Species Spotlight : American Alligator
Alligators are found throughout the southeast, as
far west as Texas and as far north as the Carolinas. An estimated one
million alligators reside in many of the thousands of lakes and
tens-of-thousands of acres of marsh and swampland in Florida. The
reptiles are as much a symbol of the state as palm trees and white
sand beaches.
In the wild, alligators can live for 30 to 35
years. Courtship and breeding take place from April to May. In June
and July, female gators lay 20-50 eggs in nests of mounded
vegetation, where the eggs incubate for two months. The female
remains in the area to defend the nest against raccoons and other
egg-eating predators. Six- to eight-inch long alligators hatch out
in mid-August to mid-September; unlike the adults, these youngsters
are banded or splotched with yellow, though they darken as they
mature.
Wading birds, raccoons, bobcats, otters, snakes, large bass and larger
alligators often eat young gators, especially those less than two years
old. Once alligators are about four feet long, their greatest enemies are
larger gators and people, though the effect of the latter has been reduced
through strict laws and limited, controlled hunts. Alligators were placed
on the endangered species list in 1973, and then delisted in 1987 when
their population rebounded.
Today, the greatest environmental threats to alligators are habitat loss and pollution.
As Florida’s human population continues to encroach on alligator habitat,
encounters between the two species are inevitable. Human fatalities due to
alligators are rare, but 12,000 to 14,000 nuisance gators are reported to
the state each year and licensed trappers kill 5,000 of these.
Where you can find American alligators
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