Caves are scary places – especially ones filled with crocodiles. “I
was crawling through the cave and suddenly there were two red eyes,”
says explorer Olivier Testa. “It was frightening!”
In 2010, he was part of an expedition into Gabon’s Abanda cave system following a tip-off about a population of dwarf crocodiles living there.
While crocs sometimes retreat underground during droughts, this is
the first population documented taking up long-term residence in caves.
The team’s crocodile expert, Matthew Shirley
from the Rare Species Conservatory Foundation, soon realised why they
had done so: a bounty of ready-made snacks was falling into the water or
lining up to be plucked off the cave walls.
“You walk in and there are just bats and crickets everywhere,” he
says. “The crocodiles are pretty good hunters anyway, but even if they
didn’t have to pull bats off the walls, there are individuals falling to
the floor all the time.”
Thanks to a steady diet of bats and other cave critters, the crocs
appear to be in better physical condition than their forest
counterparts, especially the young ones.
With at least 5 kilometres of caves to occupy, it’s difficult to
precisely know how many crocs are taking advantage of this banquet.
However, based on the team’s exploration up to 100 metres into the cave
system, Shirley reckons there are at least 50, and probably many more.
Orange is the new black
As the team headed further into the caves, they made an unexpected
discovery: in the deeper recesses, the older, dark-coloured males had
become paler, turning a bright orange. Were they losing unnecessary
pigment in a similar way to other cave-dwelling animals, such as Mexican blind cavefish?
Shirley doesn’t think so. Cave crocs must maintain contact with the
outside world for one simple reason. “They cannot reproduce in the
caves,” he says. “It’s a nesting ecology thing: they need big mounds of
rotting vegetation to lay their eggs in.”
So while the crocodiles appear to spend the entire dry season in the
caves, they emerge during the wet season – at least to breed.
Instead of
the colour change marking an early stage of subterranean adaptation,
Shirley has a more disgusting explanation.
The water these crocodiles
swim through is essentially an alkaline slurry formed from bat
droppings. “The urea in bat guano makes the water very basic,” he says.
“Eventually that will erode away the skin and change its colour.”
Bizarrely, this is similar to the chemical treatment applied to crocodile skin so it can be turned into belts and wallets.
Dwarf crocs in Gabon are in little danger of becoming belts, but they are hunted extensively for bushmeat.
Thankfully, Shirley thinks the Abanda population avoids this threat,
citing the difficulty he had capturing them in narrow, often impassable,
tunnels – “and I consider myself to be fairly good at catching
crocodiles”.
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2107837-weird-orange-crocodiles-found-gorging-on-bats-in-gabons-caves/
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