CHARACTERIZATION OF MORPHOLOGICAL TRAITS OF COMMERCIAL INTEREST IN THE MORELET'S CROCODILE (Crocodylus moreletii)

Ricardo Serna-Lagunes, Pablo Díaz-Rivera, Jesús M. Cota-Fernández

Abstract


Crocodylus moreletii is a species of commercial interest based on its skin. In this study, five morphological traits of commercial interest were characterized in 125 captivity-raised specimens of C. moreletii from four populations (Puente Chilapa, Gutiérrez Zamora, Villa Juárez and Puerto Vallarta). A canonical discriminant analysis (CDA) was used to differentiate the populations according to their morphological traits, a cluster analysis (CA) was used to infer which populations had the largest total length (TL), and a covariance analysis (ANCOVA) was used to assess the allometry and detect which population was different in terms of TL. The CDA showed no significant effects, suggesting that the morphological traits were similar among populations; the CA grouped two populations which had the largest body size; the ANCOVA revealed a significant correlation between morphological traits and detected a TL effect significantly lower in males and females from Puente Chilapa, in comparison with the other three populations. In conclusion, the males from Gutiérrez Zamora and the females from Villa Juárez were morphologically outstanding in terms of TL, and they would be the right crocodiles to establish a breeding nucleus in order to obtain offspring with their phenotypic characteristics.

Keywords


Crocodylus moreletii; Morelet’s crocodile; Management Unit for Wildlife Conservation.

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URN: http://www.revista.ccba.uady.mx/urn:ISSN:1870-0462-tsaes.v13i3.1341



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