The 'Nile crocodile' (''Crocodylus niloticus'') is one of the 3 species of
crocodiles found in
Africa, and the second largest species of crocodile. Nile crocodiles can be found throughout most of Africa south of the
Sahara, and on the island of
Madagascar. The Nile crocodile can, and sometimes will, easily snatch and devour a human. While it is no longer threatened with
extinction as a
species, the population in many countries is in danger of vanishing.
Biology and appearance
The Nile crocodile's size, repute, widespread range, and overlap with humanity has continued to make them unpopular with humans.
Like all crocodiles, they are
quadrupeds with four short, splayed
legs; long, powerful
tails; a
scaly hide with rows of ossified
scutes running down their back and tail; and powerful
jaws. They have
nictitating membranes to protect their eyes and, despite the myths, they do have
lachrymal glands, and can cleanse their eyes with tears.
Nostrils,
eyes, and
ears are situated on the tops of their head, so the rest of the body can remain concealed underwater. Their coloration also helps them hide: Juveniles are grey, dark olive, or brown; with darker cross-bands on their tail and body. As they mature they become darker and the cross-bands fade, especially those on the body. The underbelly is yellowish, and makes high-quality leather.

Nile crocodile gaping
They normally crawl along on their bellies, but they can also "high walk" with their trunks raised above the ground. Smaller specimens can
gallop, and even larger crocodiles are capable of surprising bursts of speeds, briefly reaching up to 12 to 14
km/h (7.5 to 8.5
mi/h). They can swim much faster by moving their body and tail in a sinouous fashion, and they can sustain this form of movement much longer at about 30 to 35
km/h.
They have a four-chambered
heart, like a
bird, which is especially efficient at oxygenating their blood. They normally dive for only a couple of minutes, but will stay underwater for up to 30 minutes if threatened, and if they remain inactive they can hold their breath for up to 2 hours. They have an
ectothermic metabolism, so they can survive a long time between meals — though when they do eat, they can eat up to half their body weight at a time.
They have a rich vocal range, and good
hearing. Their skin has a number of poorly-understood
integumentary sense organs (ISOs), that may react to changes in
water pressure.
Their jaws are capable of exerting impressive force as they hold on to their prey. Their mouths are filled with a total of 64 to 68 cone-shaped
teeth. On each side of the mouth, there are 5 teeth in the front of the upper jaw (the ''
premaxilla''), 13 or 14 in the rest of the upper jaw (the ''
maxilla''), and 14 or 15 on either side of the lower jaw (the ''
mandible''). Hatchlings quickly lose a hardened piece of skin on the top of their mouth called the ''
egg tooth'', which they use to break through their egg's shell at birth.
Nile crocodiles in captivity have lived up to 56 years, but scientists estimate that in their natural habitat, they can live 70–100 years.
Size

View of a Nile crocodile from the side
The Nile crocodile is the largest
African
crocodilian and the second largest crocodilian after the
Saltwater crocodile, reaching lengths of up to 5 m (16 ft), or rarely up to 6.1 m (20 ft).
[1] Good sized males weigh 500 kg (1100
lb), and truly exceptional specimens may exceed 900 kg (2,000 lb).
[2] Like all crocodiles they are
sexually dimorphic, with the males up to 30% larger than the females, though the difference is even less in some species, like the Saltwater crocodile.
Seven meters (23 ft) and larger specimens have been reported, but since gross overestimation of size is common these reports are suspect. It is not known why some crocodiles grow larger than others, but it seems to be based on a favorable environment. The largest living specimen is purported to be a notorius man-eater from
Burundi named
Gustave; he is believed to be approximately 20 feet long (some reports say up to 26 ft) and would therefore be close in size to the the largest saltwater crocodiles. Such giants are rare today; before the heavy hunting of the 1940s and 1950s, a larger population base and more extensive wetland
habitats meant more giants.
There is some evidence that Nile crocodiles from cooler climates like the southern tip of Africa are smaller, and may reach lengths of only 4 m (13 ft). Dwarf Nile crocodiles also exist in
Mali and in the
Sahara desert, which reach only 2 to 3 m (6.5 to 10 ft) in length. Their reduced size is probably the result of the less than ideal environmental conditions, not genetics.
The bite force exerted by an adult nile crocodile was thought to be about 3000 psi, however the new work by
Brady Barr has revealed that in fact the bite of a Nile crocodile can be 5000 psi or more.
[3]
Mating and breeding
For males, the onset of
sexual maturity occurs when they are about 3 m (10 ft) long; while for females, it occurs when they reach 2 to 2.5 m (6.5 to 8 ft) in length. This takes about 10 years for either sex, under normal conditions.
During the
mating season, males attract females by bellowing, slapping their snouts in the water, blowing water out of their noses, and making a variety of other noises. The larger males of a population tend to be more successful. Once a female has been attracted, the pair warble and rub the underside of their jaws together. Females lay their
eggs about 2 months after mating.
Nesting is in November or December, which is the
dry season in the north of Africa, and the
rainy season in the south. Preferred nesting locations are sandy
shores, dry
stream beds, or riverbanks. The female then digs a hole a couple of meters (
yards) from the bank and up to 500 mm (20 in) deep, and lays between 25 and 80 eggs. The number of eggs varies between different populations, but averages around 50. Multiple females may nest close together.
The eggs resemble hen eggs, but have a much thinner shell.
Once the eggs are laid, the expectant mother covers the eggs with sand, and then guards them for the 3 month
incubation period. The father-to-be will often stay nearby, and both parents will fiercely attack anything that approaches their eggs. The impending mother will only leave the nest if she needs to cool off (
thermoregulation), by taking a quick dip or seeking out a patch of shade. Despite the attentive care of both parents, the nests are often raided by
humans,
monitor lizards, and other animals while the mother is temporarily absent.
The hatchlings start to make a high-pitched chirping noise before hatching, which is the signal for the mother to rip open the nest. Both the mother and father may pick up the eggs in their mouths, and roll them between their
tongue and the upper
palate of their mouth to help crack the shell, and release their offspring. Once they are hatched, the female may lead the hatchlings to water, or even carry them there, in her mouth.

Nile crocodile eggs
Nile crocodiles have
Temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD), which means the sex of their hatchlings is determined not by genetics, but by the average
temperature during the middle third of their incubation period. If the temperature inside the nest is below 31.7 °C (89.1 °F), or above 34.5 °C (94.1 °F), the offspring will be female. Males can only be born if the temperature is within that narrow 5-degree range.
Hatchlings are about 300 mm (12 in) long at birth, and grow that much each year. The new mother will protect her offspring for up to two years, and if there are multiple nests in the same area, the mothers may form a
crèche. During this time, the mothers may pick up their offspring to protect them, either in their mouth or in her ''
gular'' or throat pouch, to keep the babies safe. The mother will sometimes carry her young on her back to avoid them getting eaten by turtles or water snakes. At the end of the two years, the hatchlings will be about 1.2 m (4 ft) long, and will naturally depart the nest area, avoiding the territories of older and larger crocodiles.
Crocodile longevity is not well established, but larger species like the Nile crocodile live longer, and may have an
average life span of 70–100 years.
Diet and eating behavior
Hatchlings eat
insects and small aquatic
invertebrates, and quickly graduate to
amphibians,
reptiles, and
birds. But even as an adult, 70% of a Nile crocodile's diet is
fish and other small vertebrates, though adult crocodiles can potentially eat nearly any
vertebrate that comes to take a drink at the edge of the water. Adult Nile Crocodiles are known to eat
zebras,
buffalo,
warthogs,
hyenas,
baboons,
antelope like the
Wildebeest,
giraffe,
big cats
[4][5] and other crocodiles.

A Spur-winged Plover picking the teeth of a Nile crocodile
Adult Nile crocodiles use their bodies and tail to herd groups of fish toward a bank, and eat them with quick sideways jerks of their heads. They also cooperate, blocking migrating fish by forming a semicircle across the river. The most dominant crocodile eats first.
Their ability to lie concealed with most of their body underwater, combined with their speed over short distances, makes them effective opportunistic hunters of larger prey. They grab such prey in their powerful jaws, drag it into the water, and hold it underneath until it drowns. They will also scavenge kills, although they avoid rotting meat. Groups of Nile crocodiles may travel hundreds of meters (yards) from a waterway to feast on a carcass.
Once their prey is dead, they rip off and swallow chunks of flesh. When groups of Nile crocodiles are sharing a kill, they use each other for leverage, biting down hard and then twisting their body to tear off large pieces of meat. This is called the ''death roll''. They may also get the necessary leverage by lodging their prey under branches or stones, before rolling and ripping.
Nile crocodiles are reputed to have a
symbiotic relationship with certain birds like the
spur-winged plover. According to reports, the crocodile opens its mouth wide, and then the bird picks pieces of meat from between the crocodile's teeth. This has proven hard to verify, and may not be a true symbiotic relationship.
Habitat and range

Distribution of ''C. niloticus''
The preferred habitat of Nile crocodiles is along
rivers, in freshwater
marshes, or along
lakes; in some cases they thrive in more
brackish water, along
estuaries or in
mangrove swamps.
They are found in most of Africa south of the
Sahara Desert, extending as far south as
Kruger National Park and the
Waterberg Massif in
South Africa; they also occur in northern
Madagascar, and along the
Nile River basin. Historically, they were present on the islands of
Comoros, which lie between Madagascar and
Mozambique, but no more. In more recent times, Nile crocodiles were present in
Israel,
Jordan, and
Algeria. Their absence is blamed on an increasingly
arid climate, and the corresponding reduction of their
wetland habitat; diminutive (both in individual and in population size) remnant populations are known from
Mauretania (
Tagant Plateau, thought to be gone by 1996 but rediscovered in 1998 and 1999
[6]), Algeria and
Chad (
Guelta d'Archei). They are also no longer found in the
Nile Delta, or along the nearby coast of the
Mediterranean Sea. Their range nowadays corresponds roughly with the
Afrotropic ecozone.
Environmental status
From the 1940s to the 1960s, the Nile crocodile was
hunted, primarily for high-quality
leather, though also for meat and purported curative properties. The population was severely depleted, and the species faced
extinction. National
laws, and international
trade regulations have resulted in a resurgence in many areas, and the species as a whole is no longer threatened with extinction. Crocodile 'protection programs' are artificial environments where crocodiles exist safely and without fear of extermination from hunters.
There are an estimated 250,000 to 500,000 individuals in the wild. The Nile crocodile is also widely distributed, with strong, documented populations in many countries in east Africa, including
Somalia,
Ethiopia,
Kenya, and
Zambia. Successful sustainable-yield programs focused on
ranching crocodiles for their skins have been successfully implemented in this area, and even countries with quotas are moving toward ranching. In 1993, 80,000 Nile crocodile skins were produced, the majority from ranches in
Zimbabwe and
South Africa.
The situation is more grim in central and west Africa, which make up about two-thirds of the Nile crocodile's habitat. The crocodile population in this area is much more sparse, and has not been adequately surveyed. While the natural population of Nile crocodiles in these areas may be lower due to a less-than-ideal environment and competition with
sympatric slender-snouted and
dwarf crocodiles, extirpation may be a serious threat in some of these areas. Additional factors are a loss of wetland habitats, and hunting in the 1970s. Additional ecological surveys and establishing management programs are necessary to resolve this.
The Nile crocodile is the top predator in its environment, and is responsible for checking the population of species like the
barbel catfish, a predator that can overeat fish populations that other species, like birds, depend on. The Nile crocodile also consumes dead animals that would otherwise pollute the waters. The primary threat to Nile crocodiles, in turn, are humans. While illegal poaching is no longer a problem, they are threatened by
pollution, hunting, and accidental entanglement in fishing nets.
Much of the hunting stems from their reputation as a man-eater, which is not entirely unjustified. Unlike other "man-eating" crocodiles, like the Salties, the Nile crocodile lives in close proximity to human populations, so contact is more frequent. While there are no solid numbers, the Nile crocodile probably kills a couple of hundred people a year, which is more than all the other crocodiles combined.
The Conservation Status of the Nile crocodile under the 1996
World Conservation Union (IUCN)
Red List is "Lower Risk" (Lrlc). The
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) lists the Nile crocodile under Appendix I (threatened with extinction) in most of its range; and under Appendix II (not threatened, but trade must be controlled) in the remainder, which either allows ranching or sets an annual quota of skins taken from the wild.
Gods, mummies, and magic
The people of
Ancient Egypt worshiped
Sobek, a crocodile-
god associated with
fertility, protection, and the power of the
Pharaoh.
[7] They had an ambivalent relationship with Sobek, as they did (and do) with the Nile crocodile; sometimes they hunted crocodiles and reviled Sobek, and sometimes they saw him as a protector and source of pharonic power.
Sobek was depicted as a crocodile, as a
mummified crocodile, or as a man with the head of a crocodile. The center of his worship was in the
Middle Kingdom city of
Arsinoe in the Faiyum Oasis (now
Al Fayyum), known as "Crocodopolis" by the
Greeks. Another major temple to Sobek is in
Kom-Ombo, and other temples were scattered across the country.
According to
Herodotus in the 5th century BC, some Egyptians kept crocodiles as pampered pets. In Sobek's temple in Arsinoe, a crocodile was kept in the pool of the temple, where it was fed, covered with
jewelry, and worshipped. When the crocodiles died, they were embalmed, mummified, placed in
sarcophagi, and then buried in a sacred
tomb. Many mummified crocodiles and even crocodile eggs have been found in Egyptian tombs.
Spells were used to appease crocodiles in Ancient Egypt, and even in modern times Nubian fishermen stuff and mount crocodiles over their doorsteps to ward against evil.
Nile crocodiles in fiction
The crocodile has seeped into modern consciousness, and appears regularly in
horror stories and
films. For instance, the
villain in the
B-movie ''Crocodile'' (2000) is a 9 m (30 ft), 100 year-old Nile crocodile called "Flat Dog", who eats teenagers.
★ In
Terry Pratchett's ''
Discworld'' series, one of the
Discworld's many gods is
Offler the crocodile god. He is mainly worshipped in
Klatch and other hot countries near large rivers.
★ In
Matthew Reilly's ''
Seven Ancient Wonders'' book, in the opening chapter, The Nine come into contact with several of these crocodiles in a tomb.
★ A
German cartoon show features
Schnappi the Little Crocodile, an adorable
animated character who sings about life in
Egypt.
Alternate names
The Nile crocodile is called ''Mamba'' in
Swahili, ''Garwe'' in
Shona, ''Ngwenya'' in
Ndebele, and ''Olom'' in a
Nubian dialect.
The Nile crocodile is also known locally in many African countries as "flatdog".
The
binomial name '''Crocodylus niloticus''' is derived from the
Greek ''kroko'' ("pebble"), ''deilos'' ("worm", or "man"), referring to its rough skin; and ''niloticus'', meaning "from the Nile River".
Classification
Crocodiles are
archosaurs; early forms split off from the rest of the reptiles about 200
Ma (million years ago), during the
Triassic. Their closest living relatives are the only other surviving lineage of archosaurs: the birds. Like birds, they have
gizzards and a four-chambered heart. Unlike birds, who are descended from
dinosaurs, the basic crocodile
body shape has changed very little over time.
''Crocodylus niloticus'' covers a wide range, and there are significant differences between the various populations. However, there are no official
subspecies though at least seven have been proposed:
★ ''C. n. africanus'': East African Nile crocodile
★ ''C. n. chamses'': West African Nile crocodile
★ ''C. n. corviei'': South African Nile crocodile
★ ''C. n. madagascariensis'': Malagasy Nile crocodile, Malagasy alligator, or Croco Mada
★ ''C. n. niloticus'': Ethiopian Nile crocodile
★ ''C. n. pauciscutatus'': Kenyan Nile crocodile, Kenyan alligator, or Kenyan caiman
★ ''C. n. suchus'': Central African Nile crocodile
Trivia
The first major modern treatise on a crocodilian was
Hugh B. Cott's paper "Scientific results of an inquiry into the ecology and economic status of the Nile crocodile (Crocodilus niloticus) in
Uganda" (''Transactions of the Zoological Society of London'' 29: 211–358).
For an informative and amusing account of pioneering discoveries in parenting behaviour, and the early days of conserving the Nile crocodile, see
Tony Pooley's book ''Discoveries of a Crocodile Man'' (Collins, 1982).
See also
★
Crocodile attacks
References
1. Somma, Louis A. (June 19, 2002). ''Crocodylus niloticus'' Laurenti, 1768. USGS Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database. Retrieved July 14, 2006 from the USGS.
2. Nile Crocodile. (n.d.). Retrieved December 16, 2004 from SeaWorld/Busch Gardens, Animal Bytes
3. National Geographic documentary; "Bite Force", Brady Barr.
4. http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/cnhc/csp_cnil.htm
5. http://www.nationalgeographic.com/kids/creature_feature/0107/crocodiles2.html
6. Shine, T. et al. 2001. Rediscovery of relict populations of the Nile crocodile Crocodylus niloticus in south-eastern Mauritania, with observations on their natural history. Oryx 35 (3), 260–262.
7. Sobek, God of Crocodiles, Power, Protection and Fertility...
★ Database entry includes a brief justification of why this species is of least concern
★ Britton, Adam. (n.d.). ''Crocodylus niloticus'' (Laurenti, 1768).
Retrieved December 16, 2004 from Crocodilian Species List.
★ El-Noshokaty, Amira. (January 17–23, 2002). Lord of the Nile. ''Al-Ahram Weekly On-line'', 569.
Retrieved December 16, 2004.
★ Nile crocodiles: Temperature dependent sex determination. (February 2000). ''Pulse of the Planet'', 2075.
Retrieved December 16, 2004 from Pulse of the Planet.
★ Ross, James Perran (ed.). (n.d.). Species Accounts: ''Crocodylus niloticus''.
December 16, 2004 from Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan, Second Edition: Crocodiles.
External links
★
Multimedia information from National Geographic Kids site
★
Nile crocodiles in captivity
★
Nile Crocodile Attack