were established.[96] In 1976, two breeding centres were established in Uttar Pradesh, one in Kukrail Reserve Forest and one in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary, with facilities to hatch and raise up to 800 gharials each year for release in rivers.[97] Between 1975 and 1982, sixteen crocodile rehabilitation centers and five crocodile sanctuaries were established in the country. Gharial eggs were initially purchased from Nepal. In 1991, the Ministry of Environment and Forests withdrew funds for the captive-breeding and egg-collection programs, arguing that the project had served its purpose. In 1997–1998, over 1,200 gharials and over 75 nests were located in the National Chambal Sanctuary, but no surveys were carried out between 1999 and 2003. Gharial eggs collected from wild and captive-breeding nests amounted to 12,000 until 2004. Eggs were incubated, and hatchlings were reared to a length of about one meter or more.[39] More than 5,000 gharials were released into Indian rivers between the early 1980s and 2006.[98] Despite the release of 142 gharials between 1982 and 2007 into the Ken River, only one adult female gharial was observed in the river in spring 2013, indicating that most of the released gharials had not reproduced.[73] Juvenile gharials have also been released into the Beas River in Punjab, India.[2]

In Nepal, wild eggs collected along rivers have been incubated in the Gharial Conservation and Breeding Center in Chitwan National Park since 1978. The first batch of 50 gharials was released in spring 1981 into the Narayani River. In subsequent years, gharials were also released into five other rivers in the country.[44] In 2016, this center was overcrowded with more than 600 gharials aged between 5 and 12 years, and many were too old to be released.[99] Between 1981 and 2018, a total of 1,365 gharials were released in the Rapti–Narayani river system.[100] Reintroducing gharials helped to maintain this population, but the survival rate of released gharials was rather low. Of 36 marked gharials released in the spring seasons of 2002 and 2003 into the Rapti–Narayani rivers, only 14 were found alive in spring 2004.[56] This reintroduction programme has been criticised in 2017 as not being comprehensive and coordinated, as often too old and unsexed gharials were released at disturbed localities during unfavourable cold months and without assessing the efficiency of these releases.[99] It has been suggested to instead leave wild nests in place, increase protection of nesting and basking sites and monitor the movement of gharials.[101]

Releasing captive-reared gharials did not contribute significantly to re-establishing viable populations.[2] Monitoring of released gharials revealed that the reintroduction programmes did not address multiple factors affecting their survival. These factors include disturbances from diversions of river courses, sand mining, cultivation of riversides, fishing by local people and mortality related to fishing methods like the use of gill nets and dynamite.[102][103] In 2017, members of the Crocodile Specialist Group therefore recommended to foster engagement of local communities in gharial conservation programs.[104]

In May 2023, sightings of the Gharial were reported in the Punjab region of Pakistan. This marked the first confirmed sighting of the species in Pakistan after a presumed absence of three decades. In response to these sightings, WWF-Pakistan, in collaboration with the other partners, aims to step up conservation efforts for the Gharial. The goal is to ensure that the newly discovered population not only survives but thrives. Pakistan has requested the transfer of hundreds of Gharial crocodiles from Nepal in an effort to reintroduce the species.[105][106][107]

In situ projects edit

The riverbanks of Girwa river were cleared from woody vegetation on sand banks and mid-river islands in 2019, and sand was added in 2020 to create an artificial sand bank of about 1,000 m2 (11,000 sq ft). This intervention helped to stabilise and optimise the soil temperature at this site. In 2020, the number of gharial nests on this river stretch increased to 36 from 25 in 2018, and the number of unhatched eggs and dead hatchlings decreased significantly.[108]

In captivity edit

 
Gharial in a Florida zoo

As of 1999, gharials were also kept in the Madras Crocodile Bank Trust, Mysore Zoo, Jaipur Zoo and Kukrail Gharial Rehabilitation Centre in India.[109]

In Europe, gharials are kept in Prague Zoo and Protivin Crocodile Zoo in the Czech Republic, and the Berlin Zoo in Germany.[110] La Ferme aux Crocodiles, a crocodile farm in France, received six juveniles in 2000 from the Gharial Breeding Centre in Nepal.[111]

In the United States, gharials are kept in Busch Gardens Tampa, Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, Fort Worth Zoo, Honolulu Zoo, San Diego Zoo, National Zoological Park, San Antonio Zoo and Aquarium and St. Augustine Alligator Farm Zoological Park.[39] Bronx Zoo and Los Angeles Zoo received gharials in 2017.[112][113] In 2023, Fort Worth Zoo announced the birth of four gharials.[114]

In culture edit

 
A miniature illustration of the Baburnama showing a gharial, ca. 1598, National Museum, New Delhi[115]

The earliest known depictions of the gharial date to the Indus Valley civilisation. Seals and tablets show gharials with fish in their mouths and surrounded by fish. A tablet shows a deity flanked by a gharial and a fish. These pieces are about 4,000 years old and were found at Mohenjo-daro and Amri, Sindh.[116]

A gharial is depicted on one of the rock carvings on a pillar of the Sanchi Stupa, which dates to the 3rd century BC.[117] In Hindu mythology, the gharial is the vehicle of the river deity Gaṅgā and of the wind and sea deity Varuna.[118]

In the 16th-century book Baburnama, Zahir-ud-din Muhammad Babur accounted of a gharial sighting in the Ghaghara River between Ghazipur and Benares in 1526.[119]

In 1915, a British officer observed the traditional method of Kehal fishermen hunting gharials along the Indus. They staked nets about 60–75 cm (2 ft 0 in – 2 ft 6 in) below the waterline close by a sandbank and waited hidden for gharials to come out of the river for basking. After some time, they left their hiding places, prompting the gharials to dart off to the river and get entangled in the nets.[120]

Local people in Nepal attributed various mystical powers to the ghara of male gharials and killed them to collect their snouts.[121] Tharu people believed that the ghara would repel insects and pests when burnt in a field, and that gharial eggs would be an effective cough medicine and aphrodisiac.[44] Jewellery found in gharial stomachs may have been the reason for the belief of local people that they would eat humans.[42]

Local names for the gharial include 'Lamthore gohi' and 'Chimpta gohi' in Nepali, whereby gohi means crocodile; 'Gharial' in Hindi; 'Susar' in Marathi; 'Nakar' and 'Bahsoolia nakar' in Bihari; 'Thantia kumhira' in Odia, with 'thantia' being derived from the Sanskrit word 'tuṇḍa' meaning beak, snout, elephant's trunk; the male is called 'Ghadiala' and the female 'Thantiana' in Odia.[5]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Joshi, A. R. (2018). "Nepali scientists deploy drones to count endangered crocodiles". Mongabay.
  • "Gavialidae". reptilis.net.
  • "Gharial". Arkive. from the original on 2009-02-05.
  • "Gavialis gangeticus". Adam Britton.
  • Species Gavialis gangeticus at The Reptile Database
  • "Oldstyle id: 6bef8e5a76defdae652840a7b3416c9b". Catalogue of Life. Species 2000: Leiden, the Netherlands.
  • . National Geographic Society. 5 May 2016. Archived from the original on March 5, 2021.
  • "Mystery of crocs' mass die-off". BBC News. 2008.
  • Lenin, J. "The song of the Ganges gharial". www.india-seminar.com.

gharial, gharial, gavialis, gangeticus, also, known, gavial, fish, eating, crocodile, crocodilian, family, gavialidae, among, longest, living, crocodilians, mature, females, long, males, adult, males, have, distinct, boss, snout, which, resembles, earthenware,. The gharial Gavialis gangeticus also known as gavial or fish eating crocodile is a crocodilian in the family Gavialidae and among the longest of all living crocodilians Mature females are 2 6 to 4 5 m 8 ft 6 in to 14 ft 9 in long and males 3 to 6 m 9 ft 10 in to 19 ft 8 in Adult males have a distinct boss at the end of the snout which resembles an earthenware pot known as a ghara hence the name gharial The gharial is well adapted to catching fish because of its long narrow snout and 110 sharp interlocking teeth GharialTemporal range Pleistocene Present 2 6 0 Ma 1 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Male gharialFemale and juvenile gharialConservation statusCritically Endangered IUCN 3 1 2 CITES Appendix I CITES 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaClade ArchosauromorphaClade ArchosauriformesOrder CrocodiliaFamily GavialidaeGenus GavialisSpecies G gangeticusBinomial nameGavialis gangeticus Gmelin 1789 Range of gharial as of 2019 in blackSynonyms 3 Lacerta gangetica Gmelin 1789 Crocodilus gavial Bonnaterre 1789 Crocodilus longirostris Schneider 1801 Crocodilus arctirostris Daudin 1802 Crocodilus gangeticus and C tenuirostris Cuvier 1807 Rhamphostoma Wagler 1830 Gharialis hysudricus Lydekker 1886The gharial probably evolved in the northern Indian subcontinent Fossil gharial remains were excavated in Pliocene deposits in the Sivalik Hills and the Narmada River valley It currently inhabits rivers in the plains of the northern part of the Indian subcontinent It is the most thoroughly aquatic crocodilian and leaves the water only for basking and building nests on moist sandbanks Adults mate at the end of the cold season Females congregate in spring to dig nests in which they lay 20 95 eggs They guard the nests and the young which hatch before the onset of the monsoon The hatchlings stay and forage in shallow water during their first year but move to sites with deeper water as they grow The wild gharial population has declined drastically since the 1930s and is limited to only 2 of its historical range today Conservation programmes initiated in India and Nepal focused on reintroducing captive bred gharials since the early 1980s Loss of habitat because of sand mining and conversion to agriculture depletion of fish resources and detrimental fishing methods continue to threaten the population It has been listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List since 2007 The oldest known depictions of the gharial are about 4 000 years old and were found in the Indus Valley Hindus regard it as the vehicle of the river deity Gaṅga Local people living near rivers attributed mystical and healing powers to the gharial and used some of its body parts as ingredients of indigenous medicine Contents 1 Etymology 2 Taxonomy 3 Evolution 3 1 Phylogeny 4 Characteristics 5 Distribution and habitat 6 Behaviour and ecology 6 1 Feeding ecology 6 2 Reproduction 6 3 Development 7 Threats 8 Conservation 8 1 Reintroduction programmes 8 2 In situ projects 8 3 In captivity 9 In culture 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEtymology editThe name gharial is derived from the Hindustani word ghara for an earthen pot in reference to the nasal protuberance on the adult male s snout It is also called gavial 4 The name fish eating crocodile is a translation of its Bengali name mecho kumhir with mecho being derived from mach meaning fish and kumhir meaning crocodile 5 The name Indian gharial has occasionally been used for gharial populations in India 6 Taxonomy editLacerta gangetica was the scientific name proposed by Johann Friedrich Gmelin in 1789 7 Gmelin followed Carl Linnaeus who proposed Lacerta in 1758 to include other crocodiles and various lizards known at the time 8 The gharial was placed in the genus Crocodilus by subsequent naturalists Crocodilus gavial by Pierre Joseph Bonnaterre in 1789 9 Crocodilus longirostris by Johann Gottlob Theaenus Schneider in 1801 10 Crocodilus arctirostris by Francois Marie Daudin in 1802 11 Longirostres was a subgroup proposed by Georges Cuvier in 1807 for crocodiles with a long snout He placed Crocodilus gangeticus with the type locality Ganges and Crocodilus tenuirostris without locality into this group 12 The generic name Gavialis was proposed by Nicolaus Michael Oppel in 1811 for crocodiles with a cylindrical shaped back He placed this genus in the family Crocodilini 13 Rhamphostoma was proposed by Johann Georg Wagler in 1830 who considered this genus to contain two species Crocodilus gangeticus and C tenuirostris 14 The family name Gavialidae was proposed by Arthur Adams in 1854 with Gavialis as the only genus in this family 15 Gavialis gangetica was the scientific name used by Albert Gunther in 1864 who considered L gangetica C longirostris and C tenuirostris as synonyms and Gavialis a monotypic taxon 16 John Edward Gray reviewed zoological specimens in the collection of the Natural History Museum London He also considered the gharial monotypic in 1869 He placed it in the family Gavialidae together with the false gharial Tomistoma schlegelii because both have long slender jaws and similar dentition 3 Gharialis hysudricus proposed by Richard Lydekker in 1886 was based on a fossil skull from the Sivalik Hills that was larger than gharial fossil skulls known at the time 17 This name is considered to be a junior synonym of Gavialis gangeticus 18 Evolution editThe evolution of the gharial and its relationship with and divergence from other crocodilians have been a subject of controversy 19 Some authors assumed that the gharial evolved earlier than the other crocodilians because of its distinct skull shape and dentition indicating a more advanced level of specialization 20 21 Others suggested that it evolved much later than other crocodilians because of its low levels of blood protein divergence As it shares this trait with the false gharial it was suggested that they form a sister group 22 In contrast it was suggested that the gharial and all the other crocodilians form a sister group as the structure of its tail muscles is unique 23 Sequencing of a ribosomal segment of mitochondrial DNAs of gharial and false gharial revealed that they share 22 unique nucleotides a similarity of 94 supporting the view that they are sister taxa 24 Analyses of nuclear gene sequences of both species also support the view that they are sister taxa 25 26 Molecular genetics and tip dating studies indicates a genetic divergence between the gharial and false gharial in the Eocene about 38 million years ago 27 The genus Gavialis probably originated in the region of India and Pakistan in the Early Miocene 28 Fossil gharial remains excavated in the Sivalik Hills of Haryana and Himachal Pradesh are dated to between the Pliocene and the Early Pleistocene 29 Fossil gharial remains were also found at two sites in the Ayeyarwady River valley in central Myanmar which are dated to the Late Pleistocene 30 During the Quaternary Gavialis dispersed as far as Java via the Siva Malayan route which did not require saltwater crossings Fossil remains of Gavialis bengawanicus found on Java were dated to the Early Pleistocene 28 G bengawanicus fossils found in Thailand s Nakhon Ratchasima Province support the hypothesis of gharial dispersal through riverine systems 31 It represents the only valid extinct Gavialis species 32 Phylogeny edit The below cladogram of the major extant crocodile groups is based on the latest molecular studies and shows the gharial s close relationship to the false gharial and how the gavialids and crocodiles are more closely related than the alligatoroids 25 33 34 27 35 Crocodilia Alligatoridae Caimaninae Caiman nbsp Melanosuchus nbsp Paleosuchus nbsp Alligatorinae Alligator nbsp Longirostres Crocodylidae Crocodylus nbsp Mecistops nbsp Osteolaemus nbsp Gavialidae Gavialis nbsp Tomistoma nbsp Here is a more detailed cladogram that shows the gharial s proposed placement within Gavialidae including extinct members 27 Gavialidae GharialGavialis bengawanicus Gavialis browni Gryposuchus colombianus Ikanogavialis Gryposuchus pachakamue Piscogavialis Harpacochampsa Toyotamaphimeia Penghusuchus Gavialosuchus Tomistoma lusitanicum False gharial Tomistoma schlegeliiCharacteristics edit nbsp Adult female gharial nbsp Adult male gharial nbsp Gharial skeleton The gharial is olive coloured with adults being darker than young which have dark brown cross bands and speckles 36 37 Its back turns almost black at 20 years of age but its belly is yellowish white It has four transverse rows of two scales on the neck which continue along the back 38 Scutes on the head neck and back form a single continuous plate composed of 21 to 22 transverse series and four longitudinal series Scutes on the back are bony but softer and feebly keeled on the sides The outer edges of the forearms legs and feet have crests jutting out fingers and toes are partly webbed 36 Its snout is very long and narrow widened at the end and with 27 to 29 upper teeth and 25 or 26 lower teeth on each side The front teeth are the largest The first second and third lower jaw teeth fit into spaces in the upper jaw The extremely long mandibular symphysis extends to the 23rd or 24th tooth The snout of adult gharials is 3 5 times longer than the width of the skull s base 36 Because of this long snout the gharial is especially adapted to catching and eating fish 4 The nasal bones are rather short and widely spaced from the premaxillae The jugal bone is raised 36 It becomes proportionally thicker with age 39 Two individuals in the weight range of 103 121 kg 227 267 lb had an average measured bite force of 1 784 2 006 N 401 451 lbf 34 Male gharials develop a hollow bulbous nasal protuberance at the tip of the snout upon reaching sexual maturity 38 This protuberance resembles an earthen pot known locally as ghara The male s ghara starts growing over the nostrils at an age of 11 5 years and measures about 5 cm 6 cm 3 5 cm 2 0 in 2 4 in 1 4 in at an age of 15 5 years It enables the males to emit a hissing sound that can be heard 75 m 246 ft away 40 The gharial is the only living crocodilian with such visible sexual dimorphism 39 Mature male gharials have larger skulls than females exceeding a basal length of 715 mm 28 1 in and a width of 287 mm 11 3 in 41 Female gharials reach sexual maturity at a body length of 2 6 m 8 ft 6 in and grow up to 4 5 m 14 ft 9 in Males mature at a body length of at least 3 m 9 ft 10 in and grow up to a length of 6 m 19 ft 8 in 42 Adult males weigh about 160 kg 350 lb on average but can reach a weight of up to 600 kg 1 300 lb 4 43 It is among the largest of the living crocodilians with the heaviest recorded male weighing 977 kg 2 154 lb 44 A 6 55 m 21 ft 6 in long gharial was claimed to have been killed in the Ghaghara River in Faizabad in August 1920 though no reliable measurements were taken 45 Male gharials with an alleged length of 7 16 to 9 14 m 23 ft 6 in 30 ft 0 in were sighted around the turn of the 20th century in Indian rivers 46 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Gharials in Karnali River Nepal with a mugger crocodile in the back nbsp Gharial in National Chambal Sanctuary The gharial once thrived in all the major river systems of the northern Indian subcontinent from the Indus River in Pakistan the Ganges in India the Brahmaputra River in northeastern India and Bangladesh to the Irrawaddy River in Myanmar 39 In the early 20th century it was considered common in the Indus River and its Punjabi tributaries 47 48 By the early 1980s it was almost extinct in the Indus 42 During surveys in 2008 and 2009 no gharial was sighted in the river 4 It was also present in India s Godavari River but was hunted to extinction between the late 1940s and the 1960s 49 It was considered extinct in the Koshi River since 1970 50 In the 1940s it was numerous in the Barak River in Assam which held big fish at the time including golden mahseer Tor putitora 51 A few individuals were also sighted in tributaries of the Barak River in Assam Mizoram and Manipur up to 1988 but surveys were not carried out 52 In 1927 a gharial was shot in the Shweli River in Myanmar a tributary of the Ayeyawady River 53 This is the only authenticated record in the country attesting the survival of gharials into the 20th century Whether gharials still live in the Shweli River today is possible but remained unclear in 2012 30 By 1976 its global range had decreased to only 2 of its historical range and fewer than 200 gharials were estimated to survive 39 It is locally extinct in Pakistan Bhutan and Myanmar 4 Since the early 1980s the population has been reinforced with captive bred gharials that were released into wild habitats in India and Nepal In 2017 the global population was estimated to comprise at maximum 900 individuals including about 600 mature adults in six major subpopulations along 1 100 km 680 mi of river courses and another 50 mature adults in eight minor subpopulations along 1 200 km 750 mi of river courses 2 In Nepal small populations are present and slowly recovering in tributaries of the Ganges such as the Karnali Babai River system in Bardia National Park 44 54 and the Narayani Rapti river system in Chitwan National Park 55 56 In spring 2017 the Babai River was surveyed using an unmanned aerial vehicle which detected 33 gharials on a stretch of 102 km 63 mi 57 In India gharial populations are present in the Ramganga River in Corbett National Park where five gharials were recorded in 1974 Captive bred gharials were released since the late 1970s The population is breeding since 2008 and increased to about 42 adults by 2013 58 59 Most of them congregate along an 8 km 5 0 mi long stretch of the Kalagarh Reservoir s shoreline Surveys in 2015 revealed a population of 90 gharials including 59 breeding adults 60 Ganges where 494 gharials were released between 2009 and 2012 in Hastinapur Wildlife Sanctuary 61 62 Girwa River in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary where the small breeding population was reinforced with captive reared gharials since 1979 63 A total of 909 gharials were released until 2006 but only 16 nesting females were recorded in the same year 2 In December 2008 105 individuals were counted including 35 adults In spring 2009 27 nests were detected in seven sites 64 The number of nest sites decreased from seven in 2017 to two in 2019 possibly due to the upgrowth of woody vegetation and reduced river flow near sandbanks 65 Gandaki River downstream the Triveni barrage west of Valmiki Tiger Reserve and adjacent to Sohagi Barwa Sanctuary 66 The population increased from 15 gharials in 2010 to 54 individuals recorded in March 2015 on a stretch of 320 km 200 mi 35 of these gharials were wild born 67 Chambal River in National Chambal Sanctuary where 107 gharials were recorded in 1974 Captive bred gharials were released since 1979 and the population increased to 1 095 gharials in 1992 68 Between December 2007 and March 2008 111 gharials were found dead 69 A total of 948 gharials were counted during surveys in 2013 along the protected river stretch of 414 km 257 mi 70 In 2017 this population was estimated at 617 761 mature individuals and more than 1250 individuals by two different survey teams 411 nests were found 71 Parbati River a tributary of the Chambal River where gharials started using a few sand banks since about 2015 29 gharials were observed in 2016 and 251 hatchlings counted at two nesting sites in 2017 71 Yamuna River where eight young gharials were detected in autumn 2012 near the confluence of the Ken and Yamuna Rivers They were probably offspring of the breeding population in the Chambal River and had drifted downriver during monsoon floods 72 Son River where 164 captive reared gharials were released between 1981 and 2011 73 Koshi River in Bihar where two gharials were sighted basking in late January 2019 during a survey targeting South Asian River Dolphins Platanista gangetica on a stretch of about 175 km 109 mi This is the first record of wild gharials in the river since the 1970s 74 Mahanadi River in Odisha s Satkosia Gorge Sanctuary where about 700 gharials were released between 1977 and the early 1990s 63 75 During a 1 5 year long survey in 2005 2006 only one male and one female gharial were detected moving together and sharing sand banks in the river 76 Between 1979 and 1993 less than 20 individuals were sighted in the upper reaches of the Brahmaputra River between Kaziranga National Park and Dibru Saikhowa National Park This population had declined due to commercial fishing poaching encroachment by local people in gharial breeding grounds and siltation of river beds following deforestation In 1998 it was not considered to be viable 77 About 30 gharials were observed in small lakes and tributaries of the Brahmaputra River in Assam between 2004 and 2007 78 In Bangladesh gharials were recorded in Padma Jamuna Mahananda and Brahmaputra rivers between 2000 and 2015 79 Behaviour and ecology edit nbsp nbsp Gharials in National Chambal Sanctuary The gharial is the most thoroughly aquatic crocodilian 42 It leaves the water only for basking on riverbanks 6 Being cold blooded it seeks to cool down during hot times and to warm up when ambient temperature is cool 80 Gharials bask daily in the cold season foremost in the mornings and prefer sandy and moist beaches They change their basking pattern with increasing daily temperatures they start basking earlier in the mornings move back into the river when it is hot and return to the beach later in the afternoon Groups comprising an adult male several females and subadults have been observed to bask together Adult males dominate groups and tolerate immature males 42 Large groups of young subadult and adult gharials form in December and January to bask Adult males and females associate by mid February 81 The gharial shares riverine habitat with the mugger crocodile Crocodylus palustris in parts of its range They use the same nesting grounds but differ in the selection of basking sites 82 The gharial basks close to water on shallow sandy beaches and lays eggs only in sandy soil near water The mugger crocodile also basks on sandy beaches but unlike the gharial climbs steep embankments and rocks and moves farther away from beaches for both basking and nest building 83 It also preys on fish but has a broader prey base than the gharial including snakes turtles birds mammals and dead animals 84 Feeding ecology edit The gharial is well adapted to hunting fish underwater because of its sharp interlocking teeth and long narrow snout which meets little resistance in the water It does not chew its prey but swallows it whole Juvenile gharials were observed to jerk their heads back to manoeuvre fish into their gullets sliding them in head first Young gharials feed on insects tadpoles small fish and frogs Adults also feed on small crustaceans Remains of Indian softshell turtle Nilssonia gangetica were also found in gharial stomachs Gharials tear apart large fish and pick up and swallow stones as gastroliths probably to aid digestion or regulate buoyancy Some gharial stomachs also contained jewellery 42 Stones weighing about 4 5 kg 10 lb were found in a gharial s stomach that was shot in the Sharda River in 1910 85 Reproduction edit Females mature at a body length of around 2 6 m 8 ft 6 in 42 Captive females breed at a body length of 3 m 9 ft 10 in 86 Male gharials mature at 15 18 years of age when they reach a body length of around 4 m 13 ft and once the ghara is developed 39 The ghara is apparently used to indicate sexual maturity as a sound resonator when bubbling underwater or for other sexual behaviours 87 Courting and mating starts by mid February at the end of the cold season In the dry season reproductive females observed in the Chambal River routinely move 80 120 km 50 75 mi and join female breeding groups to dig nests together 81 They select sites in riverside sand or silt banks located between 2 5 and 14 5 m 8 ft 2 in and 47 ft 7 in away from the water and above a water level of 1 to 3 5 m 3 ft 3 in to 11 ft 6 in These nests are 20 55 cm 8 in 1 ft 10 in deep with a diameter of about 50 60 cm 1 ft 8 in 2 ft 0 in Between end of March and early April they lay 20 95 eggs 42 A record clutch with 97 eggs was found in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary 88 The eggs are the largest of all crocodilians and weigh an average of 160 g 5 6 oz 39 Each egg is 85 90 mm 3 3 3 5 in long and 65 70 mm 2 6 2 8 in wide 89 After 71 to 93 days of incubation young gharials hatch in July just before the onset of the monsoon Their sex is most likely determined by temperature like in most reptiles 42 Females dig up the hatchlings in response to hatching chirps but do not assist them to reach the water 39 They stay at nesting sites until monsoon floods arrive and return after monsoon 81 Captive male gharials observed in the 1980s did not participate in guarding nests A captive male gharial was observed to show an interest in hatchlings and was allowed by the female to carry hatchlings on his back 90 In the Chambal River females were observed to stay close to nest sites and guard young gharials until the shoreline was flooded VHF radio tracking of a junior male gharial revealed that he was the dominant male guarding nests at a communal nesting site for two years 91 Development edit nbsp Young gharial in the breeding center at Kukrail Reserve ForestHatchlings range from 34 39 2 cm 13 4 15 4 in in body length with a weight of 82 130 g 2 9 4 6 oz In two years they grow to a length of 80 116 cm 31 46 in and of 130 158 cm 51 62 in in three years 42 Gharials hatched and raised in Nepal s Gharial Conservation and Breeding Center measured 140 167 cm 55 66 in and weighed 5 6 10 5 kg 12 23 lb at the age of 45 months in April 2013 They consumed up to 3 5 kg 7 7 lb of fish per individual and month By the age of 75 months they had gained 5 9 19 5 kg 13 43 lb in weight and grown 29 62 cm 11 24 in reaching body lengths of 169 229 cm 67 90 in 92 Young gharials in their first year of age hide and forage in shallow water preferably in sites that are surrounded by debris of fallen trees 42 A study along a 425 km 264 mi stretch of the Chambal River revealed that juvenile gharials up to a body length of 120 cm 3 ft 11 in prefer basking sites where the mid river water is 1 3 m 3 ft 3 in 9 ft 10 in deep As their body size increases they move to sites with deeper water Subadult and adult gharials above a body length of 180 cm 5 ft 11 in prefer sites where the water is deeper than 4 m 13 ft 1 in 93 Young gharials move forward by pushing the diagonally opposite legs synchronously At a young age they can also gallop but do so only in emergency situations When they reach a length of about 75 cm 30 in and a weight of about 1 5 kg 3 3 lb at the age of 8 9 months they change to an adult pattern of locomotion of pushing forward with hind and front legs simultaneously Adults do not have the ability to walk on land in the semi upright stance as other crocodilians When basking on the beach they often turn round so as to face the water 6 Threats editThe gharial population is estimated to have declined from 5 000 10 000 individuals in 1946 to fewer than 250 individuals in 2006 a decline of 96 98 within three generations Gharials were killed by fishermen hunted for skins trophies and indigenous medicine and their eggs collected for consumption The remaining individuals form several fragmented subpopulations Hunting is no longer considered a significant threat However the wild population declined from an estimated 436 adult gharials in 1997 to fewer than 250 mature individuals in 2006 One reason for this decline is the increased use of gill nets for fishing in gharial habitat The other major reason is the loss of riverine habitat as dams barrages irrigation canals and artificial embankments were built siltation and sand mining changed river courses and land near rivers is used for agriculture and grazing by livestock 2 When 111 dead gharials were found in the Chambal River between December 2007 and March 2008 it was initially suspected that they had died either because of toxicants or the illegal use of fish nets in which they became entrapped in and subsequently drowned 69 Later post mortem pathological testing of tissue samples revealed high levels of heavy metals such as lead and cadmium which together with stomach ulcers and protozoan parasites reported in most necropsies were thought to have caused their deaths 94 Water pumps used for pumping water out of the Chambal River have proven to negatively impact the gharial population 95 Threats in unprotected stretches of the Karnali River include quarrying for boulders sand mining and unlicensed fishing 54 Conservation editThe gharial is listed on CITES Appendix I 2 In India it is protected under the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972 39 In Nepal it is fully protected under the National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act of 1973 44 Reintroduction programmes edit nbsp Gharials in the Gharial Conservation and Breeding Center at Chitwan National ParkSince the late 1970s the gharial conservation approach was focused on reintroduction Rivers in protected areas in India and Nepal used to be restocked with captive bred juvenile gharials Gharial eggs were incubated hatched and juvenile gharials raised for two to three years and released when about one metre in length 2 In 1975 the Indian Crocodile Conservation Project was set up under the auspices of the Government of India initially in Odisha s Satkosia Gorge Sanctuary It was implemented with financial aid of the United Nations Development Fund and the Food and Agriculture Organization The country s first gharial breeding center was built in Nandankanan Zoological Park A male gharial was flown in from Frankfurt Zoological Garden to become one of the founding animals of the breeding program In subsequent years several protected areas were established 96 In 1976 two breeding centres were established in Uttar Pradesh one in Kukrail Reserve Forest and one in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary with facilities to hatch and raise up to 800 gharials each year for release in rivers 97 Between 1975 and 1982 sixteen crocodile rehabilitation centers and five crocodile sanctuaries were established in the country Gharial eggs were initially purchased from Nepal In 1991 the Ministry of Environment and Forests withdrew funds for the captive breeding and egg collection programs arguing that the project had served its purpose In 1997 1998 over 1 200 gharials and over 75 nests were located in the National Chambal Sanctuary but no surveys were carried out between 1999 and 2003 Gharial eggs collected from wild and captive breeding nests amounted to 12 000 until 2004 Eggs were incubated and hatchlings were reared to a length of about one meter or more 39 More than 5 000 gharials were released into Indian rivers between the early 1980s and 2006 98 Despite the release of 142 gharials between 1982 and 2007 into the Ken River only one adult female gharial was observed in the river in spring 2013 indicating that most of the released gharials had not reproduced 73 Juvenile gharials have also been released into the Beas River in Punjab India 2 In Nepal wild eggs collected along rivers have been incubated in the Gharial Conservation and Breeding Center in Chitwan National Park since 1978 The first batch of 50 gharials was released in spring 1981 into the Narayani River In subsequent years gharials were also released into five other rivers in the country 44 In 2016 this center was overcrowded with more than 600 gharials aged between 5 and 12 years and many were too old to be released 99 Between 1981 and 2018 a total of 1 365 gharials were released in the Rapti Narayani river system 100 Reintroducing gharials helped to maintain this population but the survival rate of released gharials was rather low Of 36 marked gharials released in the spring seasons of 2002 and 2003 into the Rapti Narayani rivers only 14 were found alive in spring 2004 56 This reintroduction programme has been criticised in 2017 as not being comprehensive and coordinated as often too old and unsexed gharials were released at disturbed localities during unfavourable cold months and without assessing the efficiency of these releases 99 It has been suggested to instead leave wild nests in place increase protection of nesting and basking sites and monitor the movement of gharials 101 Releasing captive reared gharials did not contribute significantly to re establishing viable populations 2 Monitoring of released gharials revealed that the reintroduction programmes did not address multiple factors affecting their survival These factors include disturbances from diversions of river courses sand mining cultivation of riversides fishing by local people and mortality related to fishing methods like the use of gill nets and dynamite 102 103 In 2017 members of the Crocodile Specialist Group therefore recommended to foster engagement of local communities in gharial conservation programs 104 In May 2023 sightings of the Gharial were reported in the Punjab region of Pakistan This marked the first confirmed sighting of the species in Pakistan after a presumed absence of three decades In response to these sightings WWF Pakistan in collaboration with the other partners aims to step up conservation efforts for the Gharial The goal is to ensure that the newly discovered population not only survives but thrives Pakistan has requested the transfer of hundreds of Gharial crocodiles from Nepal in an effort to reintroduce the species 105 106 107 In situ projects edit The riverbanks of Girwa river were cleared from woody vegetation on sand banks and mid river islands in 2019 and sand was added in 2020 to create an artificial sand bank of about 1 000 m2 11 000 sq ft This intervention helped to stabilise and optimise the soil temperature at this site In 2020 the number of gharial nests on this river stretch increased to 36 from 25 in 2018 and the number of unhatched eggs and dead hatchlings decreased significantly 108 In captivity edit nbsp Gharial in a Florida zooAs of 1999 gharials were also kept in the Madras Crocodile Bank Trust Mysore Zoo Jaipur Zoo and Kukrail Gharial Rehabilitation Centre in India 109 In Europe gharials are kept in Prague Zoo and Protivin Crocodile Zoo in the Czech Republic and the Berlin Zoo in Germany 110 La Ferme aux Crocodiles a crocodile farm in France received six juveniles in 2000 from the Gharial Breeding Centre in Nepal 111 In the United States gharials are kept in Busch Gardens Tampa Cleveland Metroparks Zoo Fort Worth Zoo Honolulu Zoo San Diego Zoo National Zoological Park San Antonio Zoo and Aquarium and St Augustine Alligator Farm Zoological Park 39 Bronx Zoo and Los Angeles Zoo received gharials in 2017 112 113 In 2023 Fort Worth Zoo announced the birth of four gharials 114 In culture edit nbsp A miniature illustration of the Baburnama showing a gharial ca 1598 National Museum New Delhi 115 The earliest known depictions of the gharial date to the Indus Valley civilisation Seals and tablets show gharials with fish in their mouths and surrounded by fish A tablet shows a deity flanked by a gharial and a fish These pieces are about 4 000 years old and were found at Mohenjo daro and Amri Sindh 116 A gharial is depicted on one of the rock carvings on a pillar of the Sanchi Stupa which dates to the 3rd century BC 117 In Hindu mythology the gharial is the vehicle of the river deity Gaṅga and of the wind and sea deity Varuna 118 In the 16th century book Baburnama Zahir ud din Muhammad Babur accounted of a gharial sighting in the Ghaghara River between Ghazipur and Benares in 1526 119 In 1915 a British officer observed the traditional method of Kehal fishermen hunting gharials along the Indus They staked nets about 60 75 cm 2 ft 0 in 2 ft 6 in below the waterline close by a sandbank and waited hidden for gharials to come out of the river for basking After some time they left their hiding places prompting the gharials to dart off to the river and get entangled in the nets 120 Local people in Nepal attributed various mystical powers to the ghara of male gharials and killed them to collect their snouts 121 Tharu people believed that the ghara would repel insects and pests when burnt in a field and that gharial eggs would be an effective cough medicine and aphrodisiac 44 Jewellery found in gharial stomachs may have been the reason for the belief of local people that they would eat humans 42 Local names for the gharial include Lamthore gohi and Chimpta gohi in Nepali whereby gohi means crocodile Gharial in Hindi Susar in Marathi Nakar and Bahsoolia nakar in Bihari Thantia kumhira in Odia with thantia being derived from the Sanskrit word tuṇḍa meaning beak snout elephant s trunk the male is called Ghadiala and the female Thantiana in Odia 5 See also editCrocodiles in India List of reptiles of South AsiaReferences edit Rio J P amp Mannion P D 2021 Phylogenetic analysis of a new morphological dataset elucidates the evolutionary history of Crocodylia and resolves the long standing gharial problem PeerJ 9 e12094 doi 10 7717 peerj 12094 PMC 8428266 PMID 34567843 a b c d e f g h i Lang J Chowfin S amp Ross J P 2019 errata version of 2019 assessment Gavialis gangeticus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T8966A149227430 Retrieved 22 January 2022 a b Gray J E 1869 Synopsis of the species of recent Crocodilians or Emydosaurians chiefly founded on the specimens in the British Museum and the Royal College of Surgeons The Transactions of the Zoological Society of London 6 4 125 169 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1867 tb00575 x a b c d e Stevenson C amp Whitaker R 2010 Gharial Gavialis gangeticus PDF In Manolis S C amp Stevenson C eds Crocodiles Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan Third ed Darwin Crocodile Specialist Group pp 139 143 a b Daniel J C 1983 Gharial or Long snouted Crocodile Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin The Book of Indian Reptiles Bombay and Oxford Bombay Natural History Society and Oxford University Press pp 15 16 ISBN 9780195621686 a b c Bustard H R amp Singh L A K 1977 Studies on the Indian gharial Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin Reptilia Crocodilia change in terrestrial locomotory pattern with age Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 74 3 534 535 Gmelin J F 1789 Lacerta gangetica Caroli a Linne Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis Carol Linne The System of Nature by the three Kingdoms of Nature according to classes orders genera species with characteristics differences synonyms places in Latin Vol Tomus I Pars III Leipzig G E Beers pp 1057 1058 Linnaeus C 1758 Lacerta Caroli Linnaei Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis in Latin Vol Tomus I decima reformata ed Holmiae Laurentius Salvius p 41 42 Bonnaterre P J 1789 Le Gavial Tableau encyclopedique et methodique des trois regnes de la nature Erpetologie Encyclopedic and methodical plates of the three Kingdoms of Nature Herpetology in French Paris Chez Panckoucke pp 34 35 Schneider J G T 1801 Longirostris Historiae amphibiorum naturalis et literariae fasciculus secundus Natural History of and Literature about the Amphibians in Latin Jena F Frommann pp 160 161 Daudin F M 1802 Le crocodile a bec etroit ou le grand Gavial The straight snouted crocodile or the great Gavial Histoire Naturelle Generale et Particuliere des Reptiles ouvrage faisant suit a l Histoire naturelle generale et particuliere composee par Leclerc de Buffon et redigee par C S Sonnini membre de plusieurs societes savantes in French Vol Tome 2 Paris F Dufart pp 393 396 Cuvier G 1807 Sur les differentes especes de crocodiles vivans et sur leurs caracteres distinctifs About the different species of the living crocodiles and their distinct characteristics Annales du Museum National d Histoire Naturelle in French 10 8 66 Oppel N M 1811 Familia Crocodilini Die Ordnungen Familien und Gattungen der Reptilien als Prodrom einer Naturgeschichte derselben in German Munchen J Lindauer p 19 Wagler J 1830 Rhamphostoma Naturliches System der Amphibien mit vorangehender Classification der Saugethiere und Vogel Ein Beitrag zur vergleichenden Zoologie A natural System of the Amphibiae preceded by a Classification of the Mammalia and Birds A contribution to comparative Zoology in German Munchen J G Cotta scche Buchhandlung p 141 Adams A 1854 II Order Emydosaurians Emydosauria In Adams A Baikie W B Barron C eds A Manual of Natural History for the Use of Travellers Being a Description of the Families of the Animal and Vegetable Kingdoms with Remarks on the Practical Study of Geology and Meteorology London John Van Voorst pp 70 71 Gunther A 1864 Gavialis Geoffr The reptiles of British India London Robert Hardwicke p 63 Lydekker R 1886 Gharialis hysudricus Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India Indian Tertiary and post Tertiary Vertebrata Vol III Calcutta Geological Survey Office pp 222 223 Martin J E 2018 The taxonomic content of the genus Gavialis from the Siwalik Hills of India and Pakistan PDF Papers in Palaeontology 5 3 483 497 Bibcode 2019PPal 5 483M doi 10 1002 spp2 1247 S2CID 134966832 Brochu C A 1997 Morphology fossils divergence timing and the phylogenetic relationships of Gavialis Systematic Biology 46 3 479 522 doi 10 1093 sysbio 46 3 479 PMID 11975331 Kalin J A 1931 Uber die Stellung der Gavialiden im System der Crocodilia On the position of the Gavialids in the system of the Crocodilia Revue Suisse de Zoologie 38 3 379 388 Hecht M K Malone K 1972 On the Early History of the Gavialid Crocodilians Herpetologica 28 3 281 284 JSTOR 3890639 Densmore III L D amp Dessauer H C 1984 Low levels of protein divergence detected between Gavialis and Tomistoma evidence for crocodilian monophyly Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part B Comparative Biochemistry 77 4 715 720 doi 10 1016 0305 0491 84 90302 X Frey E Riess J amp Tarsitano S F 1989 The axial tail musculature of recent crocodiles and its phyletic implications PDF American Zoologist 29 3 857 862 doi 10 1093 icb 29 3 857 Gatesy J amp Amato G D 1992 Sequence Similarity of 12S Ribosomal Segment of Mitochondrial DNAs of Gharial and False Gharial Copeia 1992 1 241 243 doi 10 2307 1446560 JSTOR 1446560 a b Harshman J Huddleston C J Bollback J P Parsons T J Braun M J 2003 True and false gharials A nuclear gene phylogeny of crocodylia Systematic Biology 52 3 386 402 doi 10 1080 10635150309323 PMID 12775527 Willis R E McAliley L R Neeley E D amp Densmore Ld L D 2007 Evidence for placing the false gharial Tomistoma schlegelii into the family Gavialidae Inferences from nuclear gene sequences Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 43 3 787 794 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2007 02 005 PMID 17433721 a b c Lee M S Y Yates A M 2018 Tip dating and homoplasy reconciling the shallow molecular divergences of modern gharials with their long fossil record Proceedings of the Royal Society B 285 1881 doi 10 1098 rspb 2018 1071 PMC 6030529 PMID 30051855 a b Delfino M amp De Vos J 2010 A revision of the Dubois crocodylians Gavialis bengawanicus and Crocodylus ossifragus from the Pleistocene Homo erectus beds of Java Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 30 2 427 Bibcode 2010JVPal 30 427D doi 10 1080 02724631003617910 S2CID 86396515 Patnaik R amp Schleich H H 1993 Fossil crocodile remains from the Upper Siwaliks of India Mitteilungen der Bayerischen Staatssammlung fur Palaontologie und historische Geologie 33 91 117 a b Win Ko Ko amp Platt S G 2012 Does the Gharial Gavialis gangeticus survive in Myanmar PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 32 4 14 16 Martin J E Buffetaut E Naksri W Lauprasert K amp Claude J 2012 Gavialis from the Pleistocene of Thailand and its relevance for drainage connections from India to Java PLOS ONE 7 9 e44541 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 744541M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0044541 PMC 3445548 PMID 23028557 Martin J E 2019 The taxonomic content of the genus Gavialis from the Siwalik Hills of India and Pakistan PDF Papers in Palaeontology 5 3 483 497 Bibcode 2019PPal 5 483M doi 10 1002 spp2 1247 S2CID 134966832 Gatesy J amp Amato G 2008 The rapid accumulation of consistent molecular support for intergeneric crocodylian relationships Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 48 3 1232 1237 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2008 02 009 PMID 18372192 a b Erickson G M Gignac P M Steppan S J Lappin A K Vliet K A Brueggen J A Inouye B D Kledzik D amp Webb G J W 2012 Insights into the ecology and evolutionary success of crocodilians revealed through bite force and tooth pressure experimentation PLOS ONE 7 3 e31781 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 731781E doi 10 1371 journal pone 0031781 PMC 3303775 PMID 22431965 Hekkala E Gatesy J Narechania A Meredith R Russello M Aardema M L Jensen E Montanari S Brochu C Norell M Amato G 2021 Paleogenomics illuminates the evolutionary history of the extinct Holocene horned crocodile of Madagascar Voay robustus Communications Biology 4 1 505 doi 10 1038 s42003 021 02017 0 PMC 8079395 PMID 33907305 a b c d Boulenger G A 1889 Gavialis Catalogue of the Chelonians Rhynchocephalians and Crocodiles in the British Museum Natural History New ed London Trustees of the British Museum Natural History pp 275 276 Boulenger G A 1890 Genus Gavialis Fauna of British India Reptilia and Batrachia London Taylor and Francis p 3 a b Brazaitis P 1973 Family Gavialidae Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin Zoologica 3 80 81 a b c d e f g h i j Whitaker R Members of the Gharial Multi Task Force Madras Crocodile Bank 2007 The Gharial Going Extinct Again PDF Iguana 14 1 24 33 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 26 Biswas S Acharjyo L N amp Mohapatra S 1977 A note on the protuberance or knob on the snout of male gharial Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 74 3 536 537 Hone D Mallon J C Hennessey P amp Witmer L M 2020 Ontogeny of a sexually selected structure in an extant archosaur Gavialis gangeticus Pseudosuchia Crocodylia with implications for sexual dimorphism in dinosaurs PeerJ 8 e9134 doi 10 7717 peerj 9134 PMC 7227661 PMID 32435543 a b c d e f g h i j k Whitaker R amp Basu D 1982 The Gharial Gavialis gangeticus A review Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 79 3 531 548 Gauthier J A Nesbitt S J Schachner E R Bever G S amp Joyce W G 2011 The bipedal stem crocodilian Poposaurus gracilis inferring function in fossils and innovation in archosaur locomotion Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History 52 1 107 126 doi 10 3374 014 052 0102 S2CID 86687464 a b c d e Maskey T M amp Percival H F 1994 Status and Conservation of Gharial in Nepal PDF Crocodiles Proceedings of the 12th Working Meeting of the Crocodile Specialist Group convened at Pattaya Thailand 2 6 May 1994 Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 77 83 Pitman C R S 1925 The length attained by and the habits of the Gharial G gangeticus Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 30 3 703 Flower S S 1914 The Gharial Garialis gangeticus Report on a zoological mission to India in 1913 Cairo Ministry of Public Works p 21 Francis R 1911 The broad snouted Mugger in the Indus Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 20 4 11601162 Rao C J 1933 Gavial on the Indus Journal of the Sind Natural History Society 1 4 37 Bustard H R amp Choudhury B C 1983 The distribution of the Gharial Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 79 2 427 429 Biswas S 1970 A Preliminary Survey of the Gharial in the Kosi River Indian Forester 96 9 705 710 Macdonald A S J 1944 Circumventing the Mahseer and Other Sporting Fish in India Part VI Mahseer Fishing in Assam and the Dooars Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 44 3 322 354 Choudhury A U 1997 Records of the gharial Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin from the Barak river system of north eastern India Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 94 1 162 164 Barton C G 1929 The Occurrence of the Gharial Gavialis gangeticus in Burma Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 33 2 450 451 a b Bashyal A Shrestha S Luitel K P Yadav B P Khadka B Lang J W amp Densmore L D 2021 Gharials Gavialis gangeticus in Bardiya National Park Nepal Population habitat and threats Aquatic Conservation Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 31 9 2594 2602 Bibcode 2021ACMFE 31 2594B doi 10 1002 aqc 3649 S2CID 237803213 Priol P 2003 Gharial field study report Report Kathmandu Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation a b Ballouard J M Priol P Oison J Ciliberti A amp Cadi A 2010 Does reintroduction stabilize the population of the critically endangered gharial Gavialis gangeticus Gavialidae in Chitwan National Park Nepal Aquatic Conservation Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 20 7 756 761 Bibcode 2010ACMFE 20 756B doi 10 1002 aqc 1151 Thapa G J Thapa K Thapa R Jnawali S R Wich S A Poudyal L P amp Karki S 2018 Counting crocodiles from the sky monitoring the critically endangered gharial Gavialis gangeticus population with an unmanned aerial vehicle UAV Journal of Unmanned Vehicle Systems 6 2 71 82 doi 10 1139 juvs 2017 0026 hdl 1807 87439 Chowfin S 2010 Crocodilian and freshwater research and conservation project Uttarakhand India PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 29 3 19 Chowfin S M amp Leslie A J 2013 A preliminary investigation into nesting and nest predation of the critically endangered gharial Gavialis gangeticus at Boksar in Corbett Tiger Reserve Uttarakhand India PDF World Crocodile Conference Proceedings of the 22nd Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 26 28 Chowfin S M amp Leslie A J 2016 The Gharial Gavialis gangeticus in Corbett Tiger Reserve PDF In Crocodile Specialist Group ed Crocodiles Proceedings of the 24th Working Meeting of the Crocodile Specialist Group in Skukuza South Africa 23 26 May 2016 Gland IUCN pp 120 124 Yadav S K Nawab A amp Afifullah Khan A 2013 Conserving the Critically Endangered Gharial Gavialis gangeticus in Hastinapur Wildlife Sanctuary Uttar Pradesh Promoting better coexistence for conservation PDF World Crocodile Conference Proceedings of the 22nd Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 78 82 An endangered apex predator returns to the Ganga River World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 15 August 2023 a b Rao R J amp Choudhury B C 1992 Sympatric distribution of gharial and mugger in India Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 89 312 315 Das A Basu D Converse L amp Choudhury S C 2012 Herpetofauna of Katerniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary Uttar Pradesh India Journal of Threatened Taxa 4 5 2553 2568 doi 10 11609 JoTT o2587 2553 68 Vashistha G Mungi N A Lang J W Ranjan V Dhakate P M Khudsar F A amp Kothamasi D 2021 Gharial nesting in a reservoir is limited by reduced river flow and by increased bank vegetation Scientific Reports 11 1 4805 Bibcode 2021NatSR 11 4805V doi 10 1038 s41598 021 84143 7 PMC 7910305 PMID 33637782 Choudhary S K 2010 Multi species Survey in River Gandak Bihar with focus on Gharial and Ganges River Dolphin Bhagalpur T M Bhagalpur University Choudhury B C Behera S K Sinha S K amp Chandrashekar S 2016 Restocking Monitoring Population Status New Breeding Record and Conservation Actions for Gharial in the Gandak River Bihar India PDF In Crocodile Specialist Group ed Crocodiles Proceedings of the 24th Working Meeting of the Crocodile Specialist Group in Skukuza South Africa 23 26 May 2016 Gland IUCN p 124 Hussain S A 1999 Reproductive success hatchling survival and rate of increase of gharial Gavialis gangeticus in National Chambal Sanctuary India Biological Conservation 87 2 261 268 doi 10 1016 S0006 3207 98 00065 2 a b Nawab A Basu D J Yadav S K amp Gautam P 2013 Impact of Mass Mortility of Gharial Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin 1789 on its Conservation in the Chambal River in Rajasthan In Sharma B K Kulshreshtha S amp Rahmani A R eds Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan India Springer International Publishing pp 221 229 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 01345 9 9 ISBN 978 3 319 01344 2 Rao R J Tagor S Singh H amp Dasgupta N 2013 Monitoring of Gharial Gavialis gangeticus and its habitat in the National Chambal Sanctuary India PDF World Crocodile Conference Proceedings of the 22nd Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 66 73 a b Khandal D Sahu Y K Dhakad M Shukla A Katdare S amp Lang J W 2017 Gharial and Mugger in upstream tributaries of the Chambal River north India PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 36 4 11 16 Nair T 2012 Gharial hatchlings in the Yamuna PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 32 4 17 a b Nair T amp Katdare S 2013 Dry season assessment of gharials Gavialis gangeticus in the Betwa Ken and Son Rivers India PDF World Crocodile Conference Proceedings of the 22nd Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 53 65 Nair T Dey S amp Gupta S P 2019 Relicts in the River Short Survey for Gharials Gavialis gangeticus in the Kosi River India PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 38 4 11 14 Bustard H R 1983 Movement of wild Gharial Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin in the River Mahanadi Orissa India British Journal of Herpetology 6 287 291 Mohanty B Nayak S K Panda B Mitra A amp Pattanaik S K 2010 Gharial Gavialis gangeticus in the Mahanadi River system of Orissa India On the brink of extinction E planet 8 8 49 52 Choudhury A U 1998 Status of the gharial Gavialis gangeticus in the main Brahmaputra river Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 95 1 118 120 Saikia B P 2010 Indian Gharial Gavialis gangeticus Status ecology and conservation In Singaravelan N ed Rare Animals of India Sharjah Bentham Science Publishers pp 76 100 ISBN 9781608054855 Hasan K amp Alam S 2016 Chapter 3 Findings Gharials of Bangladesh Dhaka IUCN Bangladesh Country Office pp 29 65 Lang J W 1987 Crocodilian behaviour implications for management In Webb G J W Manolis S C Whitehead P J eds Wildlife Management Crocodiles and Alligators Sydney Surrey Beatty and Sons pp 273 294 a b c Lang J W amp Kumar P 2013 Behavioral ecology of Gharial on the Chambal River India PDF World Crocodile Conference Proceedings of the 22nd Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 42 52 Rao R J amp Choudhury B C 1992 Sympatric distribution of Gharial Gavialis gangeticus and Mugger Crocodylus palustris in India Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 89 3 313 314 Choudhary S Choudhury B C amp Gopi G V 2018 Spatio temporal partitioning between two sympatric crocodilians Gavialis gangeticus amp Crocodylus palustris in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary India Aquatic Conservation Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 28 5 1067 1076 doi 10 1002 aqc 2911 S2CID 91126092 Whitaker R amp Whitaker Z 1989 Ecology of the mugger crocodile PDF Crocodiles their ecology management and conservation Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 276 296 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Forsyth H W 1914 The food of Crocodiles Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 23 1 228 229 Bustard H R amp Maharana S 1983 Size at first breeding in the Gharial Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin Reptilia Crocodilia in captivity Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 79 1 206 207 Martin B G H amp Bellairs A d A in French 1977 The narial excrescence and pterygoid bulla of the gharial Gavialis gangeticus Crocodilia Journal of Zoology 182 4 541 558 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1977 tb04169 x Bustard H R amp Basu S 1983 A record Gharial clutch Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 79 1 207 208 Smith M A 1931 Gavialis The Fauna of British India Including Ceylon and Burma Reptilia and Amphibia Vol I Loricata Testudines London Secretary of State for India in Council pp 37 40 Bustard H R 1982 Behaviour of the male Gharial during the nesting and post hatching period Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 79 3 677 680 Lang J W amp Kumar P 2016 Chambal Gharial Ecology Project 2016 Update PDF In Crocodile Specialist Group ed Crocodiles Proceedings of the 24th Working Meeting of the Crocodile Specialist Group Skukuza South Africa 23 26 May 2016 Gland IUCN pp 136 148 Khadka B B amp Bashyal A 2019 Growth rate of captive Gharials Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin 1789 Reptilia Crocodylia Gavialidae in Chitwan National Park Nepal Journal of Threatened Taxa 11 15 14998 15003 doi 10 11609 jott 5491 11 15 14998 15003 Hussain S A 2009 Basking site and water depth selection by Gharial Gavialis gangeticus Gmelin 1789 Crocodylia Reptilia in National Chambal Sanctuary India and its implication for river conservation Aquatic Conservation Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 19 2 127 133 Bibcode 2009ACMFE 19 127H doi 10 1002 aqc 960 Whitaker R Basu D amp Huchzermeyer F 2008 Update on gharial mass mortality in National Chambal Sanctuary PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 27 1 4 8 Katdare S 2011 Gharial Gavialis gangeticus populations and human influences on habitat on the River Chambal India Aquatic Conservation 21 4 364 371 Bibcode 2011ACMFE 21 364K doi 10 1002 aqc 1195 Bustard H R 1999 Indian Crocodile Conservation Project Envis Wildlife and Protected Areas 2 1 5 9 Singh A Singh R L amp Basu D 1999 Conservation Status of the Gharial in Uttar Pradesh Envis Wildlife and Protected Areas 2 1 91 94 Stevenson C J 2015 Conservation of the Indian Gharial Gavialis gangeticus successes and failures International Zoo Yearbook 49 1 150 161 doi 10 1111 izy 12066 a b Lang J W 2017 Doing the Needful in Nepal Priorities of Gharial Conservation PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 36 2 9 12 Khadka B B 2018 119 Juvenile Gharials released into the Rapti River Chitwan National Park Nepal PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 37 1 12 13 Acharya K P Khadka B K Jnawali S R Malla S Bhattarai S Wikramanayake E amp Kohl M 2017 Conservation and population recovery of Gharials Gavialis gangeticus in Nepal Herpetologica 73 2 129 135 doi 10 1655 HERPETOLOGICA D 16 00048 1 S2CID 90546861 Katdare S Srivathsa A Joshi A Panke P Pande R Khandal D amp Everard M 2011 Gharial Gavialis gangeticus populations and human influences on habitat on the River Chambal India Aquatic Conservation Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 21 4 364 371 Bibcode 2011ACMFE 21 364K doi 10 1002 aqc 1195 Nair T Thorbjarnarson J B Aust P amp Krishnaswamy J 2012 Rigorous gharial population estimation in the Chambal implications for conservation and management of a globally threatened crocodilian Journal of Applied Ecology 49 5 1046 1054 Bibcode 2012JApEc 49 1046N doi 10 1111 j 1365 2664 2012 02189 x Webb G 2018 Editorial PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 37 1 3 4 Sighting of extinct Gharial signals hope for species revival The Express Tribune May 15 2023 Gharials in Pakistan what we know so far www wwfpak org Monitoring and assessment of gharial conservation initiatives wwf panda org Vashistha G Lang J W Dhakate P M amp Kothamasi D 2021 Sand addition promotes gharial nesting in a regulated river reservoir habitat Ecological Solutions and Evidence 2 2 e12068 doi 10 1002 2688 8319 12068 Choudhury B C 1999 Crocodile Breeding in Indian Zoos Envis Wildlife and Protected Areas 2 1 100 103 Ziegler T 2018 Europe PDF In Crocodile Specialist Group ed Crocodile Specialist Group Steering Committee Meeting Universidad Nacional del Litoral Santa Fe Argentina 6 May 2018 Santa Fe Argentina pp Agenda Item SC 2 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Fougeirol L 2009 Le gavial du Gange un reve in French www luc fougeirol com Archived from the original on 2011 02 06 Retrieved 2017 12 26 Bronx Zoo 2017 Indian Gharials return to the Zoo Wildlife Conservation Society L A Zoo Becomes One of Nine Zoos in the Western Hemisphere to House Gharials Flown in from India Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Gardens 2017 Archived from the original on 2020 10 25 Retrieved 2018 10 29 NBCDFW Staff and Alicia Barrera 2023 Fort Worth Zoo announces groundbreaking births of endangered gharial crocodiles NBCDFW Verma S P 2016 Part II Depictions of Natural History Figure 11 The Illustrated Baburnama Oxon Routledge p Figure 11 ISBN 9781317338628 Parpola A 2011 Crocodile in the Indus Civilization and later South Asian traditions PDF In Osada H Endo H eds Linguistics Archaeology and the Human Past Kyoto Japan Indus Project Research Institute for Humanity and Nature pp 1 57 ISBN 978 4 902325 67 6 Vyas R 2018 Gharial Motifs Gavialis gangeticus at Sanchi Stupa India PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 37 4 13 Behera S K Singh H amp Sagar V 2014 Indicator Species Gharial and Dolphin of Riverine Ecosystem An Exploratory of River Ganga In Sanghi R ed Our National River Ganga Lifeline of Millions Switzerland Springer International Publishing pp 103 123 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 00530 0 4 ISBN 978 3 319 00529 4 Babur Z M 1922 Fauna of Hindustan Aquatic animals Babur nama The Memoirs of Babur in Chagatai Vol 2 Translated by Beveridge A S London Luzac and Co pp 501 503 Lowis R M 1915 Gharial Gavialis gangeticus and Porpoise Platanista gangetica catching in the Indus Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 23 4 779 Maskey T M amp Mishra H R 1982 Conservation of gharial Gavialis gangeticus in Nepal In Majupuria T C ed Wild is beautiful Introduction to the magnificent rich and varied fauna and wildlife of Nepal Gwalior Madhya Pradesh Lashkar S Devi pp 185 196 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gharial nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Gavialis gangeticus Joshi A R 2018 Nepali scientists deploy drones to count endangered crocodiles Mongabay Gavialidae reptilis net Gharial Arkive Archived from the original on 2009 02 05 Gavialis gangeticus Adam Britton Species Gavialis gangeticus at The Reptile Database Oldstyle id 6bef8e5a76defdae652840a7b3416c9b Catalogue of Life Species 2000 Leiden the Netherlands Gharial National Geographic Society 5 May 2016 Archived from the original on March 5 2021 Mystery of crocs mass die off BBC News 2008 Lenin J The song of the Ganges gharial www india seminar com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gharial amp oldid 1213237102, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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