Hannah Devlin,
Science correspondent, The Guardian
Tue 17 Dec 2019 07.06 EST
Crocodiles have
never had a friendly reputation, but they may just have become even scarier.
Veterinary scientists have discovered that a surprising number of species are
capable of galloping when they reach their top speeds.
Previously it was thought that
only a couple of crocodile species were able to use this horse-like gait, but
the latest observations show that the ability extends to eight different
species. Alligators and caimans, by contrast, can manage only a trot.
Since the gait is shared across
many species, the researchers believe galloping may have first emerged in
crocodiles’ ancient land-dwelling ancestors, called crocodylomorphs, which were
cat-sized creatures with long legs.
Prof John Hutchinson, a
specialist in evolutionary biomechanics at the Royal Veterinary College,
London, who led the study, said a surprising finding was that despite the
different gaits and sizes, almost all the species studied had a top speed of
about 11mph.
“We suspect that bounding and
galloping give small crocodiles better acceleration and manoeuvrability,
especially useful for escaping from danger,” he said. “It seems like alligators
and caiman stand their ground rather than run away with an extreme gait.”
The researchers found that bigger
crocodiles were less likely to gallop, the largest galloping species being a
Cuban crocodile, typically measuring more than 2 meters long.
“That’s as big as crocs can get
and still bound and gallop,” said Hutchinson. “The Cuban crocs are incredibly
active on land and incredibly athletic. This species is notorious for being
really aggressive.”
Other, smaller species were more
likely to gallop into the water to escape rather than to chase prey.
Hutchinson said galloping appears
to have emerged multiple times in evolution in different species, as an
energetically efficient way to get around. Some toads and spiders gallop, he
said.
The scientists carried out the
study at St Augustine alligator farm and zoological park in Florida, where they
recorded videos of 42 individuals from 15 species.
The creatures were placed at the
end of a runway and coaxed to run to the other end. “Every animal it took a
different motivation,” said Hutchinson. “Some of them wouldn’t go at all. The
caimans and alligators tended to just sit there and hiss and fight.”
The findings are published in the
journal Scientific
Reports.
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