She will usually dig a 'nest' in which to lay her eggs - covering them over afterwards. She will stay close-by to ward off predators. When the young begin to hatch, she will dig them out - so they can crawl to freedom. She will carry them to the nearest water source in her mouth, and stay with them through the first few weeks until they're strong enough to be completely independent.
The female she keeps them in her mouth but when their swimming she lets them out of her mouth but still keeps tight supervision on her babies and attacks anyone or anything that gets near them.
She stays near the nest, protecting it from predators. When the young hatch out, she guards them for a time, until the young disperse on their own.
the mother alligator cares for her babies for 2 years
alligaors take care of their young by protecting them from predators and teaching them to hunt. they also guard the nests while their eggs are incubating
they carry their young in their mouth
Kiss and hug each other
Alligators cannot speak, but humans call young alligators "hatchlings".
alligators
A group of alligators is called a congregation or pod (of young).
no alligators give birth to eggs than they grow up into big alligators
by staying with them
gorillas do raise their young
Seeing as alligators actually lay eggs and do not birth their young this is pretty irrelevant, oviparism is the correct term for the laying of eggs that mature outside of the mother Young alligators are ten to twelve inches long at hatching.
A group of young alligators is called a pod
They do not raise them.
None. Mother alligators will carry their young from the nest to the water and will protect them from predators, but aside from that the baby alligators must fend for themselves.
Anywhere from 30 to 60.
Sea anemone's don't raise their young.