# Variation in the Diet of Hatchling Morelet’s Crocodile (Crocodylus moreletii) in the Wild

**Authors:** Mariana González-Solórzano, Marco A. López-Luna, Laura T. Hernández-Salazar, Edgar Ahmed Bello-Sánchez, Jorge E. Morales-Mávil

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ani14172610 · 2024-09-08

## TL;DR

This study examines the diet of young Morelet’s crocodiles as they transition from hatchlings to juveniles, revealing a shift toward more varied prey.

## Contribution

The study identifies new prey items in hatchling crocodile diets and documents dietary changes during early development.

## Key findings

- Hatchling Morelet’s crocodiles have a generalist diet including invertebrates and some vertebrates.
- Two new prey items were observed in hatchling diets, not previously reported.
- Dietary differences were found between smaller and larger hatchlings, indicating ontogenetic shifts.

## Abstract

Crocodiles are one of nature’s most successful predators. Their prey varies according to their size. Adults are known to consume different types of vertebrates; juveniles have a similar diet, although their prey is smaller. However, hatchlings have a diet based mainly on insects. This study aimed to know the diet of hatchling Morelet’s crocodiles (Crocodylus moreletii) at a growth stage corresponding to their transition to the juvenile stage. Therefore, it is important to know which vertebrate prey are beginning to appear during this developmental change in crocodiles. To find out, we captured and washed the stomachs of 31 hatchling crocodiles in the Laguna de las Ilusiones in Tabasco, Mexico. Our results showed that crocodiles have a generalist diet, with prey ranging from invertebrates (mainly coleoptera and hemipterans) to some vertebrates (mostly fish and birds). It is important to know these changes in the diet of crocodilians as they develop to help us better interpret their natural history and propose better strategies for their study.

The relationship between diet and behavior is essential to understanding an animal’s strategies to obtain food, considering ontogenical changes. In reptiles, there is a relationship between the length of the individual and the size of the prey it consumes. Studies have focused on the ontogenetic changes in reptile diets from hatchling to adult, but only a few studies have focused on the transition from hatchling to juvenile. We aimed to describe and analyze the composition, variation, diversity, and overlap in the diet of hatchling Morelet’s crocodiles (Crocodylus moreletii) for three size intervals during the hatchling–juvenile transition. We captured 31 hatchling Morelet’s crocodiles in an urbanized lagoon in Tabasco. We performed stomach-flushing to determine the diet. Additionally, we estimated the volume, frequency of occurrence, and relative importance of diet items and analyzed the relationship between prey type and the total length of the individuals. The diversity of the hatchling prey suggests a generalist diet. We observed two items not previously described in the diet of hatchling crocodiles. In addition, we found differences in diet between the initial and final size intervals, as increases in the length of prey appeared that they did not consume when they were hatchlings. Our results contribute new information to the dietary changes that occur during the hatchling–juvenile transition.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Crocodylus moreletii (taxon 184237)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** stomach- (MESH:D013272)
- **Species:** Crocodylus moreletii (Morelet's crocodile, species) [taxon 184237], Crocodylidae (crocodiles, family) [taxon 8493]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11394087/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11394087