iHerp Australia Issue 9 | Page 50

rest of the mass is distributed around the gator’s hulking girth and large head with the distinctive rounded snout. Short limbs stick out to the side, and extensive toe webbing makes them perfect as rudders for steering. There are albino alligators, too, from the bayous of Louisiana, where they were accidentally discovered in 1992 by commercial gator farmer Jerry Savoie. At St. Augustine, they are kept in a shaded area just past the entrance, to protect their white scales and unpigmented eyes from the strong light. Sadly, adult albinos only exist in captivity. Their white skin makes juveniles conspicuous to predators, and they ‘ A LBINO ALLIGATORS were ACCIDENTALLY DISCOVERED by a commercial gator farmer in the bayous of Louisiana.’ are susceptible to fatal sunburn. From humble beginnings, as little more than a simple roadside attraction in the 1950s, the Alligator Farm of the new millennium has the unrivalled distinction of being the only park, since 1993, to showcase all 24 known, extant species of crocodili- ans under a single roof. Jenny Pramuk, PhD, an expert on reptiles and amphibians at Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo, wasn’t remotely concerned about sending their beloved pair of dwarf crocs to the Alligator Farm after fire ravaged their habitat last year. “They’re going to the luxury resort of croco- diles. They are going to retire in style.” What croc wouldn’t enjoy eternal sunshine, with warm pools for bathing and heated floors? The ‘Land of the Crocodiles’ exhibit provides for an up-close look at the amazing members of order Crocodilia, including the feisty, bellicose caimans and the weak-legged, narrow-snouted gharials. But the most fearsome species of these apex predators is the Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus), the largest reptile alive. Known to prey on deer, buffalo, and even humans on occasion, and possessing 64- 68 individual teeth that clamp down with the greatest bite pressure of any animal on the planet, the ‘saltie’ is capable of lightning-swift attacks from its watery lair. Able to inhabit briny ecosystems due to the ability to excrete excess salt from special glands (like all true crocodilians), Saltwater or Estuarine Crocodiles have a broad distribution that encompasses India and Southeast Asia, New Guinea and northern Australia, although they are now extinct in much of the known range. For an underwater, eye-to-eye glimpse of this croc, head to the ‘Realm of the Saltie’. There you can face off with Maximo, the Alligator Farm‘s largest reptile, weighing in at 567kg (1,250lbs) and measuring 4.8m (15’9”) in total length. Hard to imagine that this mon- strous croc once hatched from a tiny egg found 47 years ago in Australia by Aboriginal hunters. While at the South Pacific reptile exhibits, be sure to check out the ‘Python Cave’ where you will discover Green Tree Pythons (Morelia viridis) and the Reticulated Pythons (Python reticulatus). Papuan Monitors (Varanus salvadorii) and Lace Monitors (V. varius) are housed indoors, while the Komodo Dragon (V. komodoensis) has its own grassy enclosure outside, behind glass. Originally thought to be deaf, this gargantuan monitor also has poor