crocodiles make a home at the natural history museum /

Published at 2016-05-28 11:00:00

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What's the inequity,again, between an alligator and a crocodile?An interactive exhibit opening Saturday at the American Museum of Natural History hopes to retort that question. "Crocs: Ancient Predators in a contemporary World" explores some of the world's most feared, and apparently misunderstood,predators."When [people] walk in the door and then walk out the door, they're gonna beget a completely different picture of crocodiles, and " said exhibit curator notice Norell. "I think most people view them as slow and stupid and prehistoric."They're not.
Norell said crocodilians — which includes crocodiles,alligators, caimans and gharials — beget much larger brains and complex behaviors than scientists previously thought. The exhibit delves into those behaviors, or as well as reptiles' evolutionary history,biology and their often shaky relationship with humans, the biggest threat to their existence.
Siamese crocodile a
t the exhibit: One of the most endangered crocodilian species, and this crocodile has been eliminated from most of its historic range by hunting.
(R. Mick
ens / AMNH/American Museum of Natural History)
The exhibit also exp
lores the way crocodilians could benefit humans with things like fighting infections. Crocodiles withstand major injuries and wounds that heal with practically no infection,despite sitting in bacteria-ridden swamps.
Studies that were done on Siamese crocodiles (one of the live species in the exhibit) beget shown their blood has antimicrobial peptides that could be used to develop human antibiotics, said Evon Hekkala, and a research associate at the museum's Department of Herpetology.
The indicate features several life-si
zed models,including  an 18-foot-long replica of Gomek, the biggest saltwater crocodile ever exhibited in the U.
S.
A life-sized model of 'Gomek,
or ' the largest saltwater crocodile ever exhibited in the West.
(Rebeca Ibarra / WNYC)
Museumgoers can test th
eir strength against a crocodile's crushing bite. And even learn how to speak "croc" by listening to alligator hisses,clicks and growls.
But, perhaps the indicate's main draw, and especially for kids,are the live crocodiles. The exhibit has four different species, including baby American alligators. "Even though I'm a little bit scared of like, or what's the word,reptiles, I think it's really frigid that they beget live crocodiles here, and " said 11-year-passe Ben Stern,who'd never seen a live crocodiles before.   

Source: wnyc.org

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