Crocodylus halli
Crocodylus halli, also known as Hall's New Guinea crocodile, is a species of crocodile endemic to the island of New Guinea. It is found on the southern half of the island, south of the New Guinea highlands. It is named after Philip M. Hall, a researcher at the University of Florida who performed the initial studies to clarify the species' distinctiveness.[1][2][3][4]
Crocodylus halli | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Order: | Crocodilia |
Family: | Crocodylidae |
Genus: | Crocodylus |
Species: | C. halli |
Binomial name | |
Crocodylus halli | |
Taxonomy
The species was formerly considered a distinct population of the closely related New Guinea crocodile (C. novaeguineae), but genetic analysis as well as analysis of its skull structure (namely the postcrania and maxilla) has supported it being classified as its own species. The two species likely diverged within the last 3-8 million years, when the uplift of the New Guinea highlands created a barrier that divided them into separate populations; due to this relatively recent divergence, mtDNA analysis does not recover the two populations as distinct species, although phylogenetic analysis does. Despite the common ancestry of the two species, genetic analysis indicates that the New Guinea crocodile may be more closely related to the putative Borneo crocodile (C. raninus) than to Hall's New Guinea crocodile. This may indicate that C. novaeguinae and C. raninus diverged from each other even more recently than their ancestor did from C. halli, or that the specimen used for C. raninus was actually a misidentified C. novaeguinae.[1]
Distribution
The species occurs in swamps, rivers, and lakes in the southern half of New Guinea. It is known to occasionally enter estuaries, such as the Fly River estuary. Variation is known from individuals across the range, with individuals from Lake Murray having a much wider skull than those from the Aramia River.[1]
Behavior
The species nests during New Guinea's wet season (November - April), in contrast to C. novaeguineae, which nests near the end of the dry season (July - November).[1]
In captivity
Three captive crocodiles at the St. Augustine Alligator Farm Zoological Park, formerly considered individuals of C. novaeguinae, were actually found to be C. halli while the study was being conducted. These were used to substantiate observed differences between C. halli and C. novaeguinae.[1]
References
- Murray, Christopher M.; Russo, Peter; Zorrilla, Alexander; McMahan, Caleb D. (September 2019). "Divergent Morphology among Populations of the New Guinea Crocodile, Crocodylus novaeguineae (Schmidt, 1928): Diagnosis of an Independent Lineage and Description of a New Species". Copeia. 107 (3): 517–523. doi:10.1643/CG-19-240. ISSN 0045-8511.
- Hall, Philip M. (1989). "Variation in Geographic Isolates of the New Guinea Crocodile (Crocodylus novaeguineae Schmidt) Compared with the Similar, Allopatric, Philippine Crocodile (C. mindorensis Schmidt)". Copeia. 1989 (1): 71–80. doi:10.2307/1445607. ISSN 0045-8511. JSTOR 1445607.
- Ashley Strickland. "New 10-foot-long crocodile species found ... in a museum". CNN. Retrieved 2019-09-28.
- "New species of crocodile discovered in museum collections: Crocodylus halli named after late scientist who started investigating the reptile's lineage". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 2019-09-29.