dcsimg

Lifespan, longevity, and ageing

provided by AnAge articles
Maximum longevity: 24.1 years (captivity)
license
cc-by-3.0
copyright
Joao Pedro de Magalhaes
editor
de Magalhaes, J. P.
partner site
AnAge articles

Life Cycle

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Some weeks after courtship and copulation, with internal fertilization, females lay their oval, hard-shelled eggs in a newly made mound of leaf litter and other vegetation. Once the eggs are laid, the female will cover the nest. Females, and sometimes males, guard their eggs against nest predators. Temperature influences sex determination during incubation. An average nest temperature of 30 degrees C will produce mostly females and 34 degrees will produce mostly males. After an incubation period of 65 to 104 days the babies will hatch out of their eggs and move to the nearest water, with some help from their parents. Once the juveniles have hatched, they will stay near their parents for about 1.5 years. Juveniles then grow to adult size at around 1.2 to 1.4 meters in length. Once juveniles reach minimum adult size, they are able to reproduce. If they survive long enough, they can continue to grow until reaching a size that may exceed 2.4 meters.

Development - Life Cycle: temperature sex determination

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Conservation Status

provided by Animal Diversity Web

In 1986 and 1988 spectacled caimans were listed by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service as a threatened species. This was due to increased hunting pressure on their populations. Caimans are heavily harvested for their skins to make leather products. The pet and curio trade has also had some degree of responsibility for local population declines. Spectacled caiman populations are still relatively stable in some parts of their range, although they are severely depleted or extirpated in many local areas, especially near human population centers.

US Federal List: threatened

CITES: appendix ii

State of Michigan List: no special status

IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: lower risk - least concern

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Behavior

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Spectacled caimans use taste, touch, sound, and visual senses for social and reproductive communication. The ability to detect vibrations in the water may aid in prey detection.

Communication Channels: visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; chemical

Other Communication Modes: vibrations

Perception Channels: visual ; tactile ; acoustic ; vibrations ; chemical

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Benefits

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Spectacled caimans are potentially dangerous to humans and pets, and they occasionally attack livestock. Their smaller size compared to other crocodilians makes them less of a threat. They become shy and avoid humans in areas where they are frequently hunted. Spectacled caimans have been introduced outside their natural range, such as in southern Florida, and possible negative effects on local naive wildlife are in need of study.

Negative Impacts: injures humans (bites or stings)

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Benefits

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Within their native range, spectacled caimans are usually the most abundant crocodiles and are the most heavily harvested species by humans for the hide industry.

Positive Impacts: pet trade ; food ; body parts are source of valuable material; controls pest population

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Associations

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Spectacled caimans are predators of aquatic invertebrates, fish, and other aquatic and shoreline vertebrates. In their native range they are important members of riparian shoreline and aquatic communities. Where spectacled caimans have been introduced outside of their normal range, spectacled caimans may have unpredictable, perhaps deleterious effects on prey species.

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Trophic Strategy

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Spectacled caimans are carnivorous generalists. Prey items change as they grow from smaller to larger caimans. Prey can include insects, snails, shrimp, crabs, fish, lizards, snakes, turtles, birds, and mammals. Spectacled caimans have at least 105 prey items reported in their diet. Cannibalism can occur, especially under drought conditions, when many caimans of different sizes are concentrated in small areas. However this species can be surprisingly unaggressive and tolerant of temporarily dense concentrations during the dry season.

Animal Foods: birds; mammals; amphibians; reptiles; fish; carrion ; insects; terrestrial non-insect arthropods; mollusks; aquatic crustaceans

Primary Diet: carnivore (Eats terrestrial vertebrates, Piscivore , Insectivore , Eats non-insect arthropods, Molluscivore , Scavenger )

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Distribution

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Caiman crocodilus, the spectacled, common, or brown caiman, is a crocodilian native to northern South America, Central America, and certain parts of the Caribbean. They are native to the following countries: Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, French Guiana, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, Suriname, Trinidad, Tobago, and Venezuela. They have been introduced into Florida, Cuba, and Puerto Rico.

Biogeographic Regions: nearctic (Introduced ); neotropical (Native )

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Habitat

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Spectacled caimans are found in freshwater habitats as well as some salt water habitats. Rivers and wetlands, usually slow moving water, are preferred. They are found in both deep and shallow water, as they only need enough depth to submerge their bodies.

Range elevation: 800 (high) m.

Habitat Regions: tropical ; terrestrial ; saltwater or marine ; freshwater

Aquatic Biomes: lakes and ponds; rivers and streams; coastal ; brackish water

Wetlands: marsh ; swamp ; bog

Other Habitat Features: riparian ; estuarine

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Life Expectancy

provided by Animal Diversity Web

There is very little known about the lifespan of Caiman crocodilus. The longest known lifespan in the wild was estimated at about 60 years old. However, 30 to 40 years might be more normal. The average captive lifespan is 20 years, with a minimum record of 24 years.

Range lifespan
Status: wild:
60 (high) years.

Range lifespan
Status: captivity:
24 (high) years.

Typical lifespan
Status: wild:
30 to 40 years.

Average lifespan
Status: captivity:
20 years.

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Morphology

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Spectacled caimans are small to medium-sized crocodilians generally 1.5 to 2.1 meters in length. Historically, maximum reported length was 3 m. At current levels of exploitation, few specimens exceed 2.5 m in length. Females are smaller than males. Average adults are a dull olive to nearly black in color with variable yellow or black crossbands. They have long snouts and their fourth mandibular tooth is not visible from the outside of their closed jaw. Juveniles are yellowish in color with darker bands and spots. A feature that helps to distinguish Caiman crocodilus from other, sympatric crocodilians is the presence of a bony infra-orbital bridge between the eyes. Subspecies vary in color and skull size.

Range mass: 7 to 58 kg.

Average mass: 40 kg.

Range length: 1.5 to 3 m.

Average length: 2 m.

Other Physical Features: ectothermic ; heterothermic ; bilateral symmetry

Sexual Dimorphism: male larger

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Associations

provided by Animal Diversity Web

During nesting time, tegu lizards (Tupinambis sp.) can destroy up to 80% of caiman nests in some places. Coatis (Nasua narica) and foxes also raid nests. Juveniles are eaten by large fish, wading birds, large snakes, and other crocodilians. Adult spectacled caimans are able to defend themselves from most potential predators, except humans.

Known Predators:

  • tegu lizards (Tupinambis merianae)
  • coatimundis (Nasua narica)
  • herons (Ardeidae)
  • large fish (Actiinopterygii)
  • other crococilians (Crocodilia)
  • anacondas (Eunectes sp.)
  • humans (Homo sapiens)

Anti-predator Adaptations: cryptic

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Reproduction

provided by Animal Diversity Web

Mating typically occurs in the wet season from April to August, depending on local climatic conditions. Males can breed with multiple females and females can breed with multiple males. Courtship behavior involves prospective mates swimming together, rubbing backs, bellowing, touching snouts, circling each other, and bubble-blowing. Both sexes use these behaviors to attract their mates. After a female mates with a male she will build a nest in the males territory. There, the male and female will guard the nest, eggs, young, once they are hatched.

Mating System: polygynandrous (promiscuous) ; cooperative breeder

Spectacled caimans reach sexual maturity at sizes of about 1.2 meters for females and 1.4 meters for males, corresponding to from 4 to 7 years old. Social status affects growth rate and reproduction. Some younger, smaller caimans will be unable to mate because of social stress because of the presence of larger, more dominant caimans. Courtship and copulation occurs between May and August. Eggs are laid from July to November, depending on local climatic conditions. Females lay from 10 to 30 eggs. Incubation usually requires between 65 and 104 days. Sex is determined by temperature in the nest about midway through incubation. The decomposing vegetation in the nest, which may be a meter high and 2 meters in diameter, may help retain temperatures at the proper level. After hatching, the parents may excavate the juveniles from the nest and help them out of the eggshell. Once emerged, juveniles stay near their parents for approximately 1.5 years, receiving some protection from predators.

Breeding interval: Spectacled caimans breed for about four months during the wet season each year.

Breeding season: Spectacled caimans breed from May through August.

Range number of offspring: 10 to 40.

Average number of offspring: 22.

Range gestation period: 65 to 104 days.

Average time to independence: 1.5 years.

Range age at sexual or reproductive maturity (female): 4 to 7 years.

Average age at sexual or reproductive maturity (female): 6 years.

Range age at sexual or reproductive maturity (male): 4 to 7 years.

Average age at sexual or reproductive maturity (male): 6 years.

Key Reproductive Features: iteroparous ; seasonal breeding ; gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; oviparous

After copulation, females, sometimes assisted by males, build a nest out of leaf litter. Females lay their eggs in the nest and then cover it with more leaf litter. Females, and occasionally males, guard the nest from predators until they hear the babies call with grunt-like squeaks. Females then help uncover eggs and break the shells open to get the juveniles out. At that point, juveniles stay near their mother, and sometimes within the male parent's territory, for around 1.5 years for additional protection from predators. The parents may incidentally provide some food scraps for the juveniles but, for the most part, juvenile caimans catch food for themselves. After about 1.5 years with their parents, juveniles disperse from their parent's territory. In some situations, young caimans remain closer to their parents for longer periods.

Parental Investment: pre-fertilization (Provisioning, Protecting: Female); pre-hatching/birth (Provisioning: Female, Protecting: Male, Female); pre-independence (Provisioning: Female, Protecting: Female)

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
The Regents of the University of Michigan and its licensors
bibliographic citation
Terry, K. 2010. "Caiman crocodilus" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Caiman_crocodilus.html
author
Kayla Terry, Michigan State University
editor
James Harding, Michigan State University
editor
Tanya Dewey, Animal Diversity Web
original
visit source
partner site
Animal Diversity Web

Amenazas ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by Conabio
Factores de riesgo

Los factores de riesgo son similares al de otras especies de México y están dados en forma directa por una eventual captura y explotación abiertas. Se sabe de la existencia de captura clandestina y comercio ilegal de pieles. Otro factor es la destrucción y fragmentación del hábitat por actividades humanas y la creciente contaminación. El ataque a humanos es un factor que conlleva a la eliminación de individuos de la especie y eventualmente de poblaciones en algunos lugares.

Situación actual del hábitat con respecto a las necesidades de la especie

Esta especie de caimán al igual que en otros cocodrilos de México, diferentes factores afectan su hábitat, aunque los principales son la fragmentación del mismo y la contaminación ambiental.
La fragmentación se debe a causas como la destrucción del hábitat, la agricultura y la ganadería, el desarrollo turístico y la explotación de campos petroleros.
Hay una transformación de pantanos y manglares, ya sea para campos agrícolas, zonas turísticas, que además de invadir el hábitat natural de la especie, invaden áreas de reproducción y anidación, así como los desmontes y rellenos que cambian por completo el hábitat de la especie.
En el caso de la contaminación, sabemos que muchos de los contaminantes acuáticos, las aguas residuales urbanas e industriales, fertilizantes y pesticidas agrícolas, son vertidos a los ríos, que son hábitat de esta especie y llegando finalmente a las planicies costeras y al mar y parte de ellos estableciéndose en los humedales de la costa.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-2.5
copyright
CONABIO
bibliographic citation
Aguilar-Miguel, X. y Casas Andreu, G. 2005. Ficha técnica de Caiman crocodilus. En: Aguilar-Miguel, X. (compilador). Algunas especies de anfibios y reptiles contenidos en el Proyecto de Norma Oficial Mexicana PROY-NOM-059-ECOL-2000. Facultad de Ciencias, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Bióticos, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Bases de datos SNIB-CONABIO. Proyecto No. W035. México, D.F.
author
Aguilar-Miguel, X.
author
Casas Andreu, G.
original
visit source
partner site
Conabio

Biología ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by Conabio
Antecedentes del estado de la especie o de las poblaciones principales

Aún con la problemática de hábitat y su fragmentación y no obstante que existen registros de explotación de buena parte del siglo pasado, al presente persisten poblaciones en la región en que se distribuye la especie en el país.
Posiblemente se dieron varias circunstancias para que se conservaran e incrementaran muchas poblaciones en el país, posiblemente por la explotación de pieles de otros reptiles como la tortuga marina, el gran crecimiento de la industria turística y la apertura de otras fuentes de empleo para las poblaciones humanas que se encuentran alrededor de los lugares en que habitan estos animales y a partir de 1970 hubo una veda total y entraron en vigor diferentes normas legales que protegen a las especies.
Esta es la especie menos estudiada y conocida en el país, se sabe de una población en la reserva de la Encrucijada en Chiapas y posiblemente existen algunas otras más.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-2.5
copyright
CONABIO
bibliographic citation
Aguilar-Miguel, X. y Casas Andreu, G. 2005. Ficha técnica de Caiman crocodilus. En: Aguilar-Miguel, X. (compilador). Algunas especies de anfibios y reptiles contenidos en el Proyecto de Norma Oficial Mexicana PROY-NOM-059-ECOL-2000. Facultad de Ciencias, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Bióticos, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Bases de datos SNIB-CONABIO. Proyecto No. W035. México, D.F.
author
Aguilar-Miguel, X.
author
Casas Andreu, G.
original
visit source
partner site
Conabio

Descripción ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by Conabio
Estos organismos no alcanzan los 2.5 m de longitud total, aunque se sabe de organismos aislados que llegan a los 3 m. Presenta un hocico ancho y redondeado además de un eje óseo característico entre los ojos que recuerda el armazón de anteojos, la longitud de la cabeza es de 1.5 a 2 veces su ancho, 5 dientes premaxilares, 14 a 16 maxilares, 18 a 20 mandibulares, el número total de dientes es igual a 74-80. La parte superior y la inferior del cuerpo están cubiertos con una armadura de escudos dérmicos. La cola robusta esta comprimida lateralmente y los dedos de las patas están unidos por membranas y tiene garras afiladas. Son de color café suave o amarillento bronceado a olivo gris, con series de barras obscuras que pueden ser distinguibles o no en cuerpo y cola.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-2.5
copyright
CONABIO
bibliographic citation
Aguilar-Miguel, X. y Casas Andreu, G. 2005. Ficha técnica de Caiman crocodilus. En: Aguilar-Miguel, X. (compilador). Algunas especies de anfibios y reptiles contenidos en el Proyecto de Norma Oficial Mexicana PROY-NOM-059-ECOL-2000. Facultad de Ciencias, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Bióticos, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Bases de datos SNIB-CONABIO. Proyecto No. W035. México, D.F.
author
Aguilar-Miguel, X.
author
Casas Andreu, G.
original
visit source
partner site
Conabio

Distribución ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by Conabio
Histórica

MEXICO / CHIAPAS

Distribución histórica estimada:
Se tienen registros en los Estados de Chiapas, depositados en Colecciones y en bibliografía para el Istmo de Tehuantepec en Oaxaca.

Distribución actual, con poblaciones aún presentes:
La distribución actual sigue manteniéndose en los mismos estados y en la misma área reconocida originalmente y aunque no existen estudios actuales de la distribución. Se ha comentado que Sigler realizo una evaluación de las poblaciones de caimanes en la Reserva de la Biosfera la Encrucijada en el estado de Chiapas, lo cual no esta reportado.

MEXICO / OAXACA
license
cc-by-nc-sa-2.5
copyright
CONABIO
bibliographic citation
Aguilar-Miguel, X. y Casas Andreu, G. 2005. Ficha técnica de Caiman crocodilus. En: Aguilar-Miguel, X. (compilador). Algunas especies de anfibios y reptiles contenidos en el Proyecto de Norma Oficial Mexicana PROY-NOM-059-ECOL-2000. Facultad de Ciencias, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Bióticos, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Bases de datos SNIB-CONABIO. Proyecto No. W035. México, D.F.
author
Aguilar-Miguel, X.
author
Casas Andreu, G.
original
visit source
partner site
Conabio

Estado de conservación ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by Conabio
NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2001

Pr sujeta a protección especial

NOM-059-SEMARNAT-2010

Pr sujeta a protección especial
license
cc-by-nc-sa-2.5
copyright
CONABIO
bibliographic citation
Aguilar-Miguel, X. y Casas Andreu, G. 2005. Ficha técnica de Caiman crocodilus. En: Aguilar-Miguel, X. (compilador). Algunas especies de anfibios y reptiles contenidos en el Proyecto de Norma Oficial Mexicana PROY-NOM-059-ECOL-2000. Facultad de Ciencias, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Bióticos, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Bases de datos SNIB-CONABIO. Proyecto No. W035. México, D.F.
author
Aguilar-Miguel, X.
author
Casas Andreu, G.
original
visit source
partner site
Conabio

Estrategia trófica ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by Conabio
Los ejemplares más pequeños se alimentan sobretodo de insectos (principalmente coleópteros) y pequeños cangrejos, los juveniles ingieren, caracoles, cangrejos, camarones, y algunos pequeños vertebrados, en los adultos incluyen peces sin descuidar los invertebrados y algunos vertebrados terrestres, cabe señalar que para esta especie se ha reportado canibalismo (Staton y Dixon, 1975).
license
cc-by-nc-sa-2.5
copyright
CONABIO
bibliographic citation
Aguilar-Miguel, X. y Casas Andreu, G. 2005. Ficha técnica de Caiman crocodilus. En: Aguilar-Miguel, X. (compilador). Algunas especies de anfibios y reptiles contenidos en el Proyecto de Norma Oficial Mexicana PROY-NOM-059-ECOL-2000. Facultad de Ciencias, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Bióticos, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Bases de datos SNIB-CONABIO. Proyecto No. W035. México, D.F.
author
Aguilar-Miguel, X.
author
Casas Andreu, G.
original
visit source
partner site
Conabio

Hábitat ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by Conabio
Arroyos, pantanos, ríos fangosos, lagunetas, esteros, canales y estanques, en general son abundantes en lugares donde hay mucha vegetación. En ríos grandes vive en los remansos, lejos de los rápidos o raudales (Álvarez del Toro, 1974).

Macroclima

Esta especie es también tropical, encontrándose en la costa de Chiapas y en el Istmo en Oaxaca en climas cálido húmedos con lluvias de verano, con temperatura media anual por arriba de los 22° C y precipitación promedio alrededor de los 1600 mm. (García, 1988).
license
cc-by-nc-sa-2.5
copyright
CONABIO
bibliographic citation
Aguilar-Miguel, X. y Casas Andreu, G. 2005. Ficha técnica de Caiman crocodilus. En: Aguilar-Miguel, X. (compilador). Algunas especies de anfibios y reptiles contenidos en el Proyecto de Norma Oficial Mexicana PROY-NOM-059-ECOL-2000. Facultad de Ciencias, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Bióticos, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Bases de datos SNIB-CONABIO. Proyecto No. W035. México, D.F.
author
Aguilar-Miguel, X.
author
Casas Andreu, G.
original
visit source
partner site
Conabio

Relevancia de la especie ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by Conabio
Relevancia de la especie

En términos generales y como las otras especies de cocodrilos del país, ésta es relevante por su importancia a nivel económico, ecológico y cultural. Esta especie como la de otros crocodílidos, han soportado una intensa explotación por más de un siglo. El producto más cotizado es la piel, aunque en la actualidad se realiza la explotación de la carne y otros órganos y partes.
Ecológicamente algunos han considerado a los cocodrilos y caimanes como especies paraguas, ya que se encuentra en la parte más alta de la cadena de alimentación, siendo un depredador selectivo de presas a lo largo de su vida, lo que le permite el control de otras poblaciones de animales en su entorno y el reciclado de nutrientes importantes en el ambiente. Con sus hábitos cavadores y sus movimientos habituales, forman canales y reservorios de agua en la época de sequía que sirven de refugio a aves acuáticas y otros animales asociados al agua.
Culturalmente los cocodrilos y caimanes tuvieron un fuerte impacto en las culturas Precolombinas, mismas que han quedado representadas en códices y en edificaciones de los antiguos mexicanos.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-2.5
copyright
CONABIO
bibliographic citation
Aguilar-Miguel, X. y Casas Andreu, G. 2005. Ficha técnica de Caiman crocodilus. En: Aguilar-Miguel, X. (compilador). Algunas especies de anfibios y reptiles contenidos en el Proyecto de Norma Oficial Mexicana PROY-NOM-059-ECOL-2000. Facultad de Ciencias, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Bióticos, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Bases de datos SNIB-CONABIO. Proyecto No. W035. México, D.F.
author
Aguilar-Miguel, X.
author
Casas Andreu, G.
original
visit source
partner site
Conabio

Reproducción ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by Conabio
La temporada de cortejo y apareamiento para esta especie ocurre entre los meses de marzo a agosto y la anidación entre agosto y octubre. El caimán construye nidos en forma de montículo con barro u hojas. Los nidos presentan un diámetro medio de 110 cm y una altura entre 40 y 50 cm. El tamaño de la nidada varia entre 15 y 40 huevos, según el tamaño y edad de la hembra. El período de incubación esta entre los 75 y 80 días. La mayoría de los nidos se encuentran entre grupos de árboles y arbustos, pero se han observado unos en zonas de campo abierto y sobre formas flotantes de vegetación acuática. La hembra se encarga de proteger el nido durante el período de incubación, abandonándolo solo cuando requiere alimentarse. Los caimancitos miden al nacer de 200 a 225 mm.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-2.5
copyright
CONABIO
bibliographic citation
Aguilar-Miguel, X. y Casas Andreu, G. 2005. Ficha técnica de Caiman crocodilus. En: Aguilar-Miguel, X. (compilador). Algunas especies de anfibios y reptiles contenidos en el Proyecto de Norma Oficial Mexicana PROY-NOM-059-ECOL-2000. Facultad de Ciencias, Centro de Investigación en Recursos Bióticos, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México. Bases de datos SNIB-CONABIO. Proyecto No. W035. México, D.F.
author
Aguilar-Miguel, X.
author
Casas Andreu, G.
original
visit source
partner site
Conabio

Distribution ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by INBio
Distribucion en Costa Rica: Se encuentra en ambas vertientes del país.
Distribucion General: Desde México hasta Brasil.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
INBio, Costa Rica
author
Federico Munoz Chacon
partner site
INBio

Habitat ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by INBio
Es acuático; se le encuentra en ríos y otros cuerpos de agua hasta los 350 m de altura.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
INBio, Costa Rica
author
Federico Munoz Chacon
partner site
INBio

Trophic Strategy ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by INBio
Se alimenta de aves acuáticas, peces, y otros vertebrados que se acerquen o vivan en sus aguas.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
INBio, Costa Rica
author
Federico Munoz Chacon
partner site
INBio

Reproduction ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by INBio
Es una especie ovípara. Construyen nidos compuestos por montículos de diferentes materiales que incluyen hojas, ramas y barro. Se han reportado nacimientos durante todo el año. La incubación dura aproximadamente 75 días. Los individuos juveniles producen vocalizaciones que estimulan a los adultos padres a abrir el nido y permitir su salida. Esta vocalización se mantiene por un período de hasta 4 meses y estimula a los adultos a regresar, lo cual se asocia con conductas de defensa.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
INBio, Costa Rica
author
Federico Munoz Chacon
partner site
INBio

Diagnostic Description ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by INBio
Localidad del tipo: Desconocida
Depositario del tipo:
Recolector del tipo:
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
INBio, Costa Rica
author
Federico Munoz Chacon
partner site
INBio

Benefits ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by INBio
La piel puede ser usada para elaborar artículos de cuero fino.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
INBio, Costa Rica
author
Federico Munoz Chacon
partner site
INBio

Diagnostic Description ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by INBio
Como todos los crocodílidos, Caiman crocodilus es un reptil en forma de lagartija de tamaño grande, que alcanza más de 1 m del hocico a la cloaca. Utilizan sus cuatro miembros para caminar y la cola comprimida lateralmente para impulsarse dentro del agua. Los orificios nasales se abren en el extremo del hocico y el aire es conducido hacia atrás por medio de un largo tubo IMAGEDB.GET_BFILE_IMAGE?p_imageId=17035&p_imageResolutionId=2">(ver">http://attila.inbio.ac.cr:7777/pls/portal30IMAGEDB.GET_BFILE_IMAGE?p_imageId=17035&p_imageResolutionId=2">(ver cabeza).La superficie dorsal de la cabeza presenta un pliegue elevado semilunar, transversal, inmediatemente anterior a los ojos; este se encuentra completamente osificado en los adultos y parcialmente osificado en los jóvenes.

Los maxilares, los palatinos y los pterigoideos forman un paladar secundarlo óseo. En el extremo posterior de la lengua existe un repliegue que, junto con una lámina correspondiente en el paladar, permite separar completamente la boca del conducto respiratorio; esto le permite permanecer con la boca abierta bajo el agua. Los orificias nasales pueden también cerrarse gracias a una serie especial de músculos. Los tímpanos quedan protegidos por repliegues escamosos móviles. Presenta un par de quillas dorsales que se continúan sobre la cola entre las crestas caudales laterales, pero las extensiones de las quillas dorsales se funden posteriormente y forman una sola cresta corta entre el par lateral. El cuarto diente de la mandibula inferior perfora una cavidad en la mandibula superior al nivel de la sutura premaxilar-maxilar, y no es visible con la boca cerrada.

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
INBio, Costa Rica
author
Federico Munoz Chacon
partner site
INBio

Kaiman lunedek ( Breton )

provided by wikipedia BR

Ar c'haiman lunedek (Caiman crocodilus) a zo ur stlejvil hag a vev e Kreiz ha Suamerika.

 src=
Tiriad ar c'haiman lunedek
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia BR

Kajman brýlový ( Czech )

provided by wikipedia CZ

Kajman brýlový, kajman obecný či kajman středoamerický (Caiman crocodilus známý také pod starším jménem Caiman sclerops) je poměrně malý plaz z čeledi aligátorovitých obývající poměrně rozsáhlé území Střední a Jižní Ameriky v rozmezí od Venezuely až na jih Amazonské pánve. Žije v pomalu tekoucích vodách, nížinných mokřinách a jezerech, je schopen tolerovat i slanou vodu; díky této adaptaci je také nejhojnějším zástupcem své čeledi.

Popis

Český druhový název brýlový je inspirován hřebenem mezi očima, který slabě připomíná obroučku brýlí. Zkostnatělá horní víčka také poukazují na možnou podobnost s dinosaury z rodu Allosaurus [2]. Několik poddruhů tohoto kajmana se liší zbarvením, velikostí a tvaru lebky. Samci dosahují délky od 2 m do 2,5 m, maximálně pak až do 3 m. Samice jsou znatelně menší a dosahují maximální velikosti do 1,4 m. Dospělá zvířata mají tlustou kůži s olivovým nádechem. Mláďata mají obvykle nažloutlou barvu s černými skvrnami, kterou postupem času zcela ztrácí.

Potrava a rozmnožování

Mláďata se živí širokou paletou vodních bezobratlých, převážně pak larvami hmyzu, korýši a měkkýši. Postupem času začnou do svého jídelníčku zahrnovat i různé obratlovce, převážně ryby, obojživelníky, plazy a vodní ptáky. Dospělá zvířata si troufnou i na větší savce, např. divoká prasata nebo kapybary.

Období páření trvá u kajmanů brýlových v rozmezí mezi květnem a srpnem. Samice vybuduje hnízdo v podobě hromady různé půdy a rostlinné vegetace, kterou sem nahrne. V období dešťů, mezi červencem a srpnem naklade 14 až 40 (obvykle kolem 22) vajec, která po celou inkubační dobu, která trvá zhruba 90 dní pečlivě střeží. Samice dosahují pohlavní dospělosti mezi 4. a 7. rokem, samci zhruba ve stejném věku.

Kajman brýlový je loven pro svou kůži, ale ohrožení pro něj představuje i odchyt mláďat, která se následně prodávají do domácností buď živí, nebo jako kuriózní vycpaniny.

Reference

V tomto článku byl použit překlad textu z článku Spectacled Caiman na anglické Wikipedii.

  1. Červený seznam IUCN 2018.1. 5. července 2018. Dostupné online. [cit. 2018-08-09]
  2. http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/cnhc/csp_ccro.htm

Externí odkazy

Krokodýli (Crocodilia) čeleď gaviálovití (Gavialidae)
rod gaviál (Gaviál)
druh: gaviál indický (Gavialis gangeticus)
rod tomistoma (Tomistoma)
druh: tomistoma úzkohlavá (Tomistoma schlegelii)
čeleď aligátorovití (Alligatoridae)
rod aligátor (Alligator)
druhy: aligátor severoamerický (Alligator mississippiensis) • aligátor čínský (Alligator sinensis)
rod Paleosuchus
druhy: kajman trpasličí (Paleosuchus palpebrosus) • kajman klínohlavý (Paleosuchus trigonatus)
rod kajman (Caiman)
druhy: kajman paraguayský (Caiman yacare) • kajman brýlový (Caiman crocodilus) • kajman šíronosý (Caiman latirostris)
rod Melanosuchus
druh: kajman černý (Melanosuchus niger)
čeleď krokodýlovití (Crocodylidae)
rod krokodýl (Crocodylus)
druhy: krokodýl americký (Crocodylus acutus) • krokodýl orinocký (Crocodylus intermedius) • krokodýl Johnstonův (Crocodylus johnsoni) • krokodýl filipínský (Crocodylus mindorensis) • krokodýl Moreletův (Crocodylus moreletii) • krokodýl nilský (Crocodylus niloticus) • krokodýl západoafrický (Crocodylus suchus) • krokodýl novoguinejský (Crocodylus novaeguineae) • krokodýl bahenní (Crocodylus palustris) • krokodýl mořský (Crocodylus porosus) • krokodýl kubánský (Crocodylus rhombifer) • krokodýl siamský (Crocodylus siamensis)
rod Mecistops
druh: krokodýl štítnatý (Mecistops cataphractus)
rod Osteolaemus
druh: krokodýl čelnatý (Osteolaemus tetraspis)
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia autoři a editory
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia CZ

Kajman brýlový: Brief Summary ( Czech )

provided by wikipedia CZ

Kajman brýlový, kajman obecný či kajman středoamerický (Caiman crocodilus známý také pod starším jménem Caiman sclerops) je poměrně malý plaz z čeledi aligátorovitých obývající poměrně rozsáhlé území Střední a Jižní Ameriky v rozmezí od Venezuely až na jih Amazonské pánve. Žije v pomalu tekoucích vodách, nížinných mokřinách a jezerech, je schopen tolerovat i slanou vodu; díky této adaptaci je také nejhojnějším zástupcem své čeledi.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia autoři a editory
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia CZ

Krokodilkaiman ( German )

provided by wikipedia DE

Der Krokodilkaiman oder Nördliche Brillenkaiman (Caiman crocodilus) ist ein Vertreter aus der Familie der Alligatoren.

Merkmale

 src=
Krokodilkaiman

Der Krokodilkaiman erreicht eine maximale Körperlänge von etwa drei Metern, die meisten Exemplare werden allerdings nicht größer als 2,50 Meter. Er besitzt ein breites Maul und ähnelt in seinen Körperproportionen eher den Echten Krokodilen. Er ist gleichmäßig grau- bis olivbraun gefärbt. Die Schädelform, die Größe sowie die Färbung sind allerdings sehr variabel.

Verbreitung

 src=
Verbreitung

Krokodilkaimane kommen in einem sehr großen Gebiet Südamerikas bis in den Norden Boliviens vor. Als einzige Art unter den Kaimanen trifft man sie außerdem im Mittelamerika bis nach Südmexiko an. Im Laufe der letzten Jahre breiteten sie sich ebenfalls im östlicher gelegenen Puerto Rico aus. Bezüglich seines Lebensraumes ist er sehr anpassungsfähig und bewohnt Seen, Flüsse, Sümpfe und sogar von Menschen angelegte Bewässerungsteiche, Stauseen und Straßengräben.

Systematik

Es sind folgende Unterarten bekannt:

  • Gemeiner Krokodilkaiman (C. crocodilus crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758))
  • Rio-Apaporis-Krokodilkaiman (C. crocodilus apaporiensis Medem, 1955)
  • Nördlicher Krokodilkaiman (C. crocodilus fuscus (Cope, 1868))
  • Nicaragua-Krokodilkaiman (C. crocodilus chiapasius (Bocourt, 1876))

Der Status von C. crocodilus chiapasius ist umstritten und er wird manchmal als identisch mit C. crocodilus fuscus betrachtet. Eine DNA-Analyse von 2008 kommt aber zum Ergebnis, dass die Abspaltung gerechtfertigt ist. Der ehemals als Unterart geführte (Südliche) Brillenkaiman (Caiman yacare) zeichnet sich vor allem durch eine dunkle Zeichnung auf der Schnauze aus. Beide Arten besitzen eine brillenstegähnliche, knöcherne Querleiste zwischen den vorderen Augenwinkeln, was zur Bezeichnung Brillenkaiman geführt hat.

Lebensweise

Krokodilkaimane bauen Hügelnester aus Erde und Pflanzenmaterial, in die sie bis zu 40 Eier legen. Die Nester befinden sich dabei meist in der Ufervegetation, manchmal jedoch auch auf schwimmenden Grasmatten oder in offenem Gelände.

Die Jungtiere ernähren sich vor allem von Insekten und Schnecken, die auch später noch einen großen Anteil der Nahrung ausmachen. Außerdem gehören zu ihrem Nahrungsspektrum Krebstiere und Fische.

Literatur

  • Charles A. Ross (Hrsg.): Krokodile und Alligatoren – Entwicklung, Biologie und Verbreitung. Orbis Verlag, Niedernhausen 2002, ISBN 978-3-572-01319-7.
  • Joachim Brock: Krokodile – Ein Leben mit Panzerechsen. Natur und Tier Verlag, Münster 1998, ISBN 978-3-931587-11-6.
  • Armando H. Escobedo-Galván, Fabio G. Cupul-Magaña & Julián A. Velasco: Misconceptions about the taxonomy and distribution of Caiman crocodilus chiapasius and C. crocodilus fuscus (Reptilia: Crocodylia: Alligatoridae). In: Zootaxa. Nr. 3015, Magnolia Press, Auckland 2011, ISSN 1175-5326, S. 66–68 (Online)

Weblinks

 src=
– Sammlung von Bildern, Videos und Audiodateien
 title=
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autoren und Herausgeber von Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia DE

Krokodilkaiman: Brief Summary ( German )

provided by wikipedia DE

Der Krokodilkaiman oder Nördliche Brillenkaiman (Caiman crocodilus) ist ein Vertreter aus der Familie der Alligatoren.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autoren und Herausgeber von Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia DE

Yuraq lagartu ( Quechua )

provided by wikipedia emerging languages

Yuraq lagartu[1][2][3][4] (Ruya lagarto)[5] icha Challwa lagartu[6] (Caiman crocodilus) nisqaqa huk lagartum, Awya Yalapi sach'a-sach'akunapi mayukunapi kawsaq, kimsa mitrukama wiñaq.

Hawa t'inkikuna

Pukyukuna

  1. Sandra Enríquez M.: Fauna Herpetológica Amazónica. Especies representativas. Abya-Yala Editing, Quito 1999. p. 18. Yurac lagartu.
  2. Territorio Autónomo de la Nación Originaria del Pueblo Kichwa de Sarayaku “Tayjasaruta”, Filial OPIP-Confeniae-Conaie: Sarayacu propone un acuerdo integral sobre autodeterminación y manejo de sus territorios. Boletín de Prensa, Quito, 15 de octubre de 2003. p. 21. Ruyac Lagartu (Caiman crocodilus).
  3. William S. Alverson, Corine Vriesendorp, Álvaro del Campo, Debra K. Moskovits, Douglas F. Stotz, Miryan García Donayre, Luis A. Borbor L.: Informe/Report No. 20, Ecuador, Perú: Cuyabeno-Güeppí. The Field Museum, Chicago 2008. p. 146. Yura lagartu.
  4. Javier Ricardo Tierra Gushqui: Elaboración del plan de manejo sustentable de los recursos naturales en las comunidades: Caspisapa, Rio Tucan y Pamiwa Kucha, provincia Francisco de Orellana. Tesis (ingeniero forestal), Escuela Superior Politécnica de Chimborazo, Riobamba 2009. p. 121. Yura lagarto.
  5. Resultados de Evaluación Forestal de Bosque de Colinas Bajas, Anexo 3H-5. Región Loreto, Iquitos 2007. p. 140. Caiman crocodilus: ruya lagarto.
  6. Pekka Soini: Resultados de una investigación preliminar de la fauna de la isla de Iquitos e islas adyacentes. Tema III: Trabajos en semicautiverio en islas. La versión original presentada al Ministerio de Agricultura en Octubre de 1975. Caiman crocodilus: lagarto blanco, challua lagarto.
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors

Yuraq lagartu: Brief Summary ( Quechua )

provided by wikipedia emerging languages

Yuraq lagartu (Ruya lagarto) icha Challwa lagartu (Caiman crocodilus) nisqaqa huk lagartum, Awya Yalapi sach'a-sach'akunapi mayukunapi kawsaq, kimsa mitrukama wiñaq.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors

Очилен кајман ( Macedonian )

provided by wikipedia emerging languages

Очилниот кајман (Caiman crocodilus) познат и под името обичен кајман е крокодиловиден рептил кој го среќаваме во поголемиот дел на Централна и Јужна Америка. Овој вид живее во мочуришта и речни системи, но подеднакво поднесува и солена и слатка вода. Поради оваа карактеристика тoj е најчесто среќаваниот вид од сите крокодиловидни животни.

Карактеристики

Овој вид на кајман може да порасне и до 3 метри на повеќето индивидуи не се подолги од 2,5 метри. Мажјаците најчесто се долги помеѓу 2 и 2,5 метри а женките се помали, односно околу 1,4 метри (види полов диморфизам). Името на овој кајман е добиено како резултат на коскениот израсток меѓу очите поради кој имаме впечаток дека носи очила. Муцката им е широка, а според телесните пропорции доста наликуваат на крокодилите. Бојата на кожата варира од сива до маслинесто зелена. Мажјаците се територијални животни, и присутна е доминантна хиерархија.

 src=
Caiman crocodylus crocodylus

Исхрана

Младите кајмани воглавно се хранат со речни без’рбетници. Као стареат, така исхраната им се збогатува со рбетници, а возрасните индивидуи ловат и цицачи. За време на сушните периоди, очилните кајмани прекинуваат да се хранат, излегуваат од водата и за закопуваат во калта каде мируваат. Понекогаш, во такви екстремни услови се забележува и појава на канибализам.

Размножување

Женките достигнуваат сексуална зрелост на возраст од 4-7 години, кога се долги околу 1,2 метри. Мажјаците достигнуваат сексуална зрелост при должина од 1,4 метри. Неколку женки можат да делат едно гнездо, што им овозможува полесна одбрана на јајцата и на младите кајмани. Поради истата причина се случува една женка да превземе родителска грижа и врз младите на други парови. Социјална хиерархија се појавува и помеѓу младите кајмани.

Подвидови

 src=
Череп на Caiman crocodilus (Linnaesus 1758)

Постојат 3 познати подвида на очилниот кајман:

Во минатото се сметало дека јакарскиот кајман е подвид на очилниот кајман.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Автори и уредници на Википедија

Очилен кајман: Brief Summary ( Macedonian )

provided by wikipedia emerging languages

Очилниот кајман (Caiman crocodilus) познат и под името обичен кајман е крокодиловиден рептил кој го среќаваме во поголемиот дел на Централна и Јужна Америка. Овој вид живее во мочуришта и речни системи, но подеднакво поднесува и солена и слатка вода. Поради оваа карактеристика тoj е најчесто среќаваниот вид од сите крокодиловидни животни.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Автори и уредници на Википедија

Spectacled caiman

provided by wikipedia EN

The spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus), also known as the white caiman,[6] common caiman,[7] and speckled caiman,[8] is a crocodilian in the family Alligatoridae. It is brownish-, greenish-, or yellowish-gray colored and has a spectacle-like ridge between its eyes, which is where its common name come from. It grows to a length of 1.4–2.5 m (4 ft 7 in – 8 ft 2 in) and a weight of 7–40 kg (15–88 lb), with males being both longer and heavier than females. Its diet varies seasonally, commonly consisting of crabs, fish, small mammals, amphibians and snails. Breeding occurs from May to August and 14–40 eggs are laid in July and August. This crocodilian has a large range and population; it is native to much of Latin America, and has been introduced to the United States, Cuba, and Puerto Rico.

Taxonomy

The spectacled caiman was described by Carl Linnaeus in 1758, originally as Lacerta crocodilus.[2] It has since been redescribed several times, including as Caiman sclerops by Schneider in 1801.[5] Although Caiman crocodilus is now the scientific name of the species, some scientists still prefer using sclerops, as having crocodilus as the scientific name for a caiman may cause confusion.[9]

The spectacled caiman has four recognized subspecies:[7][10]

  • C. c. apaporiensis (Medem, 1955), commonly known as the Rio Apaporis caiman; endemic to Colombia and possibly the Venezuelan Llanos.
  • C. c. chiapasius (Bocourt, 1876); distributed in Mexico, Central America, and northern South America.
  • C. c. crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758), the nominate subspecies, commonly known as the spectacled caiman; found in various parts of South America, such as Venezuela, Trinidad, Tobago, Brazil, etc.
  • C. c. fuscus (Cope, 1868), commonly known as the brown caiman; lives from Nicaragua to Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela.

The yacare caiman (Caiman yacare), while previously thought to be a subspecies of C. crocodilus, is now usually considered a separate species.[2]

The Rio Apaporis caiman was believed to have become extinct by 1981, when the last known specimen died in a zoo. However, a specimen was captured for the television show Extinct or Alive in 2019 and identified by DNA sampling.[11][12][13]

Characteristics

Spectacled caiman head, with the ridge between the eyes visible
Spectacled caimans in Monterrico, Guatemala

The spectacled caiman is a small to medium-sized crocodilian. Females generally grow to no more than 1.08 to 1.4 m (3 ft 7 in to 4 ft 7 in) (the lower size typical upon the onset of sexual maturity), but can rarely grow to nearly 2 m (6 ft 7 in). Adult males can regularly reach 1.5 to 1.8 m (4 ft 11 in to 5 ft 11 in) while large mature ones grow to 2.0 to 2.5 m (6 ft 7 in to 8 ft 2 in), although relatively few get to the upper size.[14] The maximum reported size for the species is 2.64 m (8 ft 8 in).[15] The body mass of most adults is between 7 and 40 kg (15 and 88 lb), with males typically being considerably heavier than females. Some males in the Llanos have been reported to grow to up to 58 kg (128 lb).[16]

The upperside of the species is mostly brownish-, greenish-, or yellowish-gray colored and has dark brown crossbands,[15] with a lighter underside. It has a greenish iris.[17] and wrinkled eyelids.[8] It changes color seasonally – during colder weather, the black pigment within its skin cells expands, making it appear darker.[18] The species has an enlarged 4th tooth, and the teeth in its lower jaw penetrate into a socket in its upper jaw. It has a long snout that tapers moderately, with an unexpanded tip.[19] Several ridges begin in front of its eyes and travel to the tip of its snout.[17] Its common name comes from a bony ridge between its eyes, which gives the appearance of a pair of spectacles.[20] The spectacled caiman is the most widely distributed New World crocodilian, and is the most geographically variable species in the Americas, making it a highly adaptable species.[21]

Biology and behavior

The spectacled caiman can move rapidly when threatened, but is usually immobile, resting on shores or partly in water. In the rainy season, males become aggressive and territorial.[16]

Hunting and diet

Usually hunting at night, the diet of the spectacled caiman varies seasonally.[16] During the wet season, it primarily eats snails and freshwater crabs, while it mostly eats fish in the dry season. Smaller specimens tend to eat more insects and freshwater shrimp, while larger ones more frequently consume mammals and fish.[22] Overall, the most common animals in this species' diet are crabs, fish, mammals, and snails.[23] Other animals that have been known to be a part of its diet include amphibians, arachnids, birds, myriapods, reptiles (lizards, snakes, and turtles), and small mammals.[22][24] Older animals are capable of taking larger, mammalian prey (e.g. wild pigs).[25] Cannibalism has been reported under such conditions.[25] It has also been known to eat plant matter; in a study of this species in Puerto Rico, about 55% of adult specimens had plants in their diet, primarily grass and seeds. About 8% of adults and 6% of juveniles in the study had gastroliths in their stomach as well.[26] Although the species has been suggested to control piranha populations, piranhas have not been found to be a normal diet component, unlike the yacare caiman. According to the Crocodilian Species List, it is probably a generalist species, being able to adapt to a variety of prey.[14][27]

Communication

The spectacled caiman uses nine different vocalizations and 13 visual displays to communicate with individuals of its species.[16] Both adults and young produce calls for group cohesion. Males are known to communicate by moving their tail to a certain position, such as making it vertical or arched. Juveniles vocalize when in distress and adult females emit calls to warn young of threats.[2]

Reproduction

The spectacled caiman reaches sexual maturity from four to seven years old, at a length of 1.2 metres (3.9 ft) for females and 1.4 metres (4.6 ft) for males. Usually, the more dominant individuals mature more quickly. Specimens choose mates and engage in copulation from May to August, the wet season.[14] The females build nests as a mound of dense vegetation, in areas that are close to water but not at risk of being flooded. The nests are over 1 metre (3.3 ft) in diameter and can be 40 centimetres (16 in) high, but the exact size depends on the resources available. Eggs are laid in July and August; the species very rarely nests in the winter, as the temperature is too low for the eggs.[16][28] Clutch size is 22 on average, but can range from 14 to 40.[14] Larger females have been known to lay larger eggs compared to smaller females.[29] Females stay close to their nests during the incubation period, as several species, such as lizards in the genus Tupinambis, have been known to destroy nests and prey on the eggs.[14] White-nosed coatis and foxes also raid nests.[22] Flooding and human egg collecting can also be a threat to the nests.[16] In a study in the Central Amazonia assessing reproductive similarities between C. crocodilus and Melanochus niger, research found that they indiscriminately separate their nests at larger distances than other species in this family, most likely to avoid predation.[30]

Temperature is important to the developing eggs, so females build their nests in a way that insulates them from extreme temperature changes. As the vegetation in the nests decays, the nests produce heat which can keep the eggs about 5 °C (9 °F) warmer than if they were insulated by mud alone.[28] Heat not only incubates the eggs, but also determines the sex of the developing caimans (temperature-dependent sex determination). When the temperature inside the nest is about 32 °C (90 °F) or higher, the caimans become female, and otherwise become male.[31] Young hatch after 90 days,[20] with 20–25 percent of eggs hatching successfully.[16] They are yellow with black spots, a coloration which fades away as they grow older,[14] with a length of 20–23 centimetres (7.9–9.1 in).[16] Parents raise their young in crèches, with one female taking care of her own, as well as several others' offspring.[32] They take care of their young for 12–18 months.[10] Young are threatened by various predators, such as raptors (like hawks)[33] and wader birds (like herons),[22] causing most to die in their first year.[16] These juveniles are also preyed upon by large fish, large snakes (such as anacondas), and other crocodilians.[22]

Distribution and habitat

The spectacled caiman has the largest range of any caiman,[9] and of any New World crocodilian.[10] It is found in various countries throughout the Americas. It lives in Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, French Guiana, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, and Venezuela, and may also be extant in Belize and Bolivia. It has been introduced to Isla de la Juventud in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Florida in the United States;[2] in the latter, it is sometimes mislabeled as the American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis).[14] Invasive populations have become established in South Florida, with isolated records further north in the state.[32] It is intolerant to cold climates, so its range is unlikely to expand to further north than Florida.[34] It usually lives in forests, inland bodies of fresh water (such as wetlands and rivers), grasslands, shrublands, and savannas, but is very adaptable.[2] It prefers habitats with calm water containing floating vegetation, usually flooding and drying seasonally. It is most common in low-lying areas, but has been found at elevations of up to 800 m (2,600 ft).[16] In Brazil, the species lives in the rivers Amazon, Araguaia, Araguari, Itapicuru, Rio Negro, Paranaíba, Solimões, Tapajós, Tocantins, and Xingu.[8] It is able to live in human-inhabited areas.[17]

The adult population of this crocodilian is estimated to be in the millions and stable.[2] About four million spectacled caimans are found in Venezuela and surveys have shown that it is expected to increase.[18] This is an example of how well the species is able to adapt.[14] However, populations are not doing well in other countries, such as Peru.[18] The population in a single area can be determined the easiest by counting individuals in the dry season at night.[16]

Threats and conservation

C. crocodilus in Monterrico, Guatemala

The skin of the spectacled caiman is covered with osteoderms, which previously caused it to not be a major commercial target for its skin. However, harvesting of the skins of this caiman and others became very common in the 1950s, due to the declining stocks of crocodiles.[10] Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the species was frequently traded, causing its population to decrease in some areas. Its skin was often exported from South America and utilized primarily for leather; at least 6 million skins were exported from Colombia from 1996 to 2015. However, conservation efforts since have caused a significant reduction in the number of skins exported.[2] In most countries, hunting this species is legal. Venezuela permits hunting every fall, provided the total number of kills in the season does not exceed 150,000.[18] Because of its adaptability and wide distribution, habitat loss does not affect the species significantly globally.[2] It is reasonably resilient to hunting as well, as hunters usually focus on large males and the species reproduces at a small size.[10] However, it is severely threatened in Colombia,[14] primarily the subspecies C. c. fuscus and sometimes C. c. crocodilus.[35]

The spectacled caiman benefits from overhunting of competitive species which occupy the same home range, as this allows it to access resources normally lost to these other species. Specimens that have been introduced to Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the United States negatively impact the native animals there. They are believed to have been the main reason for the likely extirpation of the Cuban crocodile (Crocodylus rhombifer) from the Isla de la Juventud, Cuba.[14] The species has a similar diet to the black caiman (Melanosuchus niger) – both species eat mostly insects as juveniles and fish as adults. This causes interspecific competition, making it more difficult for the black caiman's population to recover.[36] The spectacled caiman lives in parts of the Amazon rainforest that the black caiman was extirpated from.[10]

C. crocodilus at the Helsinki Tropicario Zoo aquarium in Helsinki, Finland in 2010

Conservation programs for this species are used in many countries. The most common form of conservation is the use of cropping, which consists of manually reducing the numbers of several wild and abundant species. Long-term effects of cropping have yet to be discovered; more surveys have been recommended. Farming or ranching programs have also been used as conservation efforts for the species, but seem to be more expensive and possibly less effective.[14] A conservation program in Colombia, which existed from 2004 to 2006, bred spectacled caimans in captivity and released the young into the wild at one year old. A similar program released over 15,000 juveniles into wetlands from 2005 to 2009.[2] Previously, Colombia restricted the exportation of spectacled caiman skins to ones shorter than 1.2 metres (3.9 ft), but as of 2011 there are now only size limits for some individual pieces of the skin, rather than the overall size of the skin. These limits are less effective, as large skins could accord with the size limits if cut and trimmed.[35] According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), further surveys of the species would help with future conservation plans.[2]

The spectacled caiman is listed as a species of least concern on the IUCN Red List, due to its large range and population globally, following two assessments as threatened in 1986 and 1988.[2] The subspecies C. c. crocodilus is on Appendix II of CITES,[5] C. c. apaporiensis Appendix I,[37] and C. c. fuscus Appendix II.[38]

References

  1. ^ Rio, Jonathan P.; Mannion, Philip D. (6 September 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.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Balaguera-Reina, S.A.; Velasco, A. (2019). "Caiman crocodilus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T46584A3009688. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-1.RLTS.T46584A3009688.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  4. ^ Giovanne M. Cidade; Daniel Fortier; Ascanio Daniel Rincón; Annie Schmaltz Hsiou (2019). "Taxonomic review of two fossil crocodylians from the Cenozoic of South America and its implications for the crocodylian fauna of the continent". Zootaxa. 4656 (3): 475–486. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4656.3.5. PMID 31716812. S2CID 202012442.
  5. ^ a b c "Caiman crocodilus crocodilus". CITES. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  6. ^ Franzen, Margaret Anne (2005). Huaorani resource use in the Ecuadorian Amazon. University of California, Davis. p. 181. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  7. ^ a b "ITIS Standard Report Page: Caiman crocodilus". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  8. ^ a b c Del Claro, Kleber; Oliveira, Paulo S.; Rico-Gray, Victor (11 May 2009). Tropical Biology and Conservation Management. EOLSS Publications. pp. 273–274. ISBN 978-1848262812. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
  9. ^ a b Triche, Nina (28 May 2003). "Caiman crocodilus (spectacled caiman)". Digimorph. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Velasco, A.; Ayarzagüena, J. (2010). "Spectacled Caiman crocodilus" (PDF). In Manolis, S. C.; Stevenson, C. (eds.). Crocodiles. Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan (3 ed.). Crocodile Specialist Group. pp. 10–15. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
  11. ^ "In the bombast of the American TV host, colonial science lives on". TheWire. 5 March 2020. Retrieved 5 March 2020.
  12. ^ Fusco, Thom (19 December 2019). "Nature Believe - extinct Rio Apaporis caiman rediscovered". Discovery Channel. Retrieved 19 December 2019.
  13. ^ Lindsay renick, Mayer (12 December 2019). "Rediscovery of lost caiman lead to new crocodilian mystery". rewild. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Britton, Adam. "Spectacled Caiman (Caiman crocodilus)". Crocodilian Species List. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  15. ^ a b Conant, Roger; Collins, Joseph T. (1998). A Field Guide to Reptiles & Amphibians: Eastern and Central North America (illustrated, reprint, revised ed.). Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 144. ISBN 978-0395904527. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Ojasti, Juhani (1996). Wildlife Utilization in Latin America: Current Situation and Prospects for Sustainable Management (illustrated ed.). Food and Agriculture Organization. pp. 58–62. ISBN 978-9251033166. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  17. ^ a b c "Spectacled Caiman - Caiman crocodilus". World Association of Zoos and Aquariums. Archived from the original on 31 October 2013.
  18. ^ a b c d Alderton, David (1991). "Common Caiman Caiman crocodilus.". Crocodiles & Alligators of the World (illustrated ed.). Facts on File. pp. 131–135. ISBN 978-0816022977. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
  19. ^ Smith, Hobart M.; Brodie, Edmund D. (25 February 2014). Reptiles of North America: A Guide to Field Identification (illustrated ed.). St. Martin's Press. p. 208. ISBN 978-1466864818. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  20. ^ a b "Spectacled Caiman". Lincoln Park Zoo. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  21. ^ Velasco, Alvaro; Ayarzaguena, Jose (2010). Spectacled Caiman (Caiman crocodilus). Venezuela: Fundación La Salle de Ciencias NaturalesApartado. p. 10.
  22. ^ a b c d e Terry, Kayla. "Caiman crocodilus (Common caiman, Spectacled caiman)". Animaldiversity.org. Retrieved 13 March 2022.
  23. ^ Thorbjarnarson, John B. (March 1993). "Diet of the spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus) in the central Venezuelan Llanos". Herpetologica. Allen Press. 49 (1): 108–117. JSTOR 3892691.
  24. ^ "Spectacled Caiman (Caiman crocodilus)".
  25. ^ a b "Crocodilian Species - Spectacled Caiman (Caiman crocodilus)".
  26. ^ Bontemps, Damien R.; Cuevas, Elvira; Ortiz, Eileen; Wunderle, Joseph M.; Joglar, Rafael L. (18 March 2016). "Diet of the non-native spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus) in Puerto Rico" (PDF). Management of Biological Invasions. 7 (3): 287–296. doi:10.3391/mbi.2016.7.3.08. Retrieved 2 April 2019.
  27. ^ Ross, Charles A.; Garnett, Stephen (1989). Crocodiles and Alligators (illustrated ed.). New York: Facts on File. pp. 58–73. ISBN 978-0816021741. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
  28. ^ a b Magnusson, W.E. Vliet, K.A. Pooley, A.C. and Whitaker, R. "Reproduction." Crocodiles and Alligators (illustrated ed.). Ross, Charles A. Garnett, Stephen (1989). New York: Facts on File. pp. 118–124. ISBN 0816021740.
  29. ^ Campos, Zilca; Magnusson, William E.; Sanaiotti, Tânia; Coutinho, Marcos E. (April 2008). "Reproductive trade-offs in Caiman crocodilus crocodilus and Caiman crocodilus yacare: Implications for size-related management quotas". Herpetological Journal. 18 (2): 91–96. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  30. ^ Silveira, Ronis Da; Magnusson, William Ernest; Campos, Zilca (December 1997). "Monitoring the Distribution, Abundance and Breeding Areas of Caiman crocodilus crocodilus and Melanosuchus niger in the Anavilhanas Archipelago, Central Amazonia, Brazil". Journal of Herpetology. 31 (4): 514. doi:10.2307/1565603. JSTOR 1565603.
  31. ^ Lang, J.W. "Sex Determination." Crocodiles and Alligators (illustrated ed.). Ross, Charles A. Garnett, Stephen (1989). New York: Facts on File. pp. 118–124. ISBN 0816021740.
  32. ^ a b Somma, Louis A.; Fuller, Pam. "Common Caiman (Caiman crocodilus)". U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  33. ^ "Caiman crocodilus (Spectacled Caiman)" (PDF). Sta.uwi.edu. Retrieved 13 March 2022.
  34. ^ "Caiman". Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  35. ^ a b Webb, Grahame; Brien, Matthew; Manolis, Charlie; Medrano-Bitar, Sergio (6 May 2012). "Predicting total lengths of spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus) from skin measurements: A tool for managing the skin trade" (PDF). Herpetological Conservation and Biology. 7 (1): 16–26. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
  36. ^ Laverty, Theresa M.; Dobson, Andrew P. (March 2013). "Dietary overlap between black caimans and spectacled caimans in the Peruvian Amazon". Herpetologica. 69 (1): 91–101. doi:10.1655/HERPETOLOGICA-D-12-00031. S2CID 86391999.
  37. ^ "Caiman crocodilus fuscus". CITES. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  38. ^ "Caiman crocodilus apaporiensis". CITES. Retrieved 30 March 2019.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN

Spectacled caiman: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

The spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus), also known as the white caiman, common caiman, and speckled caiman, is a crocodilian in the family Alligatoridae. It is brownish-, greenish-, or yellowish-gray colored and has a spectacle-like ridge between its eyes, which is where its common name come from. It grows to a length of 1.4–2.5 m (4 ft 7 in – 8 ft 2 in) and a weight of 7–40 kg (15–88 lb), with males being both longer and heavier than females. Its diet varies seasonally, commonly consisting of crabs, fish, small mammals, amphibians and snails. Breeding occurs from May to August and 14–40 eggs are laid in July and August. This crocodilian has a large range and population; it is native to much of Latin America, and has been introduced to the United States, Cuba, and Puerto Rico.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN

Caiman crocodilus ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by wikipedia ES

El caimán de anteojos (Caiman crocodilus), también conocido como cachirre, blanco, guagipal, babilla o baba, es una especie de reptil carnívoro que habita los diferentes tipos de cursos de agua dulce, ciénagas y pantanos en el sur de México, Centroamérica y el noroeste de América del Sur.[3]​ Fue introducido en Puerto Rico como mascota en los años 1960 y 1970, y actualmente se encuentra en todos los cuerpos de agua de la isla.[cita requerida]

Los machos llegan a medir entre 1,8 y 2,5 m de largo, y las hembras 1,4 m. Se alimentan de diferentes especies de animales: crustáceos, peces, anfibios, reptiles, aves y mamíferos grandes y pequeños.

El apareamiento ocurre en la estación lluviosa. La hembra hace el nido aglomerando pequeñas cantidades de vegetación seca y tierra y pone allí de 15 a 40 huevos. La incubación dura un promedio de 13 semanas. Al nacer, las crías miden unos 20 cm y son protegidas de forma agresiva por la hembra.

Subespecies

 src=
Cráneo de Caiman crocodilus (Linnaeus 1758).

Según King y Burke (1989) son cuatro:

  • C. c. apaporensis Medem, 1955
  • C. c. crocodilus Linnaeus, 1758
  • C. c. chiapasius Boucurt, 1876
  • C. c. fuscus Cope, 1868

Los estudios de ADN sugieren que C. c. fuscus y C. c. chiapasius forman un grupo, en tanto que la genética molecular indicaría que C. c. apaporensis es sinónimo de C. c. crocodilus, del cual procedería Caiman yacare.

 src=
Caiman crocodilus crocodilus.

Referencias

  1. Crocodile Specialist Group (1996). «Caiman crocodilus». Lista Roja de especies amenazadas de la UICN 2015.2 (en inglés). ISSN 2307-8235. Consultado el 30 de agosto de 2015.
  2. Caiman crocodilus (Spectacled caiman) (Caiman sclerops); UniProt. Consultada el 30 de diciembre de 2012.
  3. «Especies de Costa Rica. Caiman crocodilus. Linnaeus 1758. (Caimán, guagipal)». Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad. Archivado desde el original el 24 de diciembre de 2013. Consultado el 21 de diciembre de 2013.

Bibliografía

  • Ayarzagüena Sanz, J., Velasco, A. (1995). Situación actual de las poblaciones de Baba (Caiman crocodilus) sometidas a aprovechamiento comercial en los llanos venezolanos. Nº 5 de Publicaciones de la Asociación de Amigos de Doñana. Editor Asociación Amigos de Doñana, 71 pp.
  • King F.W., R.L. Burke (1989) Crocodilian, Tuatara and Turtle Species of the World. A taxonomic and geographic reference. Assoc. Systematics Collections, Washington, D.C.
  • Rodríguez, Miguel A. (2000) Cocodrilos (Archosauria: Crocodilia) de la Región Neotropical; Biota Colombiana 1(2): 135-140.
  • Staten, M.A. , Dixon, J.R. (1977). Breeding biology of the spectacled caiman, Caiman crocodilus crocodilus, in the Venezuelan Llanos. Fish and Wildlife Service, Wildlife Research Report 5. United States Dept. of the Interior, Washington, D.C.
  • Crocodilian Species list from the Florida Museum of Natural History.

 title=
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autores y editores de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia ES

Caiman crocodilus: Brief Summary ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by wikipedia ES

El caimán de anteojos (Caiman crocodilus), también conocido como cachirre, blanco, guagipal, babilla o baba, es una especie de reptil carnívoro que habita los diferentes tipos de cursos de agua dulce, ciénagas y pantanos en el sur de México, Centroamérica y el noroeste de América del Sur.​ Fue introducido en Puerto Rico como mascota en los años 1960 y 1970, y actualmente se encuentra en todos los cuerpos de agua de la isla.[cita requerida]

Los machos llegan a medir entre 1,8 y 2,5 m de largo, y las hembras 1,4 m. Se alimentan de diferentes especies de animales: crustáceos, peces, anfibios, reptiles, aves y mamíferos grandes y pequeños.

El apareamiento ocurre en la estación lluviosa. La hembra hace el nido aglomerando pequeñas cantidades de vegetación seca y tierra y pone allí de 15 a 40 huevos. La incubación dura un promedio de 13 semanas. Al nacer, las crías miden unos 20 cm y son protegidas de forma agresiva por la hembra.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autores y editores de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia ES

Kaiman betaurrekodun ( Basque )

provided by wikipedia EU

Kaiman betaurrekoduna (Caiman crocodilus) Caiman generoko animalia da. Narrastien barruko Alligatoridae familian sailkatuta dago.

2,6 m inguru luzea, buru luze samarra eta muturra luzexka duena. Goiko masailean 19-20 hortz izaten ditu alde bakoitzean eta behekoan 18-20. Helduak beltzaranak dira eta gazteak oliba kolorekoak.[2]

Erreferentziak

Ikus, gainera

(RLQ=window.RLQ||[]).push(function(){mw.log.warn("Gadget "ErrefAurrebista" was not loaded. Please migrate it to use ResourceLoader. See u003Chttps://eu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berezi:Gadgetaku003E.");});
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipediako egileak eta editoreak
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EU

Kaiman betaurrekodun: Brief Summary ( Basque )

provided by wikipedia EU

Kaiman betaurrekoduna (Caiman crocodilus) Caiman generoko animalia da. Narrastien barruko Alligatoridae familian sailkatuta dago.

2,6 m inguru luzea, buru luze samarra eta muturra luzexka duena. Goiko masailean 19-20 hortz izaten ditu alde bakoitzean eta behekoan 18-20. Helduak beltzaranak dira eta gazteak oliba kolorekoak.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipediako egileak eta editoreak
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EU

Silmälasikaimaani ( Finnish )

provided by wikipedia FI

Silmälasikaimaani (Caiman crocodilus) on alligaattorien heimoon kuuluva kaimaanilaji.

Koko ja ulkonäkö

Silmälasikaimaanikoiras kasvaa kaksi- tai jopa kolmimetriseksi, naaras on pituudeltaan korkeintaan kaksimetrinen. Painoa voi olla jopa 300 kiloa. Nuoret kaimaanit ovat keltaisia, mutta vanhetessaan kuviot tummenevat. Aikuisen väritys, koko ja kallon muoto vaihtelevat asuinseudun mukaan, mutta silmälasikaimaanit ovat yleisväriltään selästä oliivinvihreitä. Selässä on tummia, epäselviä poikkijuovia, sen kyljet ovat harmaankirjavat ja vatsapuoli kellanvihreä. Silmälasikaimaanilla kulkee kuonon tyvestä luinen harjanne, joka reunustaa myös silmiä. Harjanne muistuttaa silmälasinsankoja, josta laji on saanut nimensä.

Levinneisyys

Silmälasikaimaaneja elää Keski-Amerikan ja Etelä-Amerikan pohjoisosassa. Sen luontainen levinneisyys kulkee Meksikosta Peruun ja Brasiliaan. Silmälasikaimaaneja elää nykyisin myös siirrettynä vieraslajina Kuubassa, Puerto Ricossa ja Yhdysvaltojen[1] Floridassa.

Elintavat

Silmälasikaimaani asustaa järvissä ja kosteilla soilla. Se viihtyy parhaiten hitaasti virtaavissa avoimissa vesistöissä, mutta saattaa löytyä myös lähes umpeen kasvaneista vesistöistä, kunhan vain ruokaa riittää. Silmälasikaimaani on aktiivisimmillaan öisin ja viettää suuren osan ajastaan vedessä hiljaa lojuen. Se siirtyy vuoroin varjoon ja vuoroin aurinkoon sekä vedessä, että maalla. Kaimaani liikkuu yleensä laiskasti, mutta ui nopeasti ja voi tehdä nopeita yllätyshyökkäyksiä voimakkaalla hännällään. Kuivana kautena se voi kaivautua mutaan odottamaan sateita, vaikka toisaalta se hyötyy veden ollessa matalalla, kun se voi napata loukkuun jääneitä kaloja.

Kaimaaninpoikaset syövät lähinnä hyönteisiä, äyriäisiä ja nilviäisiä. Kasvettuaan ne syövät kaloja, sammakoita, kilpikonnia, ja muita matelijoita, vesilintuja ja haaskoja. Toisinaan kaimaanit voivat syödä lajitoveriensa poikasia. Täysikasvuisena silmälasikaimaani voi saalistaa jo pienehköjä nisäkkäitä. Kaimaanit jahtaavat kaloja joskus ryhmänä. Tällöin ne ahdistavat kalaparven yhdessä matalikolle, josta ne on helpompi pyydystää. Tyypillisempi tapa on kuitenkin yllätyshyökkäys hivuttautumalla lähelle saalista ja saaliin nappaaminen nopealla pyrähdyksellä. Silmälasikaimaanin elinikä on yli 25 vuotta.

Lisääntyminen

Silmälasikaimaaneilla on kiima yleensä sadekautena, eli tavallisesti huhti-toukokuussa. Ne kokoontuvat yhteen lisääntymistä varten. Koiraat taistelevat naaraista ja voivat loukkaantua pahastikin. Yleensä isoimmat koiraat pääsevät parittelemaan usean naaraan kanssa. Naaras rakentaa kolmen kuukauden päästä suuren pesäkummun risuista, vesikasveista ja muusta kasviaineksesta. Naaras munii 14-40 munaa. Joskus samassa pesässä on useamman naaraan munat, jotka ne peittävät huolellisesti. Emo vartioi pesää kolme kuukautta ja puolustaa sitä pesärosvoilta. Vähän ennen munien kuoriutumista se kaivaa munat esiin. Poikaset menevät heti kuoriuduttuaan veteen ja ovat heti valmiita saalistamaan emon vartioidessa niitä. Tarpeen tullen emo voi kuivana kautena siirtää poikasia lammikosta toiseen yön aikana, jolloin se pitää yhteyttä poikasiin äänellä ja hajulla.

Uhat ja suojelu

Silmälasikaimaaneja on runsaasti ja laji on sopeutuvainen. Kokonaiskanta on ainakin miljoona yksilöä. Sitä ei pienen kokonsa vuoksi vainota samalla tavalla kuin isompia krokotiililajeja ja laji on jopa hyötynyt, kun vesistöt on joskus tyhjennetty kilpailijoista. Kuitenkin silmälasikaimaaneja pyydetään paljon alligaattorin nahan korvikkeeksi ja lemmikeiksi, joista Floridan populaatio onkin saanut alkunsa. Monet Etelä-Amerikan valtiot säätelevät lajin metsästystä. Salametsästystä esiintyy kuitenkin yhä.

Lähteet

  1. a b Crocodile Specialist Group: Caiman crocodilus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2014.1. 1996. International Union for Conservation of Nature, IUCN, Iucnredlist.org. Viitattu 21.6.2014. (englanniksi)
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedian tekijät ja toimittajat
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia FI

Silmälasikaimaani: Brief Summary ( Finnish )

provided by wikipedia FI

Silmälasikaimaani (Caiman crocodilus) on alligaattorien heimoon kuuluva kaimaanilaji.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedian tekijät ja toimittajat
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia FI

Caïman à lunettes ( French )

provided by wikipedia FR

Caiman crocodilus

Caiman crocodilus, le Caïman à lunettes, est une espèce de crocodiliens de la famille des Alligatoridae[1]. Sa présence en France se limite à Guyane où son commerce et sa détention sont interdits.

Caractéristiques

Le caïman à lunettes est un crocodilien de taille petite à moyenne. Les femelles ne mesurent généralement pas plus de 1,08 à 1,4 m (la taille la plus basse typique au début de la maturité sexuelle), mais peuvent rarement atteindre près de 2 m. Les mâles adultes peuvent régulièrement atteindre 1,5 à 1,8 m tandis que les grands mâles matures atteignent 2,0 à 2,5 m, bien que relativement peu d'entre eux atteignent la taille supérieure. La taille maximale signalée pour l'espèce est de 2,64 m[2]. La masse corporelle de la plupart des adultes est comprise entre 7 et 40 kg, les mâles étant généralement beaucoup plus lourds que les femelles. Il a été rapporté que certains mâles des Llanos atteignent jusqu'à 58 kg[3].

La face supérieure de cette espèce est principalement de couleur brunâtre, verdâtre ou gris jaunâtre et présente des bandes transversales brun foncé, avec une face inférieure plus claire. Il a un iris verdâtre. et les paupières ridées. Il change de couleur selon les saisons - par temps plus froid, le pigment noir dans les cellules de sa peau se dilate, ce qui le rend plus sombre[4]. L'espèce a une 4e dent élargie et les dents de sa mâchoire inférieure pénètrent dans une cavité de sa mâchoire supérieure. Il a un long museau qui se rétrécit modérément, avec une pointe non dilatée. Plusieurs crêtes commencent devant ses yeux et se déplacent jusqu'au bout de son museau. Son nom commun vient d'une crête osseuse entre ses yeux, qui a l'apparence d'une paire de lunettes[5].

Biologie et comportement

Le caïman à lunettes peut se déplacer rapidement lorsqu'il est menacé, mais il est généralement immobile, reposant sur les rives ou en partie dans l'eau. Pendant la saison des pluies, les mâles deviennent agressifs et territoriaux[3].

Chasse et alimentation

Généralement chassant la nuit, le régime alimentaire du caïman à lunettes varie selon les saisons. Pendant la saison des pluies, il mange principalement des escargots et des crabes d'eau douce, alors qu'il mange principalement du poisson pendant la saison sèche. Les plus petits spécimens ont tendance à manger plus d'insectes, tandis que les plus gros consomment plus fréquemment des mammifères et des poissons. Dans l'ensemble, les animaux les plus courants dans le régime alimentaire de cette espèce sont les crabes, les poissons, les mammifères et les escargots[6]. Parmi les autres animaux connus pour faire partie de son régime alimentaire, citons les amphibiens, les arachnides, les oiseaux, les myriapodes et les reptiles. Il est également connu pour manger des matières végétales; dans une étude consacrée à cette espèce à Porto Rico, environ 55 % des spécimens adultes avaient des plantes dans leur alimentation, principalement de l'herbe et des graines. Environ 8 % des adultes et 6 % des juvéniles de l'étude avaient également des gastrolithes dans leur estomac. Bien qu'il ait été suggéré que l'espèce contrôle les populations de piranhas, les piranhas ne se sont pas avérés être un élément normal du régime alimentaire, contrairement au caïman yacare. Selon la liste des espèces de crocodiliens, il s'agit probablement d'une espèce généraliste, capable de s'adapter à une variété de proies[7].

Communication

Le caïman à lunettes utilise neuf vocalisations différentes et 13 affichages visuels pour communiquer avec des individus de son espèce[3]. Les adultes comme les jeunes produisent des appels à la cohésion du groupe. Les mâles sont connus pour communiquer en déplaçant leur queue dans une certaine position, telle que la rendre verticale ou arquée. Les juvéniles vocalisent lorsqu'ils se sentent en danger et les femelles adultes émettent des appels pour avertir les jeunes de menaces.

Reproduction

Caiman crocodilus pair.jpg

Le caïman à lunettes atteint la maturité sexuelle entre quatre et sept ans, quand il atteint une longueur de 1,2 mètre pour les femelles et de 1,4 mètre pour les mâles. Habituellement, les individus les plus dominants mûrissent plus rapidement. Ils choisissent des partenaires et se livrent à la copulation de mai à août à la saison des pluies. Les femelles construisent des nids sous forme d'un monticule de végétation dense, dans des zones proches de l'eau mais qui ne risquent pas d'être inondées. Les nids mesurent plus d'un mètre de diamètre et peuvent mesurer 40 centimètres de haut, mais la taille exacte dépend des ressources disponibles. Les œufs sont pondus en juillet et août ; l'espèce nidifie très rarement en hiver, car la température est trop basse pour les œufs[8]. Le nombre d'œufs est de 22 en moyenne, mais peut varier entre 14 et 40. On sait que les femelles plus grandes pondent des œufs plus gros que les femelles plus petites[9]. Les femelles restent près de leurs nids pendant la période d'incubation, car plusieurs espèces, comme les lézards du genre Tupinambis, sont connues pour détruire les nids et se nourrir des œufs. Les inondations et la collecte d'œufs par les hommes peuvent également constituer une menace pour les nids[3].

 src=
Los Llanos, Venezuela

La température est importante pour le développement des œufs, de sorte que les femelles construisent leurs nids de manière à les isoler des changements de température extrêmes. Au fur et à mesure que la végétation des nids se décompose, les nids produisent de la chaleur qui peut garder les œufs à une température environ de 5° C plus élevée que s'ils étaient isolés par la boue seule. La chaleur n'incube pas seulement les œufs, mais détermine également le sexe des caïmans en développement (détermination du sexe en fonction de la température). Lorsque la température à l'intérieur du nid est d'environ 32° C ou plus, les caïmans deviennent des femelles et, autrement, deviennent des mâles. Les jeunes éclosent après 90 jours, 20 à 25 pour cent des œufs éclosent avec succès. Ils sont jaunes avec des taches noires, une coloration qui s'estompe avec l'âge, et d'une longueur de 20 à 23 centimètres. Les parents élèvent leurs petits dans des "garderies", une femelle s'occupant de sa progéniture, ainsi que de la progéniture de plusieurs autres. Les caïmans prennent soin de leurs petits pendant 12 à 18 mois. Les jeunes sont menacés par divers prédateurs, tels que les rapaces et les échassiers, provoquant la mort de la plupart d'entre eux au cours de leur première année[3].

Répartition et habitat

Caiman crocodylus Distribution.png

Le caïman à lunettes est le plus répandu de tous les caïmans et de tous les crocodiliens du Nouveau Monde. Cette espèce se rencontre en Amérique centrale et en Amérique du Sud[1] : au Brésil, en Colombie, au Costa Rica, en Équateur, au Salvador, au Guatemala, au Honduras, au Mexique, au Nicaragua, au Panama, au Pérou, au Suriname, en Guyane, au Guyana, à Trinité-et-Tobago, au Venezuela et en Bolivie. Elle a été introduite à Cuba, à Porto Rico et en Floride aux États-Unis, où il est parfois mal étiqueté comme Alligator d'Amérique (Alligator mississippiensis). Des populations envahissantes se sont établies dans le sud de la Floride, avec des signalements isolés plus au nord de l'État. Il est intolérant aux climats froids, il est donc peu probable que son aire de répartition s'étende plus au nord que la Floride[10]. Il vit généralement dans les forêts, les plans d'eau douce intérieurs (tels que les zones humides et les rivières), les prairies, les arbustes et les savanes, mais il est très adaptable. Il préfère les habitats aux eaux calmes contenant de la végétation flottante, inondant et séchant généralement de façon saisonnière. Il est plus commun dans les zones basses, mais a été trouvé à des altitudes allant jusqu'à 800 mètres. Au Brésil, l'espèce vit dans les rivières Amazone, Araguaia, Araguari, Itapicuru, Rio Negro, Paranaíba, Solimões, Tapajós, Tocantins et Xingu. Il est capable de vivre dans des zones habitées par l'homme.

La population adulte de ce crocodilien est estimée à plusieurs millions et stable. Environ quatre millions de caïmans à lunettes se trouvent au Venezuela et des études ont montré que celle-ci devrait augmenter, ce qui montre à quel point l'espèce est capable de s'adapter, néanmoins dans d'autres pays, comme au Pérou, les populations ne se portent pas bien. La population dans une seule zone peut être déterminée le plus facilement en comptant les individus pendant la saison sèche pendant la nuit[3].

Liste des sous-espèces

 src=
C. crocodilus à Monterrico, Guatemala

Selon Reptarium Reptile Database (23 janvier 2014)[11], ce reptile est représenté par 4 sous-espèces :

  • Caiman crocodilus crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758) ;
  • Caiman crocodilus apaporiensis Medem, 1955 ;
  • Caiman crocodilus chiapasius (Bocourt, 1876) ;
  • Caiman crocodilus fuscus (Cope, 1868).

Publications originales

  • Bocourt, 1876 : Note sur quelques reptiles de l'Isthme de Tehuantepec (Mexique) donnés par M. Sumichrast au muséum. Journal de Zoologie, vol. 5, p. 386-411 (texte intégral).
  • Cope, 1868 : On the crocodilian genus Perosuchus. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, vol. 20, p. 203 (texte intégral)
  • Linnaeus, 1758 : Systema naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis, ed. 10 (texte intégral).
  • Medem, 1955 : A new subspecies of Caiman sclerops from Colombia. Fieldiana, vol. 37, no 11, p. 339-343 (texte intégral).

Notes et références

  1. a et b Reptarium Reptile Database, consulté lors d'une mise à jour du lien externe
  2. Roger Conant et Joseph T. Collins, A Field Guide to Reptiles & Amphibians : Eastern and Central North America, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1998, illustrated, reprint, revised éd., 616 p. (ISBN 978-0-395-90452-7, lire en ligne Inscription nécessaire), 144
  3. a b c d e et f Juhani Ojasti, Wildlife Utilization in Latin America : Current Situation and Prospects for Sustainable Management, Food and Agriculture Organization, 1996, illustrated éd., 58–62 p. (ISBN 978-92-5-103316-6, lire en ligne)
  4. David Alderton, Crocodiles & Alligators of the World, Facts on File, 1991, illustrated éd., 131–135 p. (ISBN 978-0-8160-2297-7, lire en ligne Inscription nécessaire), « Common Caiman Caiman crocodilus. »
  5. « Spectacled Caiman », sur Lincoln Park Zoo (consulté le 1er avril 2019)
  6. (en) John B. Thorbjarnarson, « Diet of the spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus) in the central Venezuelan Llanos », Allen Press, vol. 49, no 1,‎ mars 1993, p. 108–117 (JSTOR )
  7. Charles A. Ross et Stephen Garnett, Crocodiles and Alligators, New York, Facts on File, 1989, illustrated éd., 58–73 p. (ISBN 978-0-8160-2174-1, lire en ligne)
  8. (en) Magnusson, W.E. Vliet, K.A. Pooley, A.C. and Whitaker, R. "Reproduction." Crocodiles and Alligators (illustrated ed.). Ross, Charles A. Garnett, Stephen (1989). New York: Facts on File. pp. 118–124. (ISBN 0816021740).
  9. (en) Zilca Campos, William E. Magnusson, Tânia Sanaiotti et Marcos E. Coutinho, « Reproductive trade-offs in Caiman crocodilus crocodilus and Caiman crocodilus yacare: Implications for size-related management quotas », Herpetological Journal, vol. 18, no 2,‎ avril 2008, p. 91–96 (lire en ligne, consulté le 30 mars 2019)
  10. (en) « Caiman », sur Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (consulté le 7 avril 2019)
  11. Reptarium Reptile Database, consulté le 23 janvier 2014
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Auteurs et éditeurs de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia FR

Caïman à lunettes: Brief Summary ( French )

provided by wikipedia FR

Caiman crocodilus

Caiman crocodilus, le Caïman à lunettes, est une espèce de crocodiliens de la famille des Alligatoridae. Sa présence en France se limite à Guyane où son commerce et sa détention sont interdits.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Auteurs et éditeurs de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia FR

Caimán común ( Galician )

provided by wikipedia gl Galician

O caimán común[3] (Caimán crocodilus) é un réptil crocodilio pertencente á familia dos aligatóridos, nativo de América central e do norte de América do Sur.

Descrición

É un crocodilio de modestas dimensións, medindo os adultos de 2 a 2,5 m. É de cor olivácea apagada e ten un relevo óseo diante dos ollos, do cal provén o seu outro nome común: caimán de anteollos[3].

Bioloxía

Vive en toda clase de ambientes húmidos de auga doce, da cal sae raramente se non é obrigado pola seca; neste caso, refúxiase na lama. De día flota na superficie, mentres que á noite se fai máis activo. Os machos son territoriais e establecen entre eles unha precisa xerarquía. Aínda que non está publicamente documentado, é posible que varias femias poñan os seus ovos nun mesmo niño, compartido e defendido por todas elas.

Alimentación

Os adultos aliméntanse doutros réptiles, peixes, anfibios e aves mariñas.

Reprodución

As femias poñen de 14 a 40 ovos en montes de terra e vexetación en fermentación, na beira da auga, ou sobre masas flotantes de material vexetal entrelazado.

Conservación

Aínda que intensamente cazado pola súa pel, o Caiman crocodilus, beneficiouse da construción de encoros de auga artificiais, que contribuíron a un aumento significativo da súa poboación.

Notas

  1. Crocodile Specialist Group. "{{{taxon}}}". Lista Vermella de especies ameazadas. (en inglés). Unión Internacional para a Conservación da Natureza.
  2. Caiman crocodilus (Spectacled caiman) (Caiman sclerops); UniProt. Consultada o 30 de decembro de 2012.
  3. 3,0 3,1 Luís Daviña Facal (2000): Diccionario das ciencias da natureza e da saúde. Tomo 2. C. A Coruña, Deputación da Coruña, páx. 720. ISBN 84-95335-46-8

Véxase tamén

Outros artigos

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autores e editores de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia gl Galician

Caimán común: Brief Summary ( Galician )

provided by wikipedia gl Galician

O caimán común (Caimán crocodilus) é un réptil crocodilio pertencente á familia dos aligatóridos, nativo de América central e do norte de América do Sur.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autores e editores de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia gl Galician

Kajman naočar ( Croatian )

provided by wikipedia hr Croatian

Kajman naočarac[1] (latinski: Caiman crocodilus), poznat i pod imenom obični kajman, je neotropski gmaz iz porodice aligatora (Alligatoridae) s najvećim područjem rasprostranjenosti među vrstama dotične porodice. Naseljava sve tipove močvarnih i riječnih staništa Srednje i Južne Amerike.

Obilježja

Ova vrsta kajmana može narasti do tri metra, no većina jedinki nije duža od 2,5 metra. Njuška im je široka a tjelesne proporcije su mu vrlo slične onima pravih krokodila. Boja mu je ravnomjerno siva do maslinasto zelena. Oblik lubanje, veličin kao i boja su vrlo različiti, a vrsta ima i više podvrsta. Ranije se Jakare kajman smatrao njegovom podvrstom. Vrsta je dobila ime po koštanom grebenu iznad očiju.

Mužjaci su izraženo teritorijalne životinje gdje uspostavljaju dominacijsku hijerarhiju.

Prehrana

Mladunci se uglavnom hrane riječnim beskralješnjacima. Sa starošću, prehrana se sve više obogaćuje svitkovcima, a neki mogu lako loviti i velike sisavce. U sušnim periodima godine kajmani naočarci se prestaju hraniti, izlaze iz vode i zakapaju se u blato. Pod ovakvim uvjetima dolazi i do pojave kanibalizma.

Razmnožavanje

Ženke postaju spolno zrele sa 4-7 godina starosti, kada su 1,2 m dugačke. Mužjaci spolnu zrelost stječu kada narastu na 1,4 m dužine. Nekoliko ženki može dijeliti jedno gnijezdo koje grade uz rub vode kao humak od zemlje i trule vegetacije ili na splavi od plutajućeg bilja. Zajedničko gnijezdo kao strategija omogućava lakšu obranu jaja i mladih. Radi istog cilja, događa se da jedna ženka prihvati hraniteljsku i obrambenu ulogu za mladunce nekoliko parova. Socijalna hijerarhija se uspostavlja već među mladuncima.

Sistematika

Vrsta kajmana naočara obuhvaća, ovisno o autorima, tri odnosno četiri podvrste:

  • C. c. apaporiensis - rasprostranjen u rijeci Rio Apaporis
  • C. c. crocodilus – rasprostranjen u Kolumbiji, Peruu i dijelovima Amazone (Brazil)
  • C. c. fuscus - rasprostranjen u Meksiku
  • C. c. yacare – većina autora smatra je sestrinskom vrstom

Izvori

  1. Životinje, velika ilustrirana enciklopedija, Izdavač: Mozaik knjiga, Zagreb ISBN 953-196-088-7

Drugi projekti

Commons-logo.svgU Wikimedijinu spremniku nalazi se članak na temu: Kajmanu naočaruWikispecies-logo.svgWikivrste imaju podatke o: Kajmanu naočaru
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autori i urednici Wikipedije
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia hr Croatian

Kajman naočar: Brief Summary ( Croatian )

provided by wikipedia hr Croatian

Kajman naočarac (latinski: Caiman crocodilus), poznat i pod imenom obični kajman, je neotropski gmaz iz porodice aligatora (Alligatoridae) s najvećim područjem rasprostranjenosti među vrstama dotične porodice. Naseljava sve tipove močvarnih i riječnih staništa Srednje i Južne Amerike.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autori i urednici Wikipedije
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia hr Croatian

Caiman crocodilus ( Italian )

provided by wikipedia IT

Il caimano dagli occhiali (Caiman crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758)), noto anche come caimano bianco,[6] caimano comune[7] o caimano maculato,[8] è un coccodrillo di medie dimensioni della famiglia Alligatoridae. Presenta una colorazione brunastra, verdastra o grigio-giallastro e una cresta simile al ponte degli occhiali tra gli occhi, da cui deriva il suo nome comune. Questo animale può cresce fino a 1,4–2,5 metri di lunghezza, per un peso di 7–40 chilogrammi, con i maschi che sono generalmente più lunghi e pesanti delle femmine. La sua dieta varia stagionalmente, ed è comunemente composta da granchi, pesci, mammiferi e lumache. La riproduzione avviene da maggio ad agosto e in luglio e agosto vengono deposte dalle 14 alle 40 uova. Questo coccodrillo ha un vasto areale e popolazione; è originario di gran parte dell'America Latina[9] ed è stato introdotto negli Stati Uniti, Cuba e Porto Rico.

Tassonomia

Il caimano dagli occhiali fu descritto da Carlo Linneo nel 1758, venendo originariamente nominato come Lacerta crocodilus.[2] Da allora è stato ridescritto più volte, anche come Caiman sclerops da Schneider, nel 1801.[4] Sebbene Caiman crocodilus sia ora il nome scientifico della specie, alcuni scienziati preferiscono ancora usare sclerops, poiché avere crocodilus come nome scientifico per un caimano può creare confusione.[10]

Il caimano dagli occhiali ha quattro sottospecie riconosciute:[9]

  • C. c. apaporiensis (Medem,, 1955) - comunemente noto come caimano del Rio Apaporis; endemico della Colombia e forse dei Llanos venezuelani;
  • C. c. chiapasius (Bocourt, 1876) - distribuito in Messico, America Centrale e Sud America settentrionale.
  • C. c. crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758) - la sottospecie nominale, comunemente nota come caimano dagli occhiali; distribuita in varie parti del Sud America, come Venezuela, Trinidad, Tobago, Brasile, ecc.;
  • C. c. fuscus (Cope, 1868) - comunemente noto come il caimano bruno; vive dal Nicaragua in Colombia, Ecuador e Venezuela;

Originariamente, il caimano yacare (Caiman yacare) era considerata una sottospecie di C. crocodilus, ma oggi è generalmente considerato una specie separata.[2]

Si credeva che il caimano del Rio Apaporis si fosse estinto nel 1981, quando l'ultimo esemplare conosciuto morì in uno zoo. Tuttavia, un esemplare è stato catturato all'interno programma televisivo Extinct or Alive nel 2019 e identificato mediante campionamento del DNA.[11][12][13]

Descrizione

 src=
Primo piano della testa, a Llanos, Venezuela

Il caimano dagli occhiali è un coccodrillo di piccole-medie dimensioni. Le femmine generalmente crescono fino a non più di 1,08-1,4 metri (le dimensioni inferiori sono tipiche dell'inizio della maturità sessuale), ma raramente possono raggiungere anche i 2 metri. I maschi adulti raggiungono regolarmente una lunghezza di 1,5-1,8 metri, mentre gli esemplari più grandi e maturi possono crescere fino a 2-2,5 metri, sebbene relativamente pochi individui raggiungano taglia tali.[14] La dimensione massima riportata per la specie è di 2,64 metri di lunghezza.[15] La massa corporea della maggior parte degli adulti è compresa tra i 7 e i 40 kg, con i maschi notevolmente più pesanti delle femmine. È stato riferito che alcuni maschi nei Llanos possano crescere fino a 58 kg (128 libbre).[16]

La parte superiore del corpo è prevalentemente di colore brunastro, verdastro o grigio-giallastro e presenta bande trasversali marrone scuro,[15] mentre la parte inferiore è più chiara. L'iride è verdastra[17] e le palpebre sono rugose.[8] Questi animali cambiano colore stagionalmente: durante la stagione più fredda, il pigmento nero all'interno delle sue cellule della pelle si espande, facendolo apparire più scuro.[18] La specie ha un quarto dente ingrandito e i denti nella mandibola penetrano si intersecano in scanalature della mandibola. L'animale ha un muso lungo che si assottiglia moderatamente, con una punta non espansa.[19] Diverse creste iniziano davanti agli occhi scorrendo fino alla punta del muso.[17] Il suo nome comune deriva da una cresta ossea tra gli occhi, che somiglia al ponte di un paio di occhiali.[20]

Biologia

 src=
Un esemplare giovane, nella Provincia di Darién, Panama
 src=
Caimani dagli occhiali a Monterrico, Guatemala

Il caimano dagli occhiali può muoversi rapidamente quando è minacciato, ma di solito passa le sue giornate a prendere il sole immobile sulle rive dei fiumi, parzialmente sommerso, divenendo più attivo nelle ore notturne. Durante la stagione delle piogge, i maschi diventano molto aggressivi e territoriali, stabilendo tra di loro una precisa gerarchia.[16]

Alimentazione

Questa specie caccia principalmente di notte,[16] e la sua dieta varia a seconda delle stagioni. Durante la stagione delle piogge si nutre principalmente di lumache e granchi d'acqua dolce, mentre durante la stagione secca si nutre principalmente di pesci. Gli esemplari più piccoli tendono a nutrirsi più di insetti e gamberetti d'acqua dolce,[21] mentre quelli più grandi predano più frequentemente mammiferi e pesci. Nel complesso, gli animali più comuni nella dieta di questa specie sono granchi, pesci, mammiferi e lumache.[22] Altri animali noti per essere parte della sua dieta includono anfibi, aracnidi, uccelli, miriapodi e rettili (lucertole, serpenti e tartarughe).[21] La specie è nota anche per nutrirsi anche di materiale vegetale; in uno studio su questa specie a Porto Rico, circa il 55% degli esemplari adulti integravano piante nella loro dieta, principalmente erba e semi. Inoltre, circa l'8% degli adulti e il 6% dei giovani nello studio sono stati ritrovati con dei gastroliti nello stomaco.[23] Sebbene si pensasse che questa specie controllasse le popolazioni di piranha predandole, si è scoperto che piranha non fanno parte della dieta abituale di questa specie, a differenza del caimano yacare e del caimano nano di Cuvier. Secondo la Crocodilian Species List, è probabilmente una specie generalista, in grado di adattarsi a una gran varietà di prede.[14][24]

Comunicazione

Il caimano dagli occhiali usa nove diverse vocalizzazioni e 13 display visivi per comunicare con gli individui della sua specie.[16] Sia gli adulti che i giovani emettono richiami per la coesione del gruppo. È noto che i maschi comunicano spostando la coda in una determinata posizione, ad esempio rendendola verticale o arcuata. I giovani vocalizzano quando sono in pericolo e le femmine adulte emettono richiami per avvertire i giovani di possibili minacce.[2]

Riproduzione

 src=
Cucciolo a Los Llanos, Venezuela

Il caimano dagli occhiali raggiunge la maturità sessuale dai quattro ai sette anni, a una lunghezza di 1,2 metri per le femmine, e 1,4 metri (4,6 piedi) per i maschi. Di solito, gli individui più dominanti maturano più rapidamente. La stagione riproduttiva avviene da maggio ad agosto, durante la stagione delle piogge.[14] Le femmine costruiscono i nidi in un cumulo di fitta vegetazione, in zone vicine all'acqua ma non a rischio di allagamento. I nidi hanno un diametro superiore al metro e possono essere alti fino a 40 centimetri, anche se le dimensioni esatte dipendono dalle risorse disponibili. Le uova vengono deposte in luglio e agosto; la specie nidifica molto raramente in inverno, poiché la temperatura è troppo bassa per le uova.[16][25] Le dimensioni della covata è in media di 22 uova, ma può variare da 14 a 40.[14] È noto che le femmine più grandi depongono uova più grandi rispetto alle femmine più piccole.[26] Le femmine rimangono vicino ai loro nidi durante tutto il periodo di incubazione, poiché è noto che diverse specie, come le lucertole del genere Tupinambis, distruggono i nidi e predano le uova.[14] Anche i coati dal naso bianco e le volpi fanno spesso irruzione nei nidi.[21] Anche le inondazioni e la caccia alle uova da parte delle popolazioni locali rappresentano una minaccia per i nidi.[16]

La temperatura è importante per lo sviluppo delle uova, quindi le femmine costruiscono i loro nidi in modo da isolarle da sbalzi di temperatura estremi. Quando la vegetazione nei nidi decade, i nidi producono calore che può mantenere le uova di circa 5 °C più calde, rispetto ad una copertura di solo fango.[25] Il calore non solo incuba le uova, ma determina anche il sesso dei caimani in via di sviluppo. Quando la temperatura all'interno del nido raggiunge i 32 °C o superiore, i caimani che se ne schiuderanno saranno femmine e, in caso contrario, maschi.[27] I giovani si schiudono dopo 90 giorni,[20] con il 20-25% delle uova che si schiudono con successo.[16] I cuccioli nascono gialli con macchie nere, una colorazione che svanisce man mano che invecchiano,[14] con una lunghezza di 20–23 centimetri appena schiusi.[16] I genitori allevano i loro piccoli in delle sorte di asili nido (chiamati crèche), in cui una singola femmina oltre a prendersi cura dei propri cuccioli può prendersi cura anche della prole di altri individui.[28] Gli adulti si prendono cura dei loro piccoli per 12–18 mesi,[29] e per il loro primo anno di vita i cuccioli sono sotto costante minaccia di predatori come uccelli rapaci[30] o trampolieri.[16][21] I giovani sono anche predati da grandi pesci, serpenti e altri coccodrilli.[21]

Distribuzione e habitat

 src=
C. crocodilus a Monterrico, Guatemala

Il caimano dagli occhiali ha l'areale più ampio di qualsiasi caimano,[10] e di qualsiasi coccodrillo del Nuovo Mondo.[29] Si trova in vari paesi delle Americhe, vivendo in Brasile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guyana francese, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Messico, Nicaragua, Panama, Perù, Suriname, Trinidad e Tobago e Venezuela, e potrebbe essere presente anche in Belize e Bolivia. È stato anche introdotto a Isla de la Juventud a Cuba, Porto Rico e Florida negli Stati Uniti;[2] in quest'ultimo, viene talvolta confuso con l'alligatore americano (Alligator mississippiensis).[14] Popolazioni invasive si sono stabilite anche nel sud della Florida, con record isolati più a nord nello stato.[28] È intollerante ai climi freddi, quindi è improbabile che il suo areale si espanda più a nord della Florida.[31] Di solito vive nelle foreste, negli specchi d'acqua dolce interni (come zone umide e fiumi), nelle praterie, negli arbusti e nelle savane, ma è molto adattabile.[2] Predilige gli habitat con acque calme contenenti vegetazione galleggiante, solitamente allagati e stagionalmente prosciugati. È più comune nelle zone basse, ma è stato trovato anche ad altitudini fino a 800 metri.[16] In Brasile, la specie vive nei fiumi Amazzoni, Araguaia, Araguari, Itapicuru, Rio Negro, Paranaíba, Solimões, Tapajós, Tocantins e Xingu.[8] È in grado di vivere anche in aree abitate dall'uomo.[17]

Si stima che la popolazione adulta di questo coccodrillo conti milioni di individui e sia stabile.[2] In Venezuela si trovano circa quattro milioni di caimani dagli occhiali e i sondaggi hanno mostrato che la popolazione è destinata ad aumentare.[18] Questo è un esempio di come la specie sia in grado di adattarsi.[14] Tuttavia, altre popolazioni, come quella del Perù, non godono degli stessi numeri.[18] La popolazione in una singola area può essere determinata più facilmente contando gli individui nella stagione secca di notte.[16]

Conservazione

 src=
C. crocodilus all'acquario del Tropicario di Helsinki, Finlandia

La pelle del caimano dagli occhiali è ricoperta di osteodermi, i quali non la rendevano particolarmente pregiata salvando l'animale dalla caccia per la sua pelle. Tuttavia, la raccolta delle pelli di questo caimano e di altri coccodrilli divenne molto comune negli anni '50, a causa del calo degli stock di coccodrilli.[29] Nel corso degli anni '70 e '80, la specie è stata spesso commercializzata, causando la diminuzione della popolazione in alcune aree. La sua pelle veniva spesso esportata dal Sud America e utilizzata principalmente per la creazione di cuoio; dal 1996 al 2015 almeno 6 milioni di pelli sono state esportate dalla Colombia. Tuttavia, gli sforzi di conservazione da allora hanno causato una significativa riduzione del numero di pelli esportate.[2] Nella maggior parte dei paesi, la caccia a questa specie è legale. Il Venezuela consente la caccia ogni autunno, a condizione che il numero totale di uccisioni nella stagione non superi i 150.000 individui.[18] A causa della sua adattabilità e dell'ampia distribuzione, la perdita di habitat non colpisce la specie in modo significativo a livello globale.[2] È ragionevolmente resistente anche alla caccia, poiché i cacciatori di solito si concentrano sui maschi di grandi dimensioni e la specie è in grado di riprodursi anche prima di raggiungere le sue massime dimensioni.[29] Tuttavia, è gravemente minacciato in Colombia,[14] principalmente la sottospecie C. c. fuscus e talvolta C. c. crocodilus.[32]

Il caimano dagli occhiali beneficia della caccia eccessiva ai danni di altre specie che occupano il suo stesso areale, in quanto ciò gli consente di accedere a risorse normalmente non accessibili e limitano la concorrenza per tali risorse. Gli esemplari che sono stati introdotti a Cuba, Porto Rico e negli Stati Uniti hanno avuto un impatto negativo sugli animali nativi. Si ritiene infatti che i caimani dagli occhiali siano la causa principale della probabile estirpazione del coccodrillo cubano (Crocodylus rhombifer) dall'isola della Juventud, Cuba.[14] La specie ha una dieta simile a quella del caimano nero (Melanosuchus niger), e ciò provoca una competizione interspecifica, rendendo più difficile il recupero delle popolazioni di caimano nero.[33] Difatti, l'estirpazione del caimano nero da alcuni territori della foresta pluviale amazzonica ha permesso al caimano dagli occhiali di appropriarsi di tale territorio.[29]

I programmi di conservazione per questa specie sono stati messi in atto in molti paesi. La forma di conservazione più comune è l'uso del cropping, che consiste nel ridurre manualmente il numero di specie selvatiche troppo numerose. Tuttavia, gli effetti a lungo termine del cropping devono ancora essere scoperti. Anche i programmi di allevamento in cattività sono stati utilizzati per la conservazione della specie, ma sembrano essere più costosi e forse meno efficaci.[14] Un programma di conservazione in Colombia, attuato dal 2004 al 2006, ha allevato caimani dagli occhiali in cattività e ha liberato i piccoli in natura all'età di un anno. Un programma simile ha rilasciato oltre 15.000 giovani nelle zone umide, dal 2005 al 2009.[2] In precedenza, la Colombia limitava l'esportazione di pelli di caimano dagli occhiali alle pelli più corte di 1,2 metri, ma a partire dal 2011 ci sono ora limiti di dimensione solo per alcuni singoli pezzi della pelle, piuttosto che la dimensione complessiva dell'animale. Questi limiti sono meno efficaci, poiché le pelli grandi potrebbero accordarsi con i limiti di dimensione se tagliate e rifilate.[32] Secondo l'Unione Internazionale per la Conservazione della Natura (IUCN), ulteriori indagini sulle specie aiuterebbero i futuri piani di conservazione.[2]

Il caimano dagli occhiali è elencato come una specie a rischio minimo nella Lista Rossa IUCN, per via del suo vasto areale e della numerosa popolazione a livello globale, a seguito di due valutazioni che lo classificavano come specie a rischio nel 1986 e nel 1988.[2] La sottospecie C. c. crocodilus si trova nell'Appendice II della CITES[4], C. c. apaporiensis Appendice I,[34] e C. c. fuscus Appendice II.[35]

Note

  1. ^ Jonathan P. Rio e Philip D. Mannion, Phylogenetic analysis of a new morphological dataset elucidates the evolutionary history of Crocodylia and resolves the long-standing gharial problem, in PeerJ, vol. 9, 6 settembre 2021, pp. e12094, DOI:10.7717/peerj.12094, PMC 8428266, PMID 34567843.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l (EN) Balaguera-Reina, S.A., Caiman crocodilus, su IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, Versione 2020.2, IUCN, 2020.
  3. ^ Appendices | CITES, su cites.org. URL consultato il 14 gennaio 2022.
  4. ^ a b c Caiman crocodilus crocodilus, su CITES. URL consultato il 30 marzo 2019 (archiviato dall'url originale il 30 marzo 2019).
  5. ^ Giovanne M. Cidade, Daniel Fortier, Ascanio Daniel Rincón e Annie Schmaltz Hsiou, Taxonomic review of two fossil crocodylians from the Cenozoic of South America and its implications for the crocodylian fauna of the continent, in Zootaxa, vol. 4656, n. 3, 2019, pp. 475–486, DOI:10.11646/zootaxa.4656.3.5, PMID 31716812.
  6. ^ Margaret Anne Franzen, Huaorani resource use in the Ecuadorian Amazon, University of California, Davis, 2005, pp. 181. URL consultato il 3 aprile 2019.
  7. ^ ITIS Standard Report Page: Caiman crocodilus, su Integrated Taxonomic Information System. URL consultato il 28 marzo 2019.
  8. ^ a b c Kleber Del Claro, Paulo S. Oliveira e Victor Rico-Gray, Tropical Biology and Conservation Management, EOLSS Publications, 11 maggio 2009, pp. 273–274, ISBN 978-1848262812. URL consultato il 5 aprile 2019.
  9. ^ a b (EN) Caiman crocodilus, su The Reptile Database. URL consultato il 17 dicembre 2017.
  10. ^ a b Nina Triche, Caiman crocodilus (spectacled caiman), su Digimorph, 28 maggio 2003. URL consultato il 3 aprile 2019.
  11. ^ In the bombast of the American TV host, colonial science lives on, su TheWire, 5 marzo 2020. URL consultato il 5 marzo 2020.
  12. ^ Thom Fusco, Nature Believe - extinct Rio Apaporis caiman rediscovered, Discovery Channel, 19 dicembre 2019. URL consultato il 19 dicembre 2019.
  13. ^ Mayer Lindsay renick, Rediscovery of lost caiman lead to new crocodilian mystery, in rewild, 12 dicembre 2019. URL consultato il 12 dicembre 2019.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Adam Britton, Spectacled Caiman (Caiman crocodilus), su Crocodilian Species List. URL consultato il 27 marzo 2019.
  15. ^ a b Roger Conant e Joseph T. Collins, A Field Guide to Reptiles & Amphibians: Eastern and Central North America, a cura di illustrated, reprint, revised, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1998, pp. 144, ISBN 978-0395904527. URL consultato il 27 marzo 2019.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Juhani Ojasti, Wildlife Utilization in Latin America: Current Situation and Prospects for Sustainable Management, a cura di illustrated, Food and Agriculture Organization, 1996, pp. 58–62, ISBN 978-9251033166. URL consultato il 27 marzo 2019.
  17. ^ a b c Spectacled Caiman - Caiman crocodilus, su World Association of Zoos and Aquariums (archiviato dall'url originale il 31 ottobre 2013).
  18. ^ a b c d David Alderton, Common Caiman Caiman crocodilus., in Crocodiles & Alligators of the World, illustrata, Facts on File, 1991, pp. 131–135, ISBN 978-0816022977. URL consultato il 29 marzo 2019.
  19. ^ Hobart M. Smith e Edmund D. Brodie, Reptiles of North America: A Guide to Field Identification, illustrated, St. Martin's Press, 25 febbraio 2014, pp. 208, ISBN 978-1466864818. URL consultato il 7 aprile 2019.
  20. ^ a b Spectacled Caiman, su Lincoln Park Zoo. URL consultato il 1º aprile 2019.
  21. ^ a b c d e Kayla Terry, Caiman crocodilus (Common caiman, Spectacled caiman), su Animaldiversity.org. URL consultato il 13 marzo 2022.
  22. ^ John B. Thorbjarnarson, Diet of the spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus) in the central Venezuelan Llanos, in Herpetologica, vol. 49, n. 1, Allen Press, marzo 1993, pp. 108–117, JSTOR 3892691.
  23. ^ Damien R. Bontemps, Elvira Cuevas, Eileen Ortiz, Joseph M. Wunderle e Rafael L. Joglar, Diet of the non-native spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus) in Puerto Rico (PDF), in Management of Biological Invasions, vol. 7, n. 3, 18 marzo 2016, pp. 287–296, DOI:10.3391/mbi.2016.7.3.08. URL consultato il 2 aprile 2019.
  24. ^ Charles A. Ross e Stephen Garnett, Crocodiles and Alligators, illustrated, New York, Facts on File, 1989, pp. 58–73, ISBN 978-0816021741. URL consultato il 29 marzo 2019.
  25. ^ a b Magnusson, W.E. Vliet, K.A. Pooley, A.C. and Whitaker, R. "Reproduction." Crocodiles and Alligators (illustrated ed.). Ross, Charles A. Garnett, Stephen (1989). New York: Facts on File. pp. 118–124. ISBN 0816021740.
  26. ^ Zilca Campos, William E. Magnusson, Tânia Sanaiotti e Marcos E. Coutinho, Reproductive trade-offs in Caiman crocodilus crocodilus and Caiman crocodilus yacare: Implications for size-related management quotas, in Herpetological Journal, vol. 18, n. 2, aprile 2008, pp. 91–96. URL consultato il 30 marzo 2019.
  27. ^ Lang, J.W. "Sex Determination." Crocodiles and Alligators (illustrated ed.). Ross, Charles A. Garnett, Stephen (1989). New York: Facts on File. pp. 118–124. ISBN 0816021740.
  28. ^ a b Louis A. Somma e Pam Fuller, Common Caiman (Caiman crocodilus), su U.S. Geological Survey. URL consultato il 27 marzo 2019.
  29. ^ a b c d e A. Velasco e J. Ayarzagüena, Spectacled Caiman crocodilus (PDF), in S. C. Manolis e C. Stevenson (a cura di), Crocodiles. Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan, 3ª ed., Crocodile Specialist Group, 2010, pp. 10–15.
  30. ^ Caiman crocodilus (Spectacled Caiman) (PDF), su Sta.uwi.edu. URL consultato il 13 marzo 2022.
  31. ^ Caiman, su Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. URL consultato il 7 aprile 2019.
  32. ^ a b Grahame Webb, Matthew Brien, Charlie Manolis e Sergio Medrano-Bitar, Predicting total lengths of spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus) from skin measurements: A tool for managing the skin trade (PDF), in Herpetological Conservation and Biology, vol. 7, n. 1, 6 maggio 2012, pp. 16–26. URL consultato il 14 aprile 2019.
  33. ^ Theresa M. Laverty e Andrew P. Dobson, Dietary overlap between black caimans and spectacled caimans in the Peruvian Amazon, in Herpetologica, vol. 69, n. 1, marzo 2013, pp. 91–101, DOI:10.1655/HERPETOLOGICA-D-12-00031.
  34. ^ Caiman crocodilus fuscus, su CITES. URL consultato il 30 marzo 2019 (archiviato dall'url originale il 30 marzo 2019).
  35. ^ Caiman crocodilus apaporiensis, su CITES. URL consultato il 30 marzo 2019 (archiviato dall'url originale il 30 marzo 2019).

 title=
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autori e redattori di Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia IT

Caiman crocodilus: Brief Summary ( Italian )

provided by wikipedia IT

Il caimano dagli occhiali (Caiman crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758)), noto anche come caimano bianco, caimano comune o caimano maculato, è un coccodrillo di medie dimensioni della famiglia Alligatoridae. Presenta una colorazione brunastra, verdastra o grigio-giallastro e una cresta simile al ponte degli occhiali tra gli occhi, da cui deriva il suo nome comune. Questo animale può cresce fino a 1,4–2,5 metri di lunghezza, per un peso di 7–40 chilogrammi, con i maschi che sono generalmente più lunghi e pesanti delle femmine. La sua dieta varia stagionalmente, ed è comunemente composta da granchi, pesci, mammiferi e lumache. La riproduzione avviene da maggio ad agosto e in luglio e agosto vengono deposte dalle 14 alle 40 uova. Questo coccodrillo ha un vasto areale e popolazione; è originario di gran parte dell'America Latina ed è stato introdotto negli Stati Uniti, Cuba e Porto Rico.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autori e redattori di Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia IT

Krokodilinis kaimanas ( Lithuanian )

provided by wikipedia LT

Krokodilinis kaimanas (lot. Caiman crocodilus) – aligatorinių (Alligatoridae) šeimos kaimanų rūšis. Paplitusi tropinėje Pietų ir Centrinėje Amerikoje: nuo pietų Meksikos iki vidurio Brazilijos, šiaurinės Bolivijos.

Suaugęs kaimanas yra 1,8–2 m ilgio (daugiausiai iki 2,5 m), patelės kiek mažesnės (1,2–1,4 m). Sveria nuo 7 iki 40 kg (daugiausiai iki 58 kg).[1] Kūnas pilkšvai žalias, priklausomai nuo temperatūros šiek tiek kinta. Aplink akis turi dėmes, dėl kurių dar vadinamas „akiniuotuoju kaimanu“.

Plačiasnukis kaimanas gyvena stovinčiuose, užžėlusiuose vandenyse. Maitinasi daugiausia smulkiais bestuburiais, sraigėmis. Didesni kaimanai medžioja roplius, paukščius, žuvis. Seni kaimanai pajėgūs pagauti stambesnį žinduolį. Patelė netoli vandens padeda iki 40 kiaušinių ir juos užkasa. Jei temperatūra viduje viršija 32 °C gimsta patelės, jei neviršija – patinėliai. Jauniklius motina atidžiai prižiūri.

Krokodiliniai kaimanai medžiojami dėl odos, vietomis tam auginami specialiuose ūkiuose. Nors rūšis susiduria su pavojais, yra pakankamai gausi.

Vietiniai pavadinimai:

  • portug. jacaretinga, jacaré-de-óculos, caimão-de-lunetas
  • isp. caimán de anteojos, cachirre, babilla, blanco, guagipal, baba
  • gvar. yakare jhu
  • keč. challwa, yuraq
 src=
Jauniklis
 src=
Galva

Šaltiniai

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Vikipedijos autoriai ir redaktoriai
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia LT

Krokodilinis kaimanas: Brief Summary ( Lithuanian )

provided by wikipedia LT

Krokodilinis kaimanas (lot. Caiman crocodilus) – aligatorinių (Alligatoridae) šeimos kaimanų rūšis. Paplitusi tropinėje Pietų ir Centrinėje Amerikoje: nuo pietų Meksikos iki vidurio Brazilijos, šiaurinės Bolivijos.

Suaugęs kaimanas yra 1,8–2 m ilgio (daugiausiai iki 2,5 m), patelės kiek mažesnės (1,2–1,4 m). Sveria nuo 7 iki 40 kg (daugiausiai iki 58 kg). Kūnas pilkšvai žalias, priklausomai nuo temperatūros šiek tiek kinta. Aplink akis turi dėmes, dėl kurių dar vadinamas „akiniuotuoju kaimanu“.

Plačiasnukis kaimanas gyvena stovinčiuose, užžėlusiuose vandenyse. Maitinasi daugiausia smulkiais bestuburiais, sraigėmis. Didesni kaimanai medžioja roplius, paukščius, žuvis. Seni kaimanai pajėgūs pagauti stambesnį žinduolį. Patelė netoli vandens padeda iki 40 kiaušinių ir juos užkasa. Jei temperatūra viduje viršija 32 °C gimsta patelės, jei neviršija – patinėliai. Jauniklius motina atidžiai prižiūri.

Krokodiliniai kaimanai medžiojami dėl odos, vietomis tam auginami specialiuose ūkiuose. Nors rūšis susiduria su pavojais, yra pakankamai gausi.

Vietiniai pavadinimai:

portug. jacaretinga, jacaré-de-óculos, caimão-de-lunetas isp. caimán de anteojos, cachirre, babilla, blanco, guagipal, baba gvar. yakare jhu keč. challwa, yuraq  src= Jauniklis  src= Galva
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Vikipedijos autoriai ir redaktoriai
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia LT

Brillekaiman ( Norwegian )

provided by wikipedia NO
Question book-new.svg
Denne artikkelen mangler kildehenvisninger, og opplysningene i den kan dermed være vanskelige å verifisere. Kildeløst materiale kan bli fjernet. Helt uten kilder. (10. okt. 2015)

Brillekaimanen er et reptil i alligatorfamilien. Dens habitat er våtmarker og elver i Sør og Mellom-Amerika, og overlever både i salt og ferskvann. Navnet kommer av en beinete struktur mellom øynene som minner om briller.

Hannen blir gjennomsnittlig 2 til 2,5 meter lang, mens hunnen er mindre, vanligvis rundt 1,5 meter.

Eksterne lenker

zoologistubbDenne zoologirelaterte artikkelen er foreløpig kort eller mangelfull, og du kan hjelpe Wikipedia ved å utvide den.
Det finnes mer utfyllende artikkel/artikler på .
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia forfattere og redaktører
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia NO

Brillekaiman: Brief Summary ( Norwegian )

provided by wikipedia NO

Brillekaimanen er et reptil i alligatorfamilien. Dens habitat er våtmarker og elver i Sør og Mellom-Amerika, og overlever både i salt og ferskvann. Navnet kommer av en beinete struktur mellom øynene som minner om briller.

Hannen blir gjennomsnittlig 2 til 2,5 meter lang, mens hunnen er mindre, vanligvis rundt 1,5 meter.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia forfattere og redaktører
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia NO

Kajman okularowy ( Polish )

provided by wikipedia POL
Commons Multimedia w Wikimedia Commons
 src=
Kajman w środowisku naturalnym

Kajman okularowy, kajman krokodylowy (Caiman crocodilus) – gatunek gada z rodziny aligatorowatych (Alligatoridae).

Występowanie

Ameryka Południowa i Środkowa: Brazylia, Kolumbia, Kostaryka, Ekwador, Salwador, Gujana, Gujana Francuska, Gwatemala, Honduras, Meksyk, Nikaragua, Panama, Peru, Surinam, Tobago, Trynidad, Wenezuela. Na Kubie i w PortoRiko został introdukowany podgatunek Caiman crocodilus fuscus. Szacowana dzika populacja wynosi ponad 1.000.000 osobników.

Taksonomia

Gatunek po raz pierwszy naukowo opisał w 1758 roku szwedzki przyrodnik Karol Linneusz, nadając mu nazwę Lacerta crocodilus[3]. Jako miejsce typowe wskazał wody Afryki, Azji i Ameryki (łac. Habitat in Africae, Asiae, Americae Aquis)[3]; ograniczone w 1955 roku do Gujany[4].

Charakterystyka

Opis
Na dużej masywnej głowie pomiędzy oczami na kościach czaszki pod oczodołami występuje kościsty twór, przypominający poprzeczkę okularów. Podobny kostny twór mają kajman czarny i kajman szerokopyski. Pysk średnio długi. Ubarwienie ciała zazwyczaj ciemnooliwkowe. Młode osobniki są żółte z ciemnymi plamami na ciele i ogonie. Wraz z wiekiem żółty kolor zanika. Podgatunki różnią się między sobą kolorem, rozmiarami i kształtem czaszki.
Rozmiary
Długość ok. 2,5 m (samiec), 1,5 m (samica)[potrzebny przypis].
Biotop
Gatunek nizinny łatwo adaptujący się do różnych warunków środowiska. Preferuje obszary ze spokojnymi ciekami wodnymi. Z całej rodziny zajmuje największy obszar. Do pewnego stopnia toleruje zasolenie wody.
Pokarm
Ryby, płazy, gady, ptaki wodne oraz ssaki. Młode żywią się rozmaitymi wodnymi bezkręgowcami: owady, skorupiaki, mięczaki.
Behawior
Kiedy warunki zewnętrzne stają się niekorzystne przeczekuje je ukryty w norze w błocie.
Rozmnażanie
Samice osiągają dojrzałość przy długości 1,2 m, tj. pomiędzy 4 a 7 rokiem życia. Samce przy długości 1,4 m w wieku 4 do 7 lat[potrzebny przypis]. Gonady zwiększają się pod koniec pory suchej czyli od kwietnia do maja i osiągają szczyt na początku pory deszczowej czyli między majem i czerwcem. Zaloty i kopulacja mają miejsce między majem a sierpniem. Podczas pory deszczowej pomiędzy lipcem a sierpniem samica buduje gniazdo na brzegu powyżej poziomu wody w kształcie kopca z błota i szczątków roślinnych, do którego składa pomiędzy 14 do 40 jaj. Samice pozostają w pobliżu gniazd, aby chronić jaja przed drapieżnikami. Okres wylęgania trwa ok. 90 dni.[potrzebny przypis] Po wylęgu młode trzymają się razem blisko samicy. Bywa, że jedna samica przejmuje pod swoją opiekę młode pochodzące od innych samic.

Przypisy

  1. Caiman crocodilus, w: Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ang.).
  2. Caiman crocodilus. Czerwona księga gatunków zagrożonych (IUCN Red List of Threatened Species) (ang.).
  3. a b C. Linneaus: Systema naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis. Wyd. 10. T. 1. Holmiae: Impensis Direct. Laurentii Salvii, 1758, s. 200. (łac.)
  4. Caiman crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758) (ang.). The Reptile Database. [dostęp 2017-06-09].
p d e
Krokodylomorfy zwierzętastrunowcekręgowcezauropsydydiapsydyarchozauromorfyarchozauryCrurotarsiSphenosuchia Allognathosuchus gracilis.jpg
Brillenkaiman (02) 2006-09-19.JPGProtosuchia Mesoeucrocodylia incertae sedis Mesoeucrocodylia: Sebecia Mesoeucrocodylia: Thalattosuchia Mesoeucrocodylia: Notosuchia Mesoeucrocodylia: Neosuchia
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autorzy i redaktorzy Wikipedii
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia POL

Kajman okularowy: Brief Summary ( Polish )

provided by wikipedia POL
 src= Kajman w środowisku naturalnym

Kajman okularowy, kajman krokodylowy (Caiman crocodilus) – gatunek gada z rodziny aligatorowatych (Alligatoridae).

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autorzy i redaktorzy Wikipedii
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia POL

Jacaretinga ( Portuguese )

provided by wikipedia PT

O jacaretinga (nome científico: Caiman crocodilus), jacaré-tinga, jacaré-de-óculos, também conhecido em Portugal como caimão-de-lunetas, ou caimão-almiscarado, é um réptil carnívoro que habita diferentes tipos de rios e lagos de água doce ao sul do México, América Central e noroeste da América do Sul.

No Brasil, recebeu o nome de jacaretinga por causa de seu dorso branco (tinga significa "branco" em língua tupi[1]).

Os machos chegam a medir entre 1,8 e 2,5 metros de comprimento e as fêmeas, 1,4 metros. Alimentam-se de diferentes espécies de animais: crustáceos, peixes, anfíbios, répteis, aves e pequenos mamíferos.

O acasalamento ocorre na estação chuvosa. A fêmea faz um ninho aglomerando pequenas quantidades de vegetação seca e terra e põe ali de catorze a quarenta ovos que demoram, em média, sessenta dias para eclodir. Ao nascer, medem cerca de vinte centímetros.

Subespécies

  • Caiman crocodilus apaporiensis (Medem, 1955)
  • C. c. chiapasius (Bocourt, 1876)
  • C. c. crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • C. c. fuscus (Cope, 1868)
 src=
Caiman crocodylus crocodylus

Referências

Veja também

 title=
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autores e editores de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia PT

Jacaretinga: Brief Summary ( Portuguese )

provided by wikipedia PT

O jacaretinga (nome científico: Caiman crocodilus), jacaré-tinga, jacaré-de-óculos, também conhecido em Portugal como caimão-de-lunetas, ou caimão-almiscarado, é um réptil carnívoro que habita diferentes tipos de rios e lagos de água doce ao sul do México, América Central e noroeste da América do Sul.

No Brasil, recebeu o nome de jacaretinga por causa de seu dorso branco (tinga significa "branco" em língua tupi).

Os machos chegam a medir entre 1,8 e 2,5 metros de comprimento e as fêmeas, 1,4 metros. Alimentam-se de diferentes espécies de animais: crustáceos, peixes, anfíbios, répteis, aves e pequenos mamíferos.

O acasalamento ocorre na estação chuvosa. A fêmea faz um ninho aglomerando pequenas quantidades de vegetação seca e terra e põe ali de catorze a quarenta ovos que demoram, em média, sessenta dias para eclodir. Ao nascer, medem cerca de vinte centímetros.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autores e editores de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia PT

Kajman okuliarnatý ( Slovak )

provided by wikipedia SK

Kajman okuliarnatý (Caiman crocodilus) je pomerne malý plaz z čeľade aligátorovité (Aligatoridae).

Výskyt

Obýva pomerne rozsiahle územie Strednej a Južnej Ameriky v rozmedzí od Venezuely až na juh Amazonskej panvy. Žije v pomaly tečúcich vodách, nížinných mokradiach a jazerách, je schopný tolerovať aj slanú vodu; vďaka tejto adaptácii je aj najhojnejším zástupcom svojej čeľade.

Opis

Samce dosahujú dĺžky od 3 m do 4 m, maximálne až do 5 m. Samice sú znateľne menšie a dosahujú maximálnu veľkosť do 3 m. Dospelé zvieratá majú tlstú kožu s olivovým nádychom. Mláďatá majú obvykle žltkastú farbu s čiernymi škvrnami, ktoré časom úplne stráca.

Poddruhy

Niekoľko poddruhov tohto kajmana sa líši sfarbením, veľkosťou a tvarom lebky ako aj rozšírením.

  • Caiman crocodilus crocodilus, nominálny poddruh,
  • Caiman crocodilus apaporiensis
  • Caiman crocodilus chiapasus, podľa niektorých prác sa vyčleňuje z poddruhu C. c. fuscus[1]
  • Caiman crocodilus fuscus

Opísané boli aj sporné poddruhy

  • Caiman crocodilus yacare, považuje sa za samostatný druh Caiman yacare
  • Caiman crocodilus paraguayensis, nebol uznaný za samostatný poddruh
  • Caiman crocodilus matogrossiensis, nebol uznaný za samostatný poddruh

Potrava a rozmnožovanie

Mláďatá sa živia širokou paletou vodných bezstavovcov, prevažne potom larvami hmyzu, kôrovcami a mäkkýšmi. Časom začnú do svojho jedálnička zahrňovať aj rôzne stavovce, ktoré tvoria prevažne ryby, obojživelníky, plazy a vodné vtáky. Dospelé zvieratá si trúfnu aj na väčšie cicavce, napr. diviaka lesného.

Obdobie párenia trvá u kajmanov okuliarnatých v rozmedzí medzi marcom a augustom. Samica vybuduje hniezdo v podobe hromady rôznej pôdy a rastlinnej vegetácie, ktorú sem nahrnie. V období dažďov, medzi júlom a v auguste nakladie 14 až 40 (obvykle okolo 22) vajec, ktoré po celú inkubačnú dobu, ktorá trvá zhruba 90 dní starostlivo stráží. Samice dosahujú pohlavnú dospelosť medzi 4. a 7. rokom, samce zhruba v rovnakom veku.

Kajman okuliarnatý je lovený pre svoju kožu, ale ohrozenie pre neho predstavuje aj odchyt mláďat, ktoré sa následne predávajú do domácností buď živé, alebo ako kuriózna vypchanina.

Iné projekty

Zdroj

Tento článok je čiastočný alebo úplný preklad článku Spectacled Caiman na anglickej Wikipédii.

  1. Venegas Anaya, M., Crawford, A.J., Galván, A.H.E., Sanjur, O.I., Densmore III, L.D. and Bermingham, E. (2008). Mitochondrial DNA phylogeography of Caiman crocodilus in Mesoamerica and South America. J. Exp. Zool. 309A(10): 614-627.
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autori a editori Wikipédie
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia SK

Kajman okuliarnatý: Brief Summary ( Slovak )

provided by wikipedia SK

Kajman okuliarnatý (Caiman crocodilus) je pomerne malý plaz z čeľade aligátorovité (Aligatoridae).

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autori a editori Wikipédie
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia SK

Cá sấu đeo kính ( Vietnamese )

provided by wikipedia VI

Caiman crocodilus (tên tiếng Anh: Spectacled caiman) là một loài cá sấu trong họ Alligatoridae được tìm thấy trong nhiều vùng ở TrungNam Mỹ. Nó sống trong một loạt các vùng đất thấp ẩm và các loại môi trường sống ven sông và có thể chịu được nước mặn cũng như ngọt; một phần do khả năng thích ứng này, nó là loài phổ biến nhất trong tất cả các loài cá sấu.

Mô tả

Đây là một loài cá sấu có kích thước từ nhỏ đến trung bình. Con đực thường dài 1,8 đến 2 m (5,9 đến 6,6 ft), con cái nhỏ hơn, thường chỉ đạt 1,2–1,4 m (3,9–4,6 ft). Khối lượng cơ thể của hầu hết còn trưởng thành từ 7 và 40 kg (15 và 88 lb). Kích thước tối đa đã được ghi nhận là 2,5 m (8,2 ft), với cân nặng 58 kg (128 lb). Con cái lớn nhất từng được biết dài 1,61 m (5,3 ft) và nặng 20 kg (44 lb). Các cá thể tại llanos Venezuela được cho là lớn hơn các cá thể ở Mexico.[1] Loài này có khả năng thay đổi màu sắc nhất định. Vào mùa lạnh, sắc tố đen trong tế bào da sẽ mở rộng, làm chúng có bề ngoài tối hơn.[2]

Hình ảnh

Chú thích

  1. ^ Britton, A. Caiman Crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758). Crocodilian Species List.http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/cnhc/csp_ccro.htm.2009.
  2. ^ Alderton, D. Common Caiman Caiman crocodilus. Crocodiles and Alligators of the World. Facts on File, Inc. 1998. 131-135.

Tham khảo

Liên kết ngoài

 src= Phương tiện liên quan tới Caiman crocodilus tại Wikimedia Commons


Hình tượng sơ khai Bài viết liên quan đến lớp Mặt thằn lằn này vẫn còn sơ khai. Bạn có thể giúp Wikipedia bằng cách mở rộng nội dung để bài được hoàn chỉnh hơn.
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia tác giả và biên tập viên
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia VI

Cá sấu đeo kính: Brief Summary ( Vietnamese )

provided by wikipedia VI

Caiman crocodilus (tên tiếng Anh: Spectacled caiman) là một loài cá sấu trong họ Alligatoridae được tìm thấy trong nhiều vùng ở TrungNam Mỹ. Nó sống trong một loạt các vùng đất thấp ẩm và các loại môi trường sống ven sông và có thể chịu được nước mặn cũng như ngọt; một phần do khả năng thích ứng này, nó là loài phổ biến nhất trong tất cả các loài cá sấu.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia tác giả và biên tập viên
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia VI

眼鏡凱門鱷 ( Chinese )

provided by wikipedia 中文维基百科
二名法 Caiman crocodilus
(Linnaeus, 1758) Caiman crocodylus Distribution.png

眼鏡凱門鱷學名Caiman crocodilus),又名南美短吻鱷眼鏡鱷,是一種鱷魚,因為眼球前端有一條橫骨,就像眼鏡架一樣,因而得名。

眼鏡凱門鱷體長最大可達2.5,初孵出來的幼鱷有20至25厘米長。眼鏡凱門鱷長,背面呈橄欖綠色部、身體、部上有個多深色斑紋,部及尾部上則有深棕色黑色的橫帶紋,肚皮的顏色則是純米色或者淺黃色。初孵出來的幼鱷下兩側有淡色斑,長大到大約35厘米長時,這些斑紋會全部消失。

分佈地

眼鏡凱門鱷原產於中美洲南美洲一帶,不過其後牠們被人類帶到美國佛羅里達州古巴

習性

眼鏡凱門鱷一般棲居於廣泛的水域棲息地。與其他鱷魚一樣,食物隨年齡、季節及棲息地的不同而變化。幼鱷主要以無脊椎動物為食,特別是鞘翅目昆蟲,也會進食等水生動物。成年鱷則主要以脊椎動物為食,包括水生及陸生的脊椎動物。牠們的捕食策略包括靜伏不動,偷襲路過的陸生脊椎動物,於水中偷襲游近的魚類與其他水生脊椎動物。此外,牠們有時也用身體和尾巴驅趕魚類到淺水處,或者於開闊的水體將魚類驅趕到狹窄的岸邊後再捕食。

眼鏡凱門鱷的求愛行為包括躍出水面、炫耀尾巴,以及輕咬和摩擦頭部與頸部等。牠們於不同地點的造巢活動的高峰期也有不同,一般多在潮濕季節。牠們的巢由葉子、小樹枝、雜草以及泥堆成小丘狀。

雌性的眼鏡凱門鱷每次產卵可達40顆,而整個孵化期雌性會有規律地關心和保護巢址。幼鱷出殼時發出叫聲,雌性將巢挖開護送雛鱷進入水中,而有時雄鱷也協助。雌鱷也會用嘴幫助胚鱷破殼而出,並用嘴攜帶幼鱷進入水中。

眼鏡凱門鱷於其一生中不同時期均有不同敵人。捕食鱷卵的動物包括有黑點雙領蜥發冠長腳鷹食蟹狐浣熊長鼻浣熊戴帽猴等。而以雛鱷和幼鱷為食的則有鯰魚等食肉性魚類、鱷魚夜鷺虎貓以及家豬等。美洲豹森蚺就會捕食成年鱷魚。

種群動態

眼鏡凱門鱷分佈廣且數量多,是提供國際鱷皮貿易的最主要種類。於原生地以外地方,牠們是極具威脅性的外來物種

參考資料

 title=
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
维基百科作者和编辑

眼鏡凱門鱷: Brief Summary ( Chinese )

provided by wikipedia 中文维基百科

眼鏡凱門鱷(學名:Caiman crocodilus),又名南美短吻鱷、眼鏡鱷,是一種鱷魚,因為眼球前端有一條橫骨,就像眼鏡架一樣,因而得名。

眼鏡凱門鱷體長最大可達2.5,初孵出來的幼鱷有20至25厘米長。眼鏡凱門鱷長,背面呈橄欖綠色部、身體、部上有個多深色斑紋,部及尾部上則有深棕色黑色的橫帶紋,肚皮的顏色則是純米色或者淺黃色。初孵出來的幼鱷下兩側有淡色斑,長大到大約35厘米長時,這些斑紋會全部消失。

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
维基百科作者和编辑

メガネカイマン ( Japanese )

provided by wikipedia 日本語
メガネカイマン メガネカイマン
メガネカイマン Caiman crocodilus
保全状況評価[1][2] LOWER RISK - Least Concern
(IUCN Red List Ver.2.3 (1994))
Status iucn2.3 LC.svgワシントン条約附属書II 分類 : 動物界 Animalia : 脊索動物門 Chordata 亜門 : 脊椎動物亜門 Vertebrata : 爬虫綱 Reptilia : ワニ目 Crocodilia : アリゲーター科 Alligatoridae : カイマン属 Caiman : メガネカイマン C. crocodilus 学名 Caiman crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758) 英名 Spectacled caiman

Caiman crocodylus Distribution.png

メガネカイマンCaiman crocodilus)はアリゲーター科カイマン属に分類されるワニの一種。

分布[編集]

エクアドルエルサルバドルガイアナグアテマラコスタリカコロンビアスリナムトリニダード・トバゴニカラグアパナマブラジルベネズエラペルーホンジュラスメキシコ[3][4][2]

  • C. c. apaporiensis アパポリスカイマン

コロンビア(アパポリス川上流域)[3]

形態[編集]

全長250センチメートル(300センチメートルに達する例もあり)[4]

口吻は基部の幅の1.2-1.5倍[3]。眼の間に隆起があり眼鏡のように見えることが名前の由来になっている[4]。頸部に並ぶ鱗の列(頸鱗板)は4-5列で隣接する[3]

  • C. c. crocodilus スリナムメガネカイマン

背面の体色が暗黄褐色[4]

  • C. c. fuscus マグダレナメガネカイマン

背面の体色が暗黄緑色[4]

分類[編集]

  • Caiman crocodilus crocodilus (Linnaeus, 1758) スリナムメガネカイマン
  • Caiman crocodilus apaporiensis アパポリスカイマン Apaporis caiman
  • Caiman crocodilus fuscus マグダレナメガネカイマン - など

生態[編集]

主に淡水域に生息するが、汽水域や海域で見られることもある[4]

食性は動物食で、魚類甲殻類、小型哺乳類などを食べる[3][4]

繁殖形態は卵生。15-40個の卵を産む[4]

人間との関係[編集]

気性は荒く攻撃的[5]だが、小型種のため自然下で人間を襲うことはないとされる[4]

ペットとして飼育されることもあり、日本にも輸入されている[4]

  • C. c. apaporiensis

ワシントン条約附属書I[1]

参考文献[編集]

[ヘルプ]
  1. ^ a b CITES Appendices I, II and III”. ^ a b Crocodile Specialist Group ("Caiman crocodilus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2014.3. International Union for Conservation of Nature. Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: Uses authors parameter
  2. ^ a b c d e 今泉吉典、松井孝爾監修 『原色ワイド図鑑3 動物』、学習研究社、1984年、150、179、238頁。
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j 千石正一監修 長坂拓也編著 『爬虫類・両生類800種図鑑 第3版』、ピーシーズ、2002年、154-155頁。
  4. ^ 『小学館の学習百科図鑑5 動物の図鑑』小学館
執筆の途中です この項目は、動物に関連した書きかけの項目です。この項目を加筆・訂正などしてくださる協力者を求めていますPortal:生き物と自然プロジェクト:生物)。
 title=
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
ウィキペディアの著者と編集者
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia 日本語

メガネカイマン: Brief Summary ( Japanese )

provided by wikipedia 日本語

メガネカイマン(Caiman crocodilus)はアリゲーター科カイマン属に分類されるワニの一種。

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
ウィキペディアの著者と編集者
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia 日本語

안경카이만 ( Korean )

provided by wikipedia 한국어 위키백과

안경카이만(Spectacled caiman)은 중앙아메리카남아메리카의 지역에서 널리 발견되는 카이만이다.

특성

안경카이만은 난쟁이악어 다음으로 가장 작은 악어이다. 암컷은 일반적으로 1.08~1.4m(3.5~4.6ft) 정도로 크며, 2m(6.6ft)까지 자라는 경우는 거의 없다. 수컷은 보통 1.5~1.8m(4.9~5.9ft)에 자라며, 드물게 2.0~2.5m(6.6~8.2ft)까지 자랄 수 있으며,[1] 가장 크게는 3m까지 자란 개체가 보고된 적도 있다.[2] 대부분의 성체의 무게는 7에서 40kg(15과 88lb) 사이인데, 일반적으로 수컷이 암컷보다 무거운 편이다. 베네수엘라 랄로스의 일부 수컷은 최대 58kg(128lb)까지 자란다고 보고된 적 있다.[3]

각주

  1. Britton, Adam. “Spectacled Caiman (Caiman crocodilus)”. 《Crocodilian Species List》. 2019년 3월 27일에 확인함.
  2. Conant, Roger; Collins, Joseph T. (1998). 《A Field Guide to Reptiles & Amphibians: Eastern and Central North America》 illurat, reprint, revis판. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. 144쪽. ISBN 978-0395904527. 2019년 3월 27일에 확인함.
  3. Ojasti, Juhani (1996). 《Wildlife Utilization in Latin America: Current Situation and Prospects for Sustainable Management》 illurat판. Food and Agriculture Organization. 58–62쪽. ISBN 978-9251033166. 2019년 3월 27일에 확인함.
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia 작가 및 편집자