Crocs and Gators have been recorded to run for short distances at speeds of up to 25MPH, but these speeds only last for a few minutes. If the alligator is simply moving across land without haste, it can go pretty far but alligators do get tired easily. Until they need to eat or cool off, alligators can travel on land but not too far.
An alligator is a reptile. Reptiles are cold-blooded vertebrates that have scales and lay eggs on land. Amphibians, on the other hand, are cold-blooded vertebrates that typically have moist skin and lay their eggs in water.
Yes, they are slow moving on land. In the water, you would be in trouble.
komodo dragon
Alligators are capable of moving short distances on land, typically around 20 to 50 feet, although some have been known to travel farther. They are best suited for life in the water and are mainly land-dwelling for basking in the sun and moving between bodies of water.
Probably not. A lion is far stronger than an alligator, much faster, much more ferocious, and is overall more intelligent. That is, unless of course the Lion is not healthy and the alligator is.
You realise you wrote it incorrectly.
anywhere they wanted but they never came very far by land travel
It depends where it is going.
Clifford E. Sutton has written: 'Trails through alligator land' -- subject(s): Description and travel
female alligator fertalizes an egg then lays multiple eggs on land
Alligators have legs which they use to crawl on land
In the water, the alligator, hands down... on land, circumstances would favor the tiger, but I wouldn't rule out the alligator.
No, Missouri is too far north for any alligator farms to be profitable.
aligator
An alligator couldn't live on land for the entire life but they couldn't live in water for the rest of there life
An alligator is a semi-aquatic animal - spending time in water and basking in the sun on the river bank.
yes but they also go on land