Since most crocs are larger and more aggressive, I would go with the crocodile.
Neither option is ideal, but if forced to choose, an alligator may be slightly less aggressive than a crocodile. Alligators are generally more docile and likely to retreat rather than attack. However, both animals are powerful predators that should be avoided.
3- i think 12 or 10 months is called a juvinielle
the biggest animal will Win the fight
Hmm... hard to say. Maybe that you aren't sure, because of the way it is written, what the other option is. Would you rather the crocodile attack the alligator instead of the other way around, or would you rather they attack each other instead of you... or some other option that isn't clear?
It is likely that a male African lion would win in a fight against a crocodile because lions are powerful predators with strong jaws and sharp claws, making them more agile and better equipped for land combat. Additionally, lions have greater agility and speed on land, giving them an advantage over a crocodile on solid ground.
Crocodile.
crocdodile
Nile Crocodile, because more deadly and 200 attacks per year.
The Crocodile would not fight with an alligator as an alligator is smaller and many crocodile species live in different countries of the world that alligators do.
It depends what type of alligator/crocodile you are talking about, but usually a croc would win. It has the advantage of size.
It is hard to say who would win a fight between these two animals. In general, saltwater crocodiles are larger but alligators are faster. In a fight judged purely on bite force, the crocodile would win.
The Crocodile would most likely win due to the fact that crocodiles are generally more aggressive and on average they are larger then alligators so they have a size advantage
It all depends on the variables: is the lion old or young, is the crocodile fed or not, the terrain matters too.
If by winning you mean surviving it, the crocodile would be the most likely winner, IF the horse didn't run away first. A crocodile can run from 2 to 10 miles per hour on land, and faster than that in water. So if the horse ran fast enough to get away, which they can certainly do, it would survive, but if the crocodile caught it, the crocodile would probably be able to kill it. The horse would not "fight" the crocodile, but would merely try to get away from it, as horses are prey animals, if they are up against an animal capable of killing them.Another AnswerA crocodile would win the fight in water. But if it fought on land, the horse would usually win if the crocodile was not strong or large.
crocodile
A crocodile's head is more narrow and the snout comes to more of a point as compared to an alligator. An alligator's snout is blunt - more of a U-shape. I try to remember the difference by thinking that if the nose is pointed like a capital "A", then it is not an Alligator. It's a bit tough to remember since it is a negative. Another memory jog - though negative - would be if the snout is rounded (a capital "C" is rounded) it is not a Crocodile.
An alligator would never come into contact with a dolphin given habitat differences. Crocodiles (particularly the American crocodile of the New World and the saltwater crocodile of the Old World) may occasionally be found in dolphin habitat. Interestingly enough (and tragically) a dolphin was killed by an American crocodile along the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica in 2011, although this must be a very rare occurrence.