A group of young alligators is called a pod
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.
They catch it like adult alligators, only their prey is much smaller
Alligators are born from eggs laid by the mother in a nest, while tigers give live birth to their young. Baby alligators are called hatchlings and are completely independent from birth, while baby tigers are called cubs and depend on their mother for care and protection. Both species are born helpless and rely on their parents for survival in the early stages of life.
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.
When baby squirrels are still in the nest it is called an infant or baby. When it is out of the nest but still young, it is called a juvenile. When they are adults we refer them as just adults or just squirrel.
A baby alligator is called a hatch-ling. This is a common name used among most reptiles that give birth by laying eggs. There is no specific name for the baby of an alligator. A group of young alligators is called a pod.
Alligators.
All crocodillians, unlike most reptiles, guard their nest.
yes they do
They're called birds.
Baby alligators live with their mothers. The mother alligator builds the nest next to her gator hole. When the babies hatch, she takes them into her hole where they swim around and learn to be gators. As long as they are with her, they are safe from predators. As they get bigger, they start wandering off. That is when the predators start eating them. Eventually all of them wander off. A few will survive to start new families.