crocodilian - definitie. Wat is crocodilian
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Wat (wie) is crocodilian - definitie

ORDER OF LARGE REPTILES
Crocodylian; Crocodillian; Crocodylians; Crocodylia; Crocodilian; Crocodilians; Crododilians; High walk; Crocodilla; Evolution of crocodilians
  • Crocodilians, like this American alligator, can "high walk" with the lower limb portions held almost vertically, unlike other [[reptile]]s.
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  • Sign in Florida warning of alligators
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  • Young gharial in Kukrail Reserve Forest
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  • Spectacled caiman immersed in vegetation covered water
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  • Diagram of crocodilian heart and circulation
  • Mother [[American alligator]] with nest and young
  • [[Nile crocodile]] swimming. Sequence runs from right to left.
  • Crocodile in the mediaeval [[Rochester Bestiary]], late 13th century
  • Aerial view of a crocodile farm in Cambodia
  • migrating]] [[wildebeest]] crossing the [[Mara River]]
  • Range of skull shape in crocodilians, from narrow to broad-snouted
  • American crocodiles basking
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  • Skin of a juvenile Nile crocodile
  • Skeletal mount of the giant crocodylian ''[[Deinosuchus]]'' from the [[Late Cretaceous]] of [[North America]]
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  • A gharial eating a fish
  • Gharial camouflaged with floating weed
  • Handbag made from skin of West African dwarf crocodile (''[[Osteolaemus tetraspis]]'') at the Natural History Museum, London.
  • The Crocodile stretching the nose of the Elephant's Child in one of [[Rudyard Kipling]]'s ''[[Just So Stories]]''. Illustration by Kipling, 1902
  • Captive Indian gharial basking and gaping
  • Relief of Egyptian god [[Sobek]]
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  • Nile crocodile eggs
  • Mounted skeleton and taxidermy of Nile crocodile
  • Overhead view of [[broad-snouted caiman]] with eyes, ears and nostrils above water
  • Restoration of early crocodylomorph ''[[Protosuchus]]''
  • Saltwater crocodile resting on beach
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  • Young saltwater crocodiles in captivity

Crocodilian         
·noun One of the Crocodilia.
II. Crocodilian ·adj Like, or pertaining to, the crocodile; characteristic of the crocodile.
crocodilian         
[?kr?k?'d?l??n]
¦ noun Zoology a reptile of the order Crocodylia, comprising the crocodiles, alligators, caimans, and gharial.
Crocodilia         
·noun ·pl An order of reptiles including the crocodiles, gavials, alligators, and many extinct kinds.

Wikipedia

Crocodilia

Crocodilia (or Crocodylia, both ) is an order of mostly large, predatory, semiaquatic reptiles, known as crocodilians. They first appeared 95 million years ago in the Late Cretaceous period (Cenomanian stage) and are the closest living relatives of birds, as the two groups are the only known survivors of the Archosauria. Members of the order's total group, the clade Pseudosuchia, appeared about 250 million years ago in the Early Triassic period, and diversified during the Mesozoic era. The order Crocodilia includes the true crocodiles (family Crocodylidae), the alligators and caimans (family Alligatoridae), and the gharial and false gharial (family Gavialidae). Although the term 'crocodiles' is sometimes used to refer to all of these, crocodilians is a less ambiguous vernacular term for members of this group.

Large, solidly built, lizard-like reptiles, crocodilians have long flattened snouts, laterally compressed tails, and eyes, ears, and nostrils at the top of the head. They swim well and can move on land in a "high walk" and a "low walk", while smaller species are even capable of galloping. Their skin is thick and covered in non-overlapping scales. They have conical, peg-like teeth and a powerful bite. They have a four-chambered heart and, somewhat like birds, a unidirectional looping system of airflow within the lungs, but like other living reptiles they are ectotherms.

Crocodilians are found mainly in lowlands in the tropics, but alligators also live in the southeastern United States and the Yangtze River in China. They are largely carnivorous, the various species feeding on animals such as fish, crustaceans, molluscs, birds, and mammals; some species like the Indian gharial are specialised feeders, while others like the saltwater crocodile have generalised diets. Crocodilians are typically solitary and territorial, though cooperative feeding does occur. During breeding, dominant males try to monopolise available females. Females lay eggs in holes or in mounds and, unlike most other reptiles, care for their hatched young.

Some species of crocodilians are known to have attacked humans. The largest number of attacks comes from the Nile crocodile. Humans are the greatest threat to crocodilian populations through activities that include hunting, poaching, and habitat destruction, but farming of crocodilians has greatly reduced unlawful trading in wild skins. Artistic and literary representations of crocodilians have appeared in human cultures around the world since Ancient Egypt. The earliest known mention of the story that crocodiles weep for their victims was in the 9th century; it was later spread by Sir John Mandeville in 1400 and then by William Shakespeare in the late 16th century and early 17th century.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor crocodilian
1. The Cuvier‘s Dwarf Caiman, Latin name Paleosuchus palpebrosus, is a crocodilian reptile from South America.
2. In between are the body–to–clutch ratios seen in other modern bird and crocodilian species in which mothers alone nurture the young.
3. In a drawer she found "bone fragments that I recognized as crocodilian." Museum staff told her "local people found them and brought them in." She named the species but could find out nothing more about it.
4. How close is the one behind me?" Back comes the answer: "Next to your right leg." "So it‘s unsafe for me to get up and move, right?" "I would say so!" Dr Barr, 44, claims to be unique in having studied all 23 species of crocodilian – crocodiles, alligators and caymans – in the wild.
5. Alone among nations, the Bolivians had sent a delegation to support Means when he and fellow secessionists announced their declaration of independence in Washington last December. (Bolivian President Evo Morales is Indian, as is roughly 55 percent of the Bolivian population.) "We respect the rights of Indians everywhere," Guzman told me, "even though we cannot take an official position on the Republic of Lakotah." Uruguay‘s ambassador to the United States, Carlos Gianelli, was a regal older gentleman with a crocodilian smile; his office was finely appointed with burgundy leather chairs and a mahogany desk.