Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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 .
The New Guinea crocodile (Crocodylus novaeguineae) is a small species of crocodile found on the island of New Guinea north of the mountain ridge that runs along the centre of the island. The population found south of the mountain ridge, formerly considered a genetically distinct population, is now considered a distinct species, Hall's New ...
Hall's New Guinea crocodile. C. halli ... New Guinea crocodile. C. novaeguineae Schmidt, 1928: New Guinea: Size: up to 200 kg (440 lb) Habitat: Inland wetlands [16]
Hall's New Guinea crocodile (Crocodylus halli) The island of New Guinea, south of the New Guinea Highlands: A smaller species that closely resembles and was long classified under the New Guinea crocodile, which it is now considered to be genetically distinct from. It lives south of the mountain barrier that divides the two species' ranges.
American crocodile at La Manzanilla, Jalisco, Mexico A skull of the extinct Voay robustus. Crocodylinae contains 13-14 extant species and 6 extinct species. Subfamily Crocodylinae. Genus Crocodylus. Crocodylus acutus, American crocodile; Crocodylus halli, Hall's New Guinea crocodile; Crocodylus intermedius, Orinoco crocodile
New Guinea is the world’s second-largest island and is made up of two halves - the east side, known as Papua New Guinea and the west half, part of Indonesia, known as Papua.
American crocodile: Southern Florida and the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of north Mexico to North America as far south as Peru and Venezuela, Cuba, Jamaica, Hispaniola and Grand Cayman. Crocodylus halli [4] Murray, Russo, Zorrilla & McMahan, 2019: Hall's crocodile: southern New Guinea Crocodylus intermedius (Graves, 1819) Orinoco crocodile
The New Guinea crocodile (Crocodylus novaeguineae) is a small species of crocodile found on the island of New Guinea north of the mountain ridge that runs along the centre of the island. The population found south of the mountain ridge, formerly considered a genetically distinct population, is now considered a distinct species, Hall's New ...