Crocodiles use sticks to lure prey: Study

Crocodiles, it turns out, do not just lie in wait for their quarry to come by; they use ‘tools’ to lure them, according to a new study.

Zee Media Bureau

Washington: Crocodiles, it turns out, do not just lie in wait for their quarry to come by; they use ‘tools’ to lure them, according to a new study.

Researchers have observed that crocodiles and alligators are shrewder hunters than has been previously thought.

Vladimir Dinets, a research assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at University of Tennessee, Knoxville, observed mugger crocodiles and American alligators using twigs and sticks to lure birds, particularly during nest-building time.

Dinets first observed the behaviour in 2007 when he spotted crocodiles lying in shallow water along the edge of a pond in India with small sticks or twigs positioned across their snouts. The behaviour potentially fooled nest-building birds wading in the water for sticks into thinking the sticks were floating on the water. The crocodiles remained still for hours and if a bird neared the stick, they would lunge.

To see if the stick-displaying was a form of clever predation, Dinets and his colleagues performed systematic observations of the reptiles for one year at four sites in Louisiana, including two rookery and two nonrookery sites. A rookery is a bird breeding ground.

The researchers observed a significant increase in alligators displaying sticks on their snouts from March to May, the time birds were building nests. Specifically, the reptiles in rookeries had sticks on their snouts during and after the nest-building season. At non-rookery sites, the reptiles used lures during the nest-building season.

"This study changes the way crocodiles have historically been viewed," Dinets said. "They are typically seen as lethargic, stupid and boring but now they are known to exhibit flexible multimodal signaling, advanced parental care and highly coordinated group hunting tactics."

The observations could mean the behaviour is more widespread within the reptilian group and could also shed light on how crocodile s` extinct relatives- dinosaurs -behaved.

The study was published in the journal Ethology, Ecology and Evolution.

(With Agency inputs)

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