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Mugger crocodile

The mugger crocodile (Crocodylus palustris) is a medium-sized broad-snouted crocodile, also known as mugger and marsh crocodile. It is native to freshwater habitats from southern Iran to the Indian subcontinent, where it inhabits marshes, lakes, rivers and artificial ponds. It rarely reaches a body length of 5 m (16 ft 5 in) and is a powerful swimmer, but also walks on land in search of suitable waterbodies during the hot season. Both young and adult mugger crocodiles dig burrows to which they retreat when the ambient temperature drops below 5 °C (41 °F) or exceeds 38 °C (100 °F). Females dig holes in the sand as nesting sites and lay up to 46 eggs during the dry season. The sex of hatchlings depends on temperature during incubation. Both parents protect the young for up to one year. They feed on insects, and adults prey on fish, reptiles, birds and mammals.

Mugger crocodile
Temporal range: Late PleistocenePresent, 0.1–0 Ma[1]
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauromorpha
Clade: Archosauriformes
Order: Crocodilia
Family: Crocodylidae
Genus: Crocodylus
Species:
C. palustris
Binomial name
Crocodylus palustris
(Lesson, 1831)[2]
Distribution of mugger crocodile
Synonyms[3]
  • Crocodilus palustris Lesson, 1831
  • Crocodilus vulgarts var. indicus Gray, 1831
  • Crocodilus bombifrons Gray, 1844
  • Crocodilus trigonops Gray, 1844
  • Crocodylus palustris subsp. kimbula Deraniyagala, 1936

The mugger crocodile evolved at least 4.19 million years ago and has been a symbol for the fructifying and destructive powers of the rivers since the Vedic period. It was first scientifically described in 1831 and is protected by law in Iran, India and Sri Lanka. Since 1982, it has been listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List. Outside protected areas, it is threatened by conversion of natural habitats, gets entangled in fishing nets and is killed in human–wildlife conflict situations and in traffic accidents.

Taxonomy and evolution

Crocodilus palustris was the scientific name proposed by René Lesson in 1831 who described the type specimen from the Gangetic plains.[4] In subsequent years, several naturalists and curators of natural history museums described zoological specimens and proposed different names, including:

Evolution

Phylogenetic analysis of 23 crocodilian species indicated that the genus Crocodylus most likely originated in Australasia about 13.72 to 8.28 million years ago. The freshwater crocodile (C. johnstoni) is thought to have been the first species that genetically diverged from the common ancestor of the genus about 12.45 to 7.17 million years ago. The sister group comprising saltwater crocodile (C. porosus), Siamese crocodile (C. siamensis) and mugger crocodile diverged about 11.65 to 6.52 million years ago. The latter diverged from this group about 8.91 to 4.19 million years ago.[6] A paleogenomics analysis indicated that Crocodylus likely originated in Africa and radiated towards Southeast Asia and the Americas, diverging from its closest recent relative, the extinct Voay of Madagascar, around 25 million years ago near the Oligocene/Miocene boundary.[7] Within Crocodylus, the mugger crocodile's closest living relatives are the Siamese crocodile and the saltwater crocodile.[8][9][10][7]

Fossil crocodile specimens excavated in the Sivalik Hills closely resemble the mugger crocodile in the shortness of the premaxillae and in the form of the nasal openings.[11][12] In Andhra Pradesh’s Prakasam district, a 30.6 cm (12.0 in) long fossilized skull of a mugger crocodile was found in a volcanic ash bed that probably dates to the late Pleistocene.[13] Crocodylus palaeindicus from late Pliocene sediments in the Sivalik Hills is thought to be an ancestor of the mugger crocodile.[14] Fossil remains of C. palaeindicus were also excavated in the vicinity of Bagan in central Myanmar.[15]

Below cladogram is from a tip dating study, for which morphological, molecular DNA sequencing and stratigraphic fossil age data were simultaneously used to establish the inter-relationships within Crocodylidae.[10] This cladogram was revised in a paleogenomics study.[7]

Crocodylidae
Osteolaeminae

Brochuchus

Rimasuchus

Osborn’s dwarf crocodile Osteolaemus osborni

Dwarf crocodile Osteolaemus tetraspis

Crocodylinae

Voay

Crocodylus
Asia+Australia

Freshwater crocodile  

New Guinea crocodile

Philippine crocodile

Saltwater crocodile  

Siamese crocodile  

Mugger crocodile  

Africa+New World

West African crocodile C. suchus

Nile crocodile  

New World

Morelet's crocodile

Cuban crocodile  

Orinoco crocodile

American crocodile  

(crown group)

Characteristics

 
Illustration of mugger crocodile skull
 
Illustration of mugger dentition

Mugger crocodile hatchlings are pale olive with black spots. Adults are dark olive to grey or brown. The head is rough without any ridges and has large scutes around the neck that is well separated from the back. Scutes usually form four, rarely six longitudinal series and 16 or 17 transverse series. The limbs have keeled scales with serrated fringes on outer edges, and outer toes are extensively webbed. The snout is slightly longer than broad with 19 upper teeth on each side. The symphysis of the lower jaw extends to the level of the fourth or fifth tooth. The premaxillary suture on the palate is nearly straight or curved forwards, and the nasal bones separate the premaxilla above.[18]

The mugger crocodile is considered a medium-sized crocodilian, but has the broadest snout among living crocodiles.[19] It has a powerful tail and webbed feet. Its visual, hearing and smelling senses are acute. Adult female muggers are 2 to 2.5 m (6 ft 7 in to 8 ft 2 in) on average; males usually measure 3 to 3.5 m (9 ft 10 in to 11 ft 6 in), but rarely reach a length of 5 m (16 ft 5 in). The two largest known muggers measured 5.63 m (18 ft 6 in) and were killed in Sri Lanka.[20] One individual weighing 207 kg (456 lb) had a bite force of 7,295 N (1,640 lbf).[21] Large males may reach a weight of 450 kg (1,000 lb).[22]

The largest zoological specimen in the British Museum of Natural History measures 3.7 m (12 ft 2 in).[18] One male mugger caught in Pakistan of about 3 m (9 ft 10 in) weighed 195 kg (430 lb).[23]

Distribution and habitat

 
Mugger crocodiles in Chabahar County, Iran
 
A mugger basking in Chitwan National Park, Nepal
 
A mugger on the banks of Vashishti River, Maharashtra
 
Mugger in Malataj, Gujarat

The mugger crocodile occurs in southern Iran, Pakistan, Nepal, India and Sri Lanka up to an elevation of 420 m (1,380 ft).[2] It inhabits freshwater lakes, rivers and marshes, and prefers slow-moving, shallow water bodies. It also thrives in artificial reservoirs and irrigation canals.[19]

In Iran, the mugger occurs along rivers in Sistan and Baluchestan Provinces along the Iran–Pakistan border.[2] A population of around 200 mugger crocodiles lives on the Iranian Makran coast near Chabahar. Due to human activity and a long drought in the late 1990s and early 2000s, it had been pushed to the brink of extinction. Following several tropical cyclones in 2007 and 2010, much of the habitat of the mugger crocodiles has been restored as formerly dry lakes and hamuns were flooded again.[24]

In Pakistan, a small population lives in 21 ponds around Dasht River; in the winter of 2007–08, 99 individuals were counted. By 2017, the population had declined to 25 individuals.[25] In Sindh Province, small mugger populations occur in wetlands of Deh Akro 2 and Nara Desert Wildlife Sanctuaries, near Chotiari Dam, in the Nara Canal and around Haleji lake.[26][27][28]

In Nepal's Terai, it occurs in the wetlands of Shuklaphanta and Bardia National Parks, Ghodaghodi Tal, Chitwan National Park and Koshi Tappu Wildlife Reserve.[29][30][31][32]

In India, it occurs in:

In Sri Lanka, it occurs in Wilpattu, Yala and Bundala National Parks.[19][48] Between 1991 and 1996, it was recorded in another 102 localities.[49]

In Bangladesh, it was historically present in the northern parts of the Sundarbans, where four to five captive individuals survived in an artificial pond by the 1980s.[50] It is possibly locally extinct in the country.[51] In Bhutan, it became extinct in the late 1960s, but a few captive-bred individuals were released in the Manas River in the late 1990s.[34] It is considered locally extinct in Myanmar.[2]

Behaviour and ecology

 
Mugger walking, Sri Lanka
 
 
Muggers basking on sand banks

The mugger crocodile is a powerful swimmer that uses its tail and hind feet to move forward, change direction and submerge. It belly-walks, with its belly touching ground, at the bottom of waterbodies and on land. During the hot dry season, it walks over land at night to find suitable wetlands and spends most of the day submerged in water. During the cold season it basks on riverbanks, individuals are tolerant of others during this period. Territorial behaviour increases during the mating season.[20]

Like all crocodilians, the mugger crocodile is a thermoconformer and has an optimal body temperature of 30 to 35 °C (86 to 95 °F) and risks dying of freezing or hyperthermia when exposed to temperatures below 5 °C (41 °F) or above 38 °C (100 °F), respectively. It digs burrows to retreat from extreme temperatures and other harsh climatic conditions.[52] Burrows are between 0.6 and 6 m (2.0 and 19.7 ft) deep, with entrances above the water level and a chamber at the end that is big enough to allow the mugger to turn around.[20] Temperatures inside remains constant at 19.2 to 29 °C (66.6 to 84.2 °F), depending on region.[48]

Hunting and diet

The mugger crocodile preys on fish, snakes, turtles, birds and mammals including monkeys, squirrels, rodents, otters and dogs. It also scavenges on dead animals. During dry seasons, muggers walk many kilometers over land in search of water and prey.[53] Hatchlings feed mainly on insects such as beetles, but also on crabs and shrimp and on vertebrates later on.[54][55] It seizes and drags potential prey approaching watersides into the water, when the opportunity arises. Adult muggers were observed feeding on a flapshell turtle and a tortoise.[56][57] Subadult and adult muggers favour fish, but also prey on small to medium-sized ungulates up to the size of chital (Axis axis).[58] In Bardia National Park, a mugger was observed caching a chital kill beneath the roots of a tree and returning to its basking site. A part of the deer was still wedged among the roots on the next day.[30] Muggers have also been observed while preying and feeding on a python.[55] At the Chambal River, muggers have attacked water buffaloes, cattle and goats.[59] In Yala National Park, a mugger was observed killing a large Indian pangolin (Manis crassicaudata), of which it devoured pieces over several hours.[60]

Tool use

Mugger crocodiles have been documented using lures to hunt birds.[61] This means they are among the first reptiles recorded to use tools. By balancing sticks and branches on their heads, they lure birds that are looking for nesting material. This strategy is particularly effective during the nesting season.[62]

Reproduction

Female muggers obtain sexual maturity at a body length of around 1.8–2.2 m (5 ft 11 in – 7 ft 3 in) at the age of about 6.5 years, and males at around 2.6 m (8 ft 6 in) body length. The reproduction cycle starts earliest in November at the onset of the cold season with courtship and mating. Between February and June, females dig 35–56 cm (14–22 in) deep holes for nesting between 1 and 2,000 m (3 ft 3 in and 6,561 ft 8 in) away from the waterside. They lay up to two clutches with 8 –46 eggs each. Eggs weigh 128 g (4.5 oz) on average. Laying of one clutch usually takes less than half an hour. Thereafter, females scrape sand over the nest to close it. Males have been observed to assist females in digging and protecting nest sites. Hatching season is two months later, between April and June in south India, and in Sri Lanka between August and September. Then females excavate the young, pick them up in their snouts and take them to the water. Both females and males protect the young for up to one year.[20][53]

Healthy hatchlings develop at a temperature range of 28–33 °C (82–91 °F). Sex ratio of hatched eggs depends on incubation temperature and exposure of nests to sunshine. Only females develop at constant temperatures of 28–31 °C (82–88 °F), and only males at 32.5 °C (90.5 °F). Percentage of females in a clutch decreases at constant temperatures between 32.6 and 33 °C (90.7 and 91.4 °F), and of males between 31 and 32.4 °C (87.8 and 90.3 °F). Temperature in natural nests is not constant but varies between nights and days. Foremost females hatch in natural early nests when initial temperature inside nests ranges between 26.4 and 28.9 °C (79.5 and 84.0 °F). The percentage of male hatchlings increases in late nests located in sunny sites.[63] Hatchlings are 26–31 cm (10–12 in) long and weigh 75 g (2.6 oz) on average when one month old. They grow about 4.25 cm (1.67 in) per month and reach a body length of 90–170 cm (35–67 in) when two years old.[20]

Sympatric predators

 
Mugger crocodile attacking a tiger, 1901[64]
 
A mugger crocodile and a tiger in Ranthambore National Park
 
Mugger crocodile and gharial

The distribution of the mugger crocodile overlaps with that of the saltwater crocodile in a few coastal areas, but it barely enters brackish water and prefers shallow waterways.[19][65][66][67] It is an apex predator in freshwater ecosystems.[68] It is sympatric with the gharial (Gavialis gangeticus) in the Rapti and Narayani Rivers, in the eastern Mahanadi, and in tributaries of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers.[32][69][37]

The Bengal tiger (Panthera tigris tigris) occasionally fights mugger crocodiles off prey and rarely preys on adult mugger crocodiles in Ranthambore National Park.[70] The Asiatic lion (Panthera leo leo) sometimes preys on crocodiles on the banks of the Kamleshwar Dam in Gir National Park during dry, hot months.[71]

Threats

The mugger crocodile is threatened by habitat destruction because of conversion of natural habitats for agricultural and industrial use. As humans encroach into its habitat, the incidents of conflict increase. Muggers are entangled in fishing equipment and drown, and are killed in areas where fishermen perceive them as competition.[2] Major wetlands in Pakistan were drained in the 1990s by dams and channels to funnel natural streams and agricultural runoffs into rivers.[34]

In Gujarat, two muggers were found killed, one in 2015 with the tail cut off and internal organs missing; the other in 2017, also with the tail cut off. The missing body parts indicate that the crocodiles were sacrificed in superstitious practices or used as aphrodisiacs.[72] Between 2005 and 2018, 38 mugger crocodiles were victims of traffic accidents on roads and railway tracks in Gujarat; 29 were found dead, four died during treatment, and five were returned to the wild after medical care.[36] In 2017, a dead mugger was found on a railway track in Rajasthan.[73]

Conservation

The mugger crocodile is listed in CITES Appendix I, hence international commercial trade is prohibited. It has been listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List since 1982. By 2013, less than 8,700 mature individuals were estimated to live in the wild and no population unit to comprise more than 1,000 individuals.[2]

In India, it has been protected since 1972 under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972, which prohibits catching, killing and transporting a crocodile without a permit; offenders face imprisonment and a fine.[65] In Sri Lanka, it was listed in Schedule IV of the Fauna & Flora Protection Ordinance in 1946, which allowed for shooting one crocodile with a permit. Today, it is strictly protected, but law enforcement in Sri Lanka is lacking.[74] In Iran, the mugger crocodile is listed as endangered and has been legally protected since 2013; capturing and killing a crocodile is punished with a fine of 100 million Iranian rials.[75]

Since large muggers occasionally take livestock, this leads to conflict with local people living close to mugger habitat. In Maharashtra, local people are compensated for loss of close relatives and livestock.[55][76] Local people in Baluchestan respect the mugger crocodile as a water living creature and do not harm it. If an individual kills livestock, the owner is compensated for the loss. The mugger crocodile is translocated in severe conflict cases.[75]

A total of 1,193 captive bred muggers were released to restock populations in 28 protected areas in India between 1978 and 1992. Production of new offspring was halted by the Indian Government in 1994.[2]

In culture

 
Makara on a beam from the Bharhut Stupa, now in the Indian Museum, Kolkata

The Sanskrit word मकर 'makara' refers to the crocodile and a mythical crocodile-like animal.[77] The Hindi word for crocodile is मगर 'magar'.[78] In English language, both names 'mugger' and 'magar' were used around the turn of the 20th century.[79][80][81] The names 'marsh crocodile' and 'broad-snouted crocodile' have been used since the late 1930s.[82]

The crocodile is acknowledged as the prototype of the makara and symbolises both the fructifying and the destructive powers of the rivers.[83] It is the animal vehicle of the Vedic deity Varuna and of several nature spirits called yakshas. In Hindu mythology, it represents virility as a vehicle of Ganga and as an emblem of Kamadeva.[84] A stone carving of a mugger crocodile was part of a beam of a gateway to the Bharhut Stupa built around 100 BC.[85]

The traditional biography of the Indian saint Adi Shankara includes an incident where he is grabbed by a crocodile in the Kaladi river, which releases him only after his mother reluctantly let him choose the ascetic path of a Sannyasa.[86] The Muslim saint Pīr Mango is said to have taken care of crocodiles and created a stream to trickle out of a rock near Karachi in the 13th century. This place was later walled around, and about 40 mugger crocodiles were kept in the reservoir called Magar Talao in the 1870s; they were fed by both Hindu and Muslim pilgrims.[87] Mugger crocodiles have also been kept in tanks near Hindu temples built in the vicinity of rivers; these crocodiles are considered sacred. In the early 20th century, young married women fed the crocodiles in Khan Jahan Ali's Tank in Jessore in the hope of being blessed with children.[88]

Vasava, Gamit and Chodhri tribes in Gujarat worship the crocodile god Mogra Dev asking for children, good crops and milk yield of their cows. They carve wooden statues symbolising Mogra Dev and mount them on poles. Their offerings during the installation ceremony include rice, milk, wine, heart and liver of a chicken, and a mixture of vermillion, oil and coconut fibres.[89] Fatal attacks of mugger crocodiles on humans were documented in Gujarat and Maharasthra, but they rarely consumed the victims who died of drowning.[90]

A fable from the Jataka tales of Buddhist traditions features a clever monkey outwitting a crocodile.[91] Three folktales feature crocodiles and jackals.[92][93][94] A mugger crocodile is one of the characters in The Undertakers, a chapter of The Second Jungle Book.[79] The children’s book Adventures of a Nepali Frog features the character Mugger, the crocodile who lives by the Rapti River in Chitwan National Park.[95]

See also

References

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External links

  • "Crocodylus palustris Lesson 1831 (mugger crocodile)". Paleobiology Database.
  • "Crocodiles moved from world's tallest statue". BBC News. 2019. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  • "Eight Crocodiles, Two Tortoises, Australian Parrots Seized; Two Held". Mid-Day. 2018.
  • "Marsh crocodiles in good condition in Iran". Tehran Times Daily Newspaper. 2018.
  • Nelson, D. (2011). "Fifteen-foot Bengali crocodile claims king of jungle title from tiger". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2022-01-12.

mugger, crocodile, mugger, crocodile, crocodylus, palustris, medium, sized, broad, snouted, crocodile, also, known, mugger, marsh, crocodile, native, freshwater, habitats, from, southern, iran, indian, subcontinent, where, inhabits, marshes, lakes, rivers, art. The mugger crocodile Crocodylus palustris is a medium sized broad snouted crocodile also known as mugger and marsh crocodile It is native to freshwater habitats from southern Iran to the Indian subcontinent where it inhabits marshes lakes rivers and artificial ponds It rarely reaches a body length of 5 m 16 ft 5 in and is a powerful swimmer but also walks on land in search of suitable waterbodies during the hot season Both young and adult mugger crocodiles dig burrows to which they retreat when the ambient temperature drops below 5 C 41 F or exceeds 38 C 100 F Females dig holes in the sand as nesting sites and lay up to 46 eggs during the dry season The sex of hatchlings depends on temperature during incubation Both parents protect the young for up to one year They feed on insects and adults prey on fish reptiles birds and mammals Mugger crocodileTemporal range Late Pleistocene Present 0 1 0 Ma 1 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Conservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 2 CITES Appendix I CITES 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaClade ArchosauromorphaClade ArchosauriformesOrder CrocodiliaFamily CrocodylidaeGenus CrocodylusSpecies C palustrisBinomial nameCrocodylus palustris Lesson 1831 2 Distribution of mugger crocodileSynonyms 3 Crocodilus palustris Lesson 1831Crocodilus vulgarts var indicus Gray 1831Crocodilus bombifrons Gray 1844Crocodilus trigonops Gray 1844Crocodylus palustris subsp kimbula Deraniyagala 1936The mugger crocodile evolved at least 4 19 million years ago and has been a symbol for the fructifying and destructive powers of the rivers since the Vedic period It was first scientifically described in 1831 and is protected by law in Iran India and Sri Lanka Since 1982 it has been listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List Outside protected areas it is threatened by conversion of natural habitats gets entangled in fishing nets and is killed in human wildlife conflict situations and in traffic accidents Contents 1 Taxonomy and evolution 1 1 Evolution 2 Characteristics 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour and ecology 4 1 Hunting and diet 4 2 Tool use 4 3 Reproduction 4 4 Sympatric predators 5 Threats 6 Conservation 7 In culture 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksTaxonomy and evolutionCrocodilus palustris was the scientific name proposed by Rene Lesson in 1831 who described the type specimen from the Gangetic plains 4 In subsequent years several naturalists and curators of natural history museums described zoological specimens and proposed different names including C bombifrons by John Edward Gray in 1844 for a specimen sent by the Museum of the Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal to the British Museum of Natural History 5 C trigonops also by Gray in 1844 for a young mugger specimen from India 5 Evolution Phylogenetic analysis of 23 crocodilian species indicated that the genus Crocodylus most likely originated in Australasia about 13 72 to 8 28 million years ago The freshwater crocodile C johnstoni is thought to have been the first species that genetically diverged from the common ancestor of the genus about 12 45 to 7 17 million years ago The sister group comprising saltwater crocodile C porosus Siamese crocodile C siamensis and mugger crocodile diverged about 11 65 to 6 52 million years ago The latter diverged from this group about 8 91 to 4 19 million years ago 6 A paleogenomics analysis indicated that Crocodylus likely originated in Africa and radiated towards Southeast Asia and the Americas diverging from its closest recent relative the extinct Voay of Madagascar around 25 million years ago near the Oligocene Miocene boundary 7 Within Crocodylus the mugger crocodile s closest living relatives are the Siamese crocodile and the saltwater crocodile 8 9 10 7 Fossil crocodile specimens excavated in the Sivalik Hills closely resemble the mugger crocodile in the shortness of the premaxillae and in the form of the nasal openings 11 12 In Andhra Pradesh s Prakasam district a 30 6 cm 12 0 in long fossilized skull of a mugger crocodile was found in a volcanic ash bed that probably dates to the late Pleistocene 13 Crocodylus palaeindicus from late Pliocene sediments in the Sivalik Hills is thought to be an ancestor of the mugger crocodile 14 Fossil remains of C palaeindicus were also excavated in the vicinity of Bagan in central Myanmar 15 Phylogenetic relationships of the mugger crocodile based onanalysis of 12 concatenated mitochondrial DNA sequences 6 16 Crocodylus American crocodile C acutus Orinoco crocodile C intermedius Cuban crocodile C rhombifer Morelet s crocodile C moreletii Nile crocodile C niloticus Saltwater crocodile C porosus Mugger crocodileSiamese crocodile C siamensis New Guinea crocodile C novaeguineae Philippine crocodile C mindorensis Freshwater crocodile C johnstoni based on Illumina sequencing of mitogenomes 17 Crocodylus Orinoco crocodileAmerican crocodileCuban crocodileMorelet s crocodileNile crocodileMugger crocodileSiamese crocodileSaltwater crocodileNew Guinea crocodilePhilippine crocodileFreshwater crocodile Below cladogram is from a tip dating study for which morphological molecular DNA sequencing and stratigraphic fossil age data were simultaneously used to establish the inter relationships within Crocodylidae 10 This cladogram was revised in a paleogenomics study 7 Crocodylidae Osteolaeminae West African slender snouted crocodile Mecistops cataphractusEuthecodon Brochuchus Rimasuchus Osborn s dwarf crocodile Osteolaemus osborniDwarf crocodile Osteolaemus tetraspisCrocodylinae Voay Crocodylus Crocodylus anthropophagus Crocodylus thorbjarnarsoni Crocodylus palaeindicus Crocodylus Tirari Desert Asia Australia Freshwater crocodile nbsp New Guinea crocodilePhilippine crocodileSaltwater crocodile nbsp Siamese crocodile nbsp Mugger crocodile nbsp Africa New World Crocodylus checchiai Crocodylus falconensis West African crocodile C suchusNile crocodile nbsp New World Morelet s crocodileCuban crocodile nbsp Orinoco crocodileAmerican crocodile nbsp crown group Characteristics nbsp Illustration of mugger crocodile skull nbsp Illustration of mugger dentition Mugger crocodile hatchlings are pale olive with black spots Adults are dark olive to grey or brown The head is rough without any ridges and has large scutes around the neck that is well separated from the back Scutes usually form four rarely six longitudinal series and 16 or 17 transverse series The limbs have keeled scales with serrated fringes on outer edges and outer toes are extensively webbed The snout is slightly longer than broad with 19 upper teeth on each side The symphysis of the lower jaw extends to the level of the fourth or fifth tooth The premaxillary suture on the palate is nearly straight or curved forwards and the nasal bones separate the premaxilla above 18 The mugger crocodile is considered a medium sized crocodilian but has the broadest snout among living crocodiles 19 It has a powerful tail and webbed feet Its visual hearing and smelling senses are acute Adult female muggers are 2 to 2 5 m 6 ft 7 in to 8 ft 2 in on average males usually measure 3 to 3 5 m 9 ft 10 in to 11 ft 6 in but rarely reach a length of 5 m 16 ft 5 in The two largest known muggers measured 5 63 m 18 ft 6 in and were killed in Sri Lanka 20 One individual weighing 207 kg 456 lb had a bite force of 7 295 N 1 640 lbf 21 Large males may reach a weight of 450 kg 1 000 lb 22 The largest zoological specimen in the British Museum of Natural History measures 3 7 m 12 ft 2 in 18 One male mugger caught in Pakistan of about 3 m 9 ft 10 in weighed 195 kg 430 lb 23 Distribution and habitat nbsp Mugger crocodiles in Chabahar County Iran nbsp A mugger basking in Chitwan National Park Nepal nbsp A mugger on the banks of Vashishti River Maharashtra nbsp Mugger in Malataj Gujarat The mugger crocodile occurs in southern Iran Pakistan Nepal India and Sri Lanka up to an elevation of 420 m 1 380 ft 2 It inhabits freshwater lakes rivers and marshes and prefers slow moving shallow water bodies It also thrives in artificial reservoirs and irrigation canals 19 In Iran the mugger occurs along rivers in Sistan and Baluchestan Provinces along the Iran Pakistan border 2 A population of around 200 mugger crocodiles lives on the Iranian Makran coast near Chabahar Due to human activity and a long drought in the late 1990s and early 2000s it had been pushed to the brink of extinction Following several tropical cyclones in 2007 and 2010 much of the habitat of the mugger crocodiles has been restored as formerly dry lakes and hamuns were flooded again 24 In Pakistan a small population lives in 21 ponds around Dasht River in the winter of 2007 08 99 individuals were counted By 2017 the population had declined to 25 individuals 25 In Sindh Province small mugger populations occur in wetlands of Deh Akro 2 and Nara Desert Wildlife Sanctuaries near Chotiari Dam in the Nara Canal and around Haleji lake 26 27 28 In Nepal s Terai it occurs in the wetlands of Shuklaphanta and Bardia National Parks Ghodaghodi Tal Chitwan National Park and Koshi Tappu Wildlife Reserve 29 30 31 32 In India it occurs in Rajasthan along the Chambal Ken and Son Rivers and in Ranthambore National Park 33 34 Gujarat along the Vishwamitri River 35 and several reservoirs and lakes in Kutch 36 Madhya Pradesh s National Chambal Sanctuary 37 38 Uttarakhand s Rajaji National Park Corbett Tiger Reserve and Lansdowne Forest Division 39 Uttar Pradesh s Katarniaghat and Kishanpur Wildlife Sanctuaries 40 Odisha s Simlipal National Park and along Mahanadi and Sabari Rivers 41 42 In 2019 82 individuals were recorded in the river systems of Simlipal National Park 43 Telangana s Manjira Wildlife Sanctuary 34 Maharashtra s Kadavi and Warna Rivers 44 and Savitri River in Raigad District 45 Goa s Salaulim Reservoir Zuari River and in small lakes 34 Karnataka along Kaveri and Kabini Rivers in the Ranganthittu Bird Sanctuary Nagarhole National Park and Tungabhadra Reservoir 34 Kerala s Parambikulam Reservoir and Neyyar Wildlife Sanctuary 34 46 Tamil Nadu s Amaravathi Reservoir Moyar and Kaveri rivers 34 47 In Sri Lanka it occurs in Wilpattu Yala and Bundala National Parks 19 48 Between 1991 and 1996 it was recorded in another 102 localities 49 In Bangladesh it was historically present in the northern parts of the Sundarbans where four to five captive individuals survived in an artificial pond by the 1980s 50 It is possibly locally extinct in the country 51 In Bhutan it became extinct in the late 1960s but a few captive bred individuals were released in the Manas River in the late 1990s 34 It is considered locally extinct in Myanmar 2 Behaviour and ecology nbsp Mugger walking Sri Lanka nbsp nbsp Muggers basking on sand banks The mugger crocodile is a powerful swimmer that uses its tail and hind feet to move forward change direction and submerge It belly walks with its belly touching ground at the bottom of waterbodies and on land During the hot dry season it walks over land at night to find suitable wetlands and spends most of the day submerged in water During the cold season it basks on riverbanks individuals are tolerant of others during this period Territorial behaviour increases during the mating season 20 Like all crocodilians the mugger crocodile is a thermoconformer and has an optimal body temperature of 30 to 35 C 86 to 95 F and risks dying of freezing or hyperthermia when exposed to temperatures below 5 C 41 F or above 38 C 100 F respectively It digs burrows to retreat from extreme temperatures and other harsh climatic conditions 52 Burrows are between 0 6 and 6 m 2 0 and 19 7 ft deep with entrances above the water level and a chamber at the end that is big enough to allow the mugger to turn around 20 Temperatures inside remains constant at 19 2 to 29 C 66 6 to 84 2 F depending on region 48 Hunting and diet The mugger crocodile preys on fish snakes turtles birds and mammals including monkeys squirrels rodents otters and dogs It also scavenges on dead animals During dry seasons muggers walk many kilometers over land in search of water and prey 53 Hatchlings feed mainly on insects such as beetles but also on crabs and shrimp and on vertebrates later on 54 55 It seizes and drags potential prey approaching watersides into the water when the opportunity arises Adult muggers were observed feeding on a flapshell turtle and a tortoise 56 57 Subadult and adult muggers favour fish but also prey on small to medium sized ungulates up to the size of chital Axis axis 58 In Bardia National Park a mugger was observed caching a chital kill beneath the roots of a tree and returning to its basking site A part of the deer was still wedged among the roots on the next day 30 Muggers have also been observed while preying and feeding on a python 55 At the Chambal River muggers have attacked water buffaloes cattle and goats 59 In Yala National Park a mugger was observed killing a large Indian pangolin Manis crassicaudata of which it devoured pieces over several hours 60 Tool use Mugger crocodiles have been documented using lures to hunt birds 61 This means they are among the first reptiles recorded to use tools By balancing sticks and branches on their heads they lure birds that are looking for nesting material This strategy is particularly effective during the nesting season 62 Reproduction Female muggers obtain sexual maturity at a body length of around 1 8 2 2 m 5 ft 11 in 7 ft 3 in at the age of about 6 5 years and males at around 2 6 m 8 ft 6 in body length The reproduction cycle starts earliest in November at the onset of the cold season with courtship and mating Between February and June females dig 35 56 cm 14 22 in deep holes for nesting between 1 and 2 000 m 3 ft 3 in and 6 561 ft 8 in away from the waterside They lay up to two clutches with 8 46 eggs each Eggs weigh 128 g 4 5 oz on average Laying of one clutch usually takes less than half an hour Thereafter females scrape sand over the nest to close it Males have been observed to assist females in digging and protecting nest sites Hatching season is two months later between April and June in south India and in Sri Lanka between August and September Then females excavate the young pick them up in their snouts and take them to the water Both females and males protect the young for up to one year 20 53 Healthy hatchlings develop at a temperature range of 28 33 C 82 91 F Sex ratio of hatched eggs depends on incubation temperature and exposure of nests to sunshine Only females develop at constant temperatures of 28 31 C 82 88 F and only males at 32 5 C 90 5 F Percentage of females in a clutch decreases at constant temperatures between 32 6 and 33 C 90 7 and 91 4 F and of males between 31 and 32 4 C 87 8 and 90 3 F Temperature in natural nests is not constant but varies between nights and days Foremost females hatch in natural early nests when initial temperature inside nests ranges between 26 4 and 28 9 C 79 5 and 84 0 F The percentage of male hatchlings increases in late nests located in sunny sites 63 Hatchlings are 26 31 cm 10 12 in long and weigh 75 g 2 6 oz on average when one month old They grow about 4 25 cm 1 67 in per month and reach a body length of 90 170 cm 35 67 in when two years old 20 Sympatric predators nbsp Mugger crocodile attacking a tiger 1901 64 nbsp A mugger crocodile and a tiger in Ranthambore National Park nbsp Mugger crocodile and gharial The distribution of the mugger crocodile overlaps with that of the saltwater crocodile in a few coastal areas but it barely enters brackish water and prefers shallow waterways 19 65 66 67 It is an apex predator in freshwater ecosystems 68 It is sympatric with the gharial Gavialis gangeticus in the Rapti and Narayani Rivers in the eastern Mahanadi and in tributaries of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers 32 69 37 The Bengal tiger Panthera tigris tigris occasionally fights mugger crocodiles off prey and rarely preys on adult mugger crocodiles in Ranthambore National Park 70 The Asiatic lion Panthera leo leo sometimes preys on crocodiles on the banks of the Kamleshwar Dam in Gir National Park during dry hot months 71 ThreatsThe mugger crocodile is threatened by habitat destruction because of conversion of natural habitats for agricultural and industrial use As humans encroach into its habitat the incidents of conflict increase Muggers are entangled in fishing equipment and drown and are killed in areas where fishermen perceive them as competition 2 Major wetlands in Pakistan were drained in the 1990s by dams and channels to funnel natural streams and agricultural runoffs into rivers 34 In Gujarat two muggers were found killed one in 2015 with the tail cut off and internal organs missing the other in 2017 also with the tail cut off The missing body parts indicate that the crocodiles were sacrificed in superstitious practices or used as aphrodisiacs 72 Between 2005 and 2018 38 mugger crocodiles were victims of traffic accidents on roads and railway tracks in Gujarat 29 were found dead four died during treatment and five were returned to the wild after medical care 36 In 2017 a dead mugger was found on a railway track in Rajasthan 73 ConservationThe mugger crocodile is listed in CITES Appendix I hence international commercial trade is prohibited It has been listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List since 1982 By 2013 less than 8 700 mature individuals were estimated to live in the wild and no population unit to comprise more than 1 000 individuals 2 In India it has been protected since 1972 under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act 1972 which prohibits catching killing and transporting a crocodile without a permit offenders face imprisonment and a fine 65 In Sri Lanka it was listed in Schedule IV of the Fauna amp Flora Protection Ordinance in 1946 which allowed for shooting one crocodile with a permit Today it is strictly protected but law enforcement in Sri Lanka is lacking 74 In Iran the mugger crocodile is listed as endangered and has been legally protected since 2013 capturing and killing a crocodile is punished with a fine of 100 million Iranian rials 75 Since large muggers occasionally take livestock this leads to conflict with local people living close to mugger habitat In Maharashtra local people are compensated for loss of close relatives and livestock 55 76 Local people in Baluchestan respect the mugger crocodile as a water living creature and do not harm it If an individual kills livestock the owner is compensated for the loss The mugger crocodile is translocated in severe conflict cases 75 A total of 1 193 captive bred muggers were released to restock populations in 28 protected areas in India between 1978 and 1992 Production of new offspring was halted by the Indian Government in 1994 2 In culture nbsp Makara on a beam from the Bharhut Stupa now in the Indian Museum KolkataThe Sanskrit word मकर makara refers to the crocodile and a mythical crocodile like animal 77 The Hindi word for crocodile is मगर magar 78 In English language both names mugger and magar were used around the turn of the 20th century 79 80 81 The names marsh crocodile and broad snouted crocodile have been used since the late 1930s 82 The crocodile is acknowledged as the prototype of the makara and symbolises both the fructifying and the destructive powers of the rivers 83 It is the animal vehicle of the Vedic deity Varuna and of several nature spirits called yakshas In Hindu mythology it represents virility as a vehicle of Ganga and as an emblem of Kamadeva 84 A stone carving of a mugger crocodile was part of a beam of a gateway to the Bharhut Stupa built around 100 BC 85 The traditional biography of the Indian saint Adi Shankara includes an incident where he is grabbed by a crocodile in the Kaladi river which releases him only after his mother reluctantly let him choose the ascetic path of a Sannyasa 86 The Muslim saint Pir Mango is said to have taken care of crocodiles and created a stream to trickle out of a rock near Karachi in the 13th century This place was later walled around and about 40 mugger crocodiles were kept in the reservoir called Magar Talao in the 1870s they were fed by both Hindu and Muslim pilgrims 87 Mugger crocodiles have also been kept in tanks near Hindu temples built in the vicinity of rivers these crocodiles are considered sacred In the early 20th century young married women fed the crocodiles in Khan Jahan Ali s Tank in Jessore in the hope of being blessed with children 88 Vasava Gamit and Chodhri tribes in Gujarat worship the crocodile god Mogra Dev asking for children good crops and milk yield of their cows They carve wooden statues symbolising Mogra Dev and mount them on poles Their offerings during the installation ceremony include rice milk wine heart and liver of a chicken and a mixture of vermillion oil and coconut fibres 89 Fatal attacks of mugger crocodiles on humans were documented in Gujarat and Maharasthra but they rarely consumed the victims who died of drowning 90 A fable from the Jataka tales of Buddhist traditions features a clever monkey outwitting a crocodile 91 Three folktales feature crocodiles and jackals 92 93 94 A mugger crocodile is one of the characters in The Undertakers a chapter of The Second Jungle Book 79 The children s book Adventures of a Nepali Frog features the character Mugger the crocodile who lives by the Rapti River in Chitwan National Park 95 See alsoCrocodiles in India List of reptiles of South AsiaReferences 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 Choudhury B C amp de Silva A 2013 Crocodylus palustris IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2013 e T5667A3046723 Retrieved 22 January 2022 Crocodylus palustris Global Biodiversity Information Facility Retrieved 17 April 2022 Lesson R 1834 Le Crocodile des Marais In Belanger C Geoffroy Saint Hilaire I Lesson R Valenciennes A Deshayes G P Guerin F E eds Voyage aux Indes Orientales par le nord de l Europe Vol Zoology Paris Bertrand pp 305 307 a b Gray J E 1844 Crocodiles Catalogue of the tortoises crocodiles and amphisbaenians in the collection of the British Museum London Trustees of the British Museum pp 58 63 a b Oaks J R 2011 A time calibrated species tree of Crocodylia reveals a recent radiation of the true crocodiles Evolution International Journal of Organic Evolution 65 11 3285 3297 doi 10 1111 j 1558 5646 2011 01373 x PMID 22023592 a b c Hekkala E Gatesy J Narechania A Meredith R Russello M Aardema M L Jensen E Montanari S Brochu C Norell M amp 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 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 Srikulnath K Thapana W amp Muangmai N 2015 Role of chromosome changes in Crocodylus evolution and diversity Genomics Inform 13 4 102 111 doi 10 5808 GI 2015 13 4 102 PMC 4742319 PMID 26865840 a b Lee M S Y amp Yates A M 2018 Tip dating and homoplasy reconciling the shallow molecular divergences of modern gharials with their long fossil Proceedings of the Royal Society B 285 1881 doi 10 1098 rspb 2018 1071 PMC 6030529 PMID 30051855 Lydekker R 1886 Siwalik Crocodilia Lacertilia and Ophidia Palaeontologia Indica 10 Indian Tertiary and post Tertiary vertebrata Vol III Calcutta Geological Survey Office pp 209 240 Garg R L 1988 New fossil reptile from the Siwalik Fossil Park Saketi Sirmur District Himachal Pradesh In Sastry M V A Sastri V V Ramanujam C G K Kapoor H M Rao B R J Satsangi P P Mathur U B eds Symposium on three decades of developments in palaeontology and stratigraphy in India 11 Calcutta Geological Survey of India Special Publication pp 207 211 Shankar K amp Rao C V N K 1994 First report of a fossil marsh crocodile Crocodylus palustris from the Manneru Valley Andhra Pradesh Current Science 67 9 10 687 689 JSTOR 24095837 Brochu C A 2000 Phylogenetic relationships and divergence timing of Crocodylus based on morphology and the fossil record Copeia 2000 3 657 673 doi 10 1643 0045 8511 2000 000 0657 pradto 2 0 co 2 S2CID 85824292 Iijima M Takai M Nishioka Y Thaung Htike Zin Maung Maung Thein Egi N Kusuhashi N Tsubamoto T Kono R T amp Hirayama R 2021 Taxonomic overview of Neogene crocodylians in Myanmar Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 41 6 e1879100 doi 10 1080 02724634 2021 1879100 S2CID 233619370 Meredith R W Hekkala E R Amato G amp Gatesy J 2011 A phylogenetic hypothesis for Crocodylus Crocodylia based on mitochondrial DNA Evidence for a trans Atlantic voyage from Africa to the New World Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 60 1 183 191 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2011 03 026 PMID 21459152 Pan T Miao J S Zhang H B Yan P Lee P S Jiang X Y Ouyang J H Deng Y P Zhang B W amp Wu X B 2021 Near complete phylogeny of extant Crocodylia Reptilia using mitogenome based data Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 191 4 1075 1089 doi 10 1093 zoolinnean zlaa074 a b Boulenger G A 1890 Crocodilus palustris Fauna of British India Vol Reptilia and Batrachia London Taylor and Francis p 5 a b c d Da Silva A amp Lenin J 2010 Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus palustris PDF In Manolis S C amp Stevenson C eds Crocodiles Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan 3rd ed Darwin IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 94 98 a b c d e Whitaker R amp Whitaker Z 1984 Reproductive biology of the Mugger Crocodylus palustris Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 81 2 297 317 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 Marsh Crocodile www wii gov in Siddiqui R Jeyamogan S Ali S M Abbas F Sagathevan K A amp Khan N A 2017 Crocodiles and alligators Antiamoebic and antitumor compounds of crocodiles Experimental Parasitology 183 194 200 doi 10 1016 j exppara 2017 09 008 PMID 28917711 Mobaraki A amp Abtin E 2013 Estimate of Mugger population in Iran Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 32 1 11 21 Rahim A Gabol K Ahmed W Manzoor B amp Batool A 2018 Population assessment threats and conservation measures of marsh crocodile at Dasht River Gwadar PDF Pakistan Journal of Marine Sciences 27 1 45 53 Chang M S Gachal G S Qadri A H amp Shaikh M Y 2012 Bio ecological status management and conservation of Marsh Crocodiles Crocodylus palustris in Deh Akro 2 Sindh Pakistan Sindh University Research Journal Science Series 44 2 209 214 Chang M S Gachal G S Qadri A H Jabeen T Baloach S amp Shaikh M Y 2012 Distribution and Population Status of Marsh Crocodiles Crocodilus palustris in Nara Desert Wildlife Sanctuary NDWS Sindh Pakistan Sindh University Research Journal Science Series 44 3 453 456 Chang M S Gachal G S Qadri A H amp Memon K 2016 Physico Chemical Assessment of Water Quality and its Effects on Marsh Crocodiles Crocodylus palustris Population in Haleji Lake Wildlife Sanctuary Thatta Sindh Pakistan Sindh University Research Journal Science Series 48 1 41 44 Bhatt H P Saund T B amp Thapa J B 2012 Status and Threats to Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus palustris Lesson 1831 at Rani Tal Shuklaphanta Wildlife Reserve Nepal Nepal Journal of Science and Technology 13 1 125 131 doi 10 3126 njst v13i1 7451 a b Bhattarai S 2016 Notes on Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus palustris Lesson 1831 hunting on Axis axis in Bardia National Park Nepal Hyla Herpetological Bulletin 2015 2 41 44 Khatri T B amp Baral H S 2012 Survey of Ghodaghodi Lake Complex for Cotton Pygmy Goose Nettapus coromandelianus and Marsh Mugger Crocodylus palustris Our Nature 2012 10 137 144 a b Khadka B B Maharjan A Thapalia B P amp Lamichhane B R 2014 Population Status of the Mugger in Chitwan National Park Nepal Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 33 3 9 12 Nair T amp Katdare S 2013 Dry season assessment of gharials Gavialis gangeticus in the Betwa Ken and Son Rivers India World Crocodile Conference Proceedings of the 22nd Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 53 65 a b c d e f g h Whitaker R amp Andrews H 2003 Crocodile conservation Western Asia Region an update Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 100 2 amp 3 432 445 Vyas R 2012 Current status of Marsh Crocodiles Crocodylus palustris Reptilia Crocodylidae in Vishwamitri River Vadodara City Gujarat India Journal of Threatened Taxa 4 14 3333 3341 doi 10 11609 jott o2977 3333 41 a b Vyas R amp Vasava A 2019 Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus palustris mortality due to roads and railways in Gujarat India PDF Herpetological Conservation and Biology 14 3 615 626 a b Sharma R K amp Singh L A K 2015 Status of Mugger crocodile Crocodylus palustris in National Chambal Sanctuary after thirty years and its implications on conservation of Gharial Gavialis gangeticus Zoo s Print 30 5 9 16 Taigor S R amp Rao R J 2010 Habitat features of Aquatic animals in the National Chambal Sanctuary Madhya Pradesh India Asian Journal of Experimental Biological Sciences 1 2 409 414 Joshi R 2013 Range extension of mugger crocodile Crocodylus palustris Lesson 1831 in upper Ganges and tributaries lesser Himalayan zone north India Journal of Biology and Earth Sciences 3 1 100 109 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 1 10 doi 10 1002 aqc 2911 S2CID 91126092 Sahu H Dutta S amp Rout S 2007 Survey of Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus palustris in Similipal Tiger Reserve Orissa India Tigerpaper 34 1 27 32 Debata S Purohit S Mahata A Jena S K amp Palita S K 2018 Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus palustris Lesson 1831 Reptilia Crocodilia Crocodylidae in river Saberi of Godavari system in southern Odisha India conservation implications Journal of Threatened Taxa 10 6 11770 11774 doi 10 11609 jott 3974 10 6 11770 11774 Rathore H S Pati J Das A amp Pandav B 2021 Population status and distribution of mugger crocodile Crocodylus palustris in the Similipal Tiger Reserve Odisha India Herpetological Bulletin 156 28 30 doi 10 33256 hb156 2830 Patil S R Atigre R H amp Patil S V 2012 First Record of Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus Palustrius Lesson 1831 from River Kadavi at Sarud Tal Shahuwadi Dist Kolhapur MS India 4th International Conference on Agriculture and Animal Science 47 100 104 Chavan U M amp Borkar M R 2022 Population trends of Mugger Crocodile and human crocodile interactions along the Savitri River at Mahad Maharashtra India Journal of Threatened Taxa 14 11 22118 22132 doi 10 11609 jott 7934 14 11 22118 22132 Sivaperuman C amp Jayson E A 2013 An assessment of human crocodile conflicts in Neyyar Wildlife Sanctuary India World Crocodile Conference Proceedings of the 22nd Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group p 115 Whitaker N amp Srinivasan M 2020 Human crocodile conflict on the Cauvery river delta region Tamil Nadu south India International Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Studies 8 5 Part A 1 5 a b Whitaker R Barr B de Silva A amp Ratnasiri P 2007 Observations on burrows dug by mugger crocodiles Crocodylus palustris in Bundala National Park Sri Lanka Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 104 2 19 24 Santiapillai C amp de Silva M 2001 Status distribution and conservation of crocodiles in Sri Lanka Biological Conservation 97 3 305 318 doi 10 1016 S0006 3207 00 00126 9 Khan M A R 1986 Wildlife in Bangladesh Mangrove Ecosystem Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 86 1 32 48 Halder N K 2003 Crocodile Conservation Plan of the Sundarban Forest Report Dhaka Ministry of Environment and Forests Government of Bangladesh 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 Whitaker R amp Whitaker Z 1989 Ecology of the mugger crocodile Crocodiles their ecology management and conservation PDF Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 276 296 McCann C 1935 The Mugger Crocodilus palustris feeding on large water beetles Cybister sp Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 38 2 409 a b c Bhatnagar C amp Mahur M 2010 Observations on feeding behavior of a wild population of marsh crocodile in Baghdarrah Lake Udaipur Rajasthan Reptile Rap 10 16 18 Ranjitsh M 1989 Mugger Crocodilus palustris eating Soft shell Turtle Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 86 1 107 De Silva M Amarasinghe A A de Silva A amp Karunarathna D M S 2011 Mugger crocodile Crocodylus palustris Lesson 1831 preys on a radiated tortoise in Sri Lanka Taprobanica The Journal of Asian Biodiversity 3 1 38 41 doi 10 4038 tapro v3i1 3232 Vyas R 2010 Mugger Crocodilus palustris population in and around Vadodara city Gujarat state India Russian Journal of Herpetology 17 1 43 50 Rao R J amp Gurjwar R K 2013 Crocodile human conflict in National Chambal Sanctuary India World Crocodile Conference Proceedings of the 22nd Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 105 109 De Silva A Probst J De Silva P D D S amp Karunarathna S 2018 An incident of a Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus palustris devouring a Pangolin Manis crassicaudata Wildlanka 6 3 147 150 Dinets V Brueggen J C amp Brueggen J D 2013 Crocodilians use tools for hunting Ethology Ecology and Evolution 1 74 78 doi 10 1080 03949370 2013 858276 S2CID 84655220 Venugopal P D 2006 Observations on Mugger Crocodylus palustris Lesson feeding on birds in Ranganthittu Bird Sanctuary Karnataka India Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 103 1 105 Lang J W Andrews H amp Whitaker R 1989 Sex determination and sex ratios in Crocodylus palustris American Zoologist 29 3 935 952 doi 10 1093 icb 29 3 935 Lydekker R 1901 The Tiger Felis tigris The New Natural History Vol 1 New York Merrill pp 377 390 a b Whitaker R amp Daniel J C 1980 The status of Indian crocodilians Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 75 Supplement 1238 1245 Singh L A K amp Kar S K 2006 Status of the Saltwater Crocodile in Orissa An Overview Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 103 2 3 274 285 Martin S 2008 Global diversity of crocodiles Crocodilia Reptilia in freshwater PDF Hydrobiologia 595 1 587 591 doi 10 1007 s10750 007 9030 4 S2CID 42140696 Vyas R V 2021 Remarkable predatory skills in Mugger Crocodiles makes them the apex predators of freshwater ecosystems 36 2 Zoo s Print 2 6 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Rao R J amp Choudhury B C 1992 Sympatric distribution of gharial and mugger in India Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 89 3 312 315 Pandit P K 2012 Sundarban Tiger a new prey species of estuarine crocodile at Sundarban Tiger Reserve India PDF Tigerpaper XXXIX 1 1 5 Mitra S 2005 Crocodiles and Other Reptiles Gir Forest and the saga of the Asiatic lion New Delhi Indus pp 148 152 ISBN 978 8173871832 Vyas R 2017 Emergence of a new potential threat to the Mugger Crocodylus palustris population of Gujarat State India PDF Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 36 4 16 17 Sharma R K Jangid A K amp Das A 2021 Blood on the Track A case of Mugger Crocodylus palustris mortality in Jawai Rajasthan India Reptiles amp Amphibians 28 2 320 321 doi 10 17161 randa v28i2 15591 S2CID 238785693 Jayawardene J 2004 Conservation and management of the two species of Sri Lankan Crocodiles Crocodylus porosus and Crocodylus palustris PDF In Crocodile Specialist Group ed Crocodiles Proceedings of the 17th Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland Switzerland and Cambridge UK IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group pp 155 165 a b Rastegar Pouyani N Gholamifard A Karamiani R Bahmani Z Mobaraki A Abtin E Faizi H Heidari N Takesh M Sayyadi F Ahsani N amp Browne R K 2015 Sustainable Management of the Herpetofauna of the Iranian Plateau and Coastal Iran Amphibian and Reptile Conservation 9 1 1 15 Whitaker N 2007 Survey of Human Crocodile Conflict in India Maharashtra State December 2007 PDF Report Madras Madras Crocodile Trust Apte V S 1957 मकर The practical Sanskrit English dictionary Revised and enlarged ed Poona Prasad Prakashan p 1218 Caturvedi M 1970 मगर A practical Hindi English dictionary Delhi National Publishing House p 567 a b Kipling R 1895 The Undertakers The Second Jungle Book Garden City NY Doubleday Page amp Co pp 109 144 Hornaday W T 1901 V The Gangetic Crocodile Two years in the jungle the experiences of a hunter and naturalist in India Ceylon the Malay Peninsula and Borneo Seventh ed New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 55 57 Lydekker R 1901 Indian crocodile The New Natural History Vol 5 New York Merrill amp Baker p 2378 McCann C 1938 The Reptiles and Amphibia of Cutch State Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 40 3 425 427 Darian S 1976 The Other Face of the Makara Artibus Asiae 38 1 29 36 doi 10 2307 3250095 JSTOR 3250095 Coomaraswamy A K 1931 4 The Makara Yakṣas Part II Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Freer Gallery of Art pp 47 56 Kramrisch S 1954 Makara end of beam of gateway of Stupa Barhut The art of India Traditions of Indian sculpture painting and architecture London Phaidon Press p Plate 19 Smith W L 1992 Some hagiographical motifs in the Saṅkaravijayas Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde Sudasiens Vienna Journal of South Asian Studies 36 Supplement Proceedings of the VIIIth World Sanskrit Conference Vienna 1990 189 195 JSTOR 24010818 Burton R F 1877 IV Clifton Ghisri Bandar The Alligator Tank Sind revisited Vol 1 London Richard Bentley and Son pp 82 106 Crooke W 1906 Crocodile Things Indian Being Discursive Notes on Various Subjects Connected with India London John Murray pp 111 113 Fischer E amp Shah H 1971 Mogra Dev Tribal Crocodile Gods Wooden Crocodile Images of Chodhri Gamit and Vasava Tribes South Gujarat India Art for tribal rituals in South Gujarat Ahmedabad Gujarat Vidyapith Sideleau B amp Britton A R C 2012 A preliminary analysis of worldwide crocodilian attacks Crocodiles Proceedings of the 21st Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Gland IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group pp 22 25 Babbit E C 1912 The Monkey and the Crocodile The Jatakas Tales of India New York The Century Co pp 3 9 Frere M 1898 The Alligator and the Jackal Old Deccan Days London John Murray pp 211 214 Bodding P O 1909 The Jackal and the Crocodiles Folklore of the Santal Parganas London D Nutt pp 331 333 Parker H 1910 The Crocodile and the Jackal Village Folk tales of Ceylon London Luzac amp Co pp 380 381 Dixit K M 2003 Adventures of a Nepali Frog PDF Lalitpur Rato Bangala Kitab External links nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Crocodylus palustris nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Crocodylus palustris Mugger New International Encyclopedia 1905 Species Crocodylus palustris at The Reptile Database Crocodylus palustris Lesson 1831 mugger crocodile Paleobiology Database Crocodiles moved from world s tallest statue BBC News 2019 Retrieved 2019 01 26 Eight Crocodiles Two Tortoises Australian Parrots Seized Two Held Mid Day 2018 Marsh crocodiles in good condition in Iran Tehran Times Daily Newspaper 2018 Nelson D 2011 Fifteen foot Bengali crocodile claims king of jungle title from tiger The Telegraph Archived from the original on 2022 01 12 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mugger crocodile amp oldid 1170680365, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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