All crocodillians, unlike most reptiles, guard their nest.
Alligators make a nest from rotting leaves and dirt beside the water. They usually stay nearby while the eggs are in the nest. When the babies hatch, they make peeping noises, and the mother alligator digs them up and carries them to the water. Alligators actually make very good mothers, and care for their babies for several weeks until the babies can survive on their own.
They don’t have shelters, but do build nest for their eggs.
Female alligators lay eggs in a nest made of vegetation, mud, and sticks. The nest provides warmth for the eggs as they develop. After about 65 days, the eggs hatch and the mother may help some of the hatchlings by carrying them in her mouth to water.
yes they do
Alligators use sexual reproduction, and then the female lays leathery eggs in a ground nest.
Female alligators typically lay their eggs in a nest made of vegetation and soil near the water's edge. The warmth of the sun helps incubate the eggs, and the female alligator will protect the nest until the eggs hatch.
No. Some lizards may guard their eggs but not their young. The only reptiles that guard their young are crocodiles and alligators.
Alligators lay roughly 20-50 eggs.
no they do not
Alligators.
the range of eggs per nest is 4 eggs
Alligators' offspring are called hatchlings. They typically hatch from eggs laid by the female alligator in a nest made of vegetation and mud. The mother alligator exhibits maternal care by protecting the hatchlings after they hatch.