The American alligator is found in the southeastern
The female American alligator builds a nest of mud, sticks and leaves above the high water level and lays 20 – 50 eggs in it. She guards the nest for about nine weeks until the young hatch and then she carries them down to the water in her mouth in small groups. She continues to guard her young for another 12 months.
Come see the American alligator in the
- An American alligator can be distinguished from a crocodile by the arrangement of its teeth. The alligator’s teeth in its lower jaw are usually hidden under the edge of its wide upper jaw. In the crocodile, some of the lower jaw teeth are visible on the outside of the upper jaw.
- The gender of the hatchlings is determined by the temperature in the nest during incubation. Males are produced in the warmer parts and females in the cooler areas.
- Juvenile alligators have black backs with bright yellow cross-bands. The stripes disappear in the adult.
- The tail of an adult American alligator makes up about one half of its body length.
- Alligators have between 74 and 80 teeth that are used for grasping and tearing prey.





