Dictionary > Crocodilia

Crocodilia

Definition
noun
(taxonomy) A taxonomic order that includes the crocodilian species
Supplement
The order Crocodilia is comprised of all crocodilian species, such as true crocodiles, alligators, true gharials, false gharials, and caimans. They appeared in the Late Cretaceous period, therefore, around 83.5 million years ago. The true crocodiles (family Crocodylidae) are amphibious reptiles that inhabit land and aquatic habitats such as rivers, wetlands, and lakes. The crocodile, Crocodylus porosus, is adapted to a marine environment and often resides in brackish waters such as mangrove swamps, estuaries, lagoons, and deltas throughout the tropics in Australia, America, Africa, and Asia. An obvious morphological distinction of crocodiles that make them identifiable from other crocodilians, particularly alligators and caimans, is having a V-shaped snout. Another distinctive morphological feature is having a large fourth tooth in the lower jaw that fits into a constriction in the upper jaw when the mouth is closed. The alligators are large carnivorous reptiles. There are two known extant species of alligators, i.e. Alligator mississippiensis (common alligator) and Alligator sinensis (Yangtze alligator). Morphologically, alligators have a shorter and broader snout than the crocodile, thus, shaped like a letter U, and the large teeth of the lower jaw shut into pits in the upper jaw, which has no marginal notches. The caimans (subfamily Caimaninae of the family Alligatoridae) are a crocodilian group found living in several tropical habitats in South and Central America such as swamps, marshes, mangrove rivers, and lakes. They have a scaly skin and smaller in size compared with alligators. The gharials (family Gavialidae) are characterized by their distinctive narrow snout, which is advantageous for catching aquatic preys such as fish. They are native to the northern part of the Indian subcontinent. Another group from the same family is the false gharials. The false gharials differ from the true gharials in a way that the formers’ snout broadens considerably towards the base.
Variant:

  • Crocodylia

Scientific classification:

  • Kingdom: Animalia
  • Phylum: Chordata
  • Class: Reptilia
  • Superorder: Crocodylomorpha
  • Clade: Eusuchia
  • Order: Crocodilia (Owen, 1842)

See also:


You will also like...

Freshwater Ecology
Freshwater Ecology

Freshwater ecology focuses on the relations of aquatic organisms to their freshwater habitats. There are two forms of co..

Homeostatic Mechanisms and Cellular Communication
Homeostatic Mechanisms and Cellular Communication

Homeostasis is the relatively stable conditions of the internal environment that result from compensatory regulatory res..

Human Nervous System
The Human Nervous System

The nervous system is essentially a biological information highway. This tutorial gives an overview of the nervous syste..

green plant cells
Plant Cells vs. Animal Cells

Plant cells have plastids essential in photosynthesis. They also have an additional layer called cell wall on their cell..

Gene Regulation in Eukaryotes
Gene Regulation in Eukaryotes

Learn about the general structure of a eukaryotic gene, the transcription factors, and post-transcriptional regulation....

"Opabinia regalis"
The Evolutionary Development of Multicellular Organisms

Multicellular organisms evolved. The first ones were likely in the form of sponges. Multicellularity led to the evolutio..

Related Articles...

No related articles found

See all Related Topics