Milk is fed to young only in the case of mammals (usually hairy or furry animals), so alligators do not feed milk to their young. The young survive on bits of meat that fall out of the mothers' mouths after they have successfully hunted.
An alligator does not feed its babies. As soon as a baby alligator hatches, it must start looking for its own food. As long as it looks for food in the vicinity of the mother, the mother will eat anything that tries to eat her baby but other that that, the baby is on its own.
No, alligator babies hatch from eggs.
If they survive predators, babies will become adults with a long lifespan.
An alligator can have a clutch of 20-50 eggs in one nesting season, but the number of babies that hatch and survive to adulthood can vary depending on factors like predation and environmental conditions.
American Alligator: Alligator missipiensisChinese Alligator :Alligator sinensis)Alligator mississippiensis
An American alligator is a species of alligator native to the southeastern United States, Latin name Alligator mississippiensis.
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No. There were two species of alligator: the American Alligator and the Chinese alligator.
No. There were two species of alligator: the American Alligator and the Chinese alligator.
A Male American alligator will usually be 230 kg and a female American alligator will usually be 91 pounds.
The genus Alligator has two species:Alligator mississippiensis - the American AlligatorandAlligator sinensis - the Chinese Alligator
American alligator