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The Chinese alligator (A. sinensis) is a much smaller, little-known reptile found in the Yangtze River region of China. It is similar to the larger form but attains a maximum length of about 2.1 metres (7 feet)—although usually to 1.5 metres—and is blackish with faint yellowish markings. It is considered endangered by the International Union for...
...diversity of animal life to develop and have permitted animals to survive there that elsewhere are extinct. Notable among such survivals are the great paddlefish of the Yangtze, the species of small alligator in eastern and central China, and the giant salamander (related to the Japanese giant salamander and the American hellbender) in western China. The diversity of animal life is perhaps...
in crocodile: Distribution and abundance )...(Caiman latirostris) and Jacaré caiman (C. yacare) extend into temperate areas of South America. The American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) and the Chinese alligator (A. sinensis) also occur in temperate regions. In the family Gavialidae, the Indian gavial (Gavialis gangeticus) is found in Pakistan, northern India, Nepal, Bhutan,...
One of the world’s rare animals, the Yangtze alligator, lives in the environs of Wu-hu. It is less than six feet long and feeds mainly on fish and small animals. Apart from rodents and reptiles, very few wild mammals remain in the densely settled and cultivated plains.
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