Write a note on female gharial (from the chapter saving the gharial)
Answers
The gharial probably evolved in the northern Indian subcontinent. Fossil gharial remains were excavated in Pliocene deposits in the Sivalik Hills and the Narmada River valley. It currently inhabits rivers in the plains of the northern part of the Indian subcontinent. It is the most thoroughly aquatic crocodilian, and leaves the water only for basking and building nests on moist sandbanks. Adults mate at the end of the cold season. Females congregate in spring to dig nests. They lay 20–95 eggs, and guard the nests and the young that hatch before the onset of the monsoon. The hatchlings stay and forage in shallow water during their first year, but move to sites with deeper water as they grow.
Answer:
The gharials are the only living crocodilian with such visible sexual demorphisim. The female gharials reach sexual maturity at a body length 2.6m (8 ft. 6 inches) and grow up to 4.5m (14 ft. 9 inches). They make nests during dry season, and the large female gharials are capable to lay more than 100 eggs.