MENU

AskIFAS Powered by EDIS

English

Have you seen a skinny alligator in south Florida?

Michiko Squires, Avishka Godahewa, Justin Dalaba, Laura A. Brandt, and Frank J. Mazzotti

This publication is available as a printable trifold brochure at https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/pdf/UW/UW461/UW461-7786492.pdf

Alligator biologists and natural resource managers need your help! Be a citizen scientist and help track alligator health and body condition throughout the greater Everglades ecosystem.

There has been an increase in reports of very skinny alligators, and help from the public is needed to better understand where and when this problem occurs. When visiting the Everglades, you can be a citizen scientist and help identify and document very skinny alligators. Carefully observe and photograph an alligator from a safe distance, then classify its body condition based on the guidelines below. In addition to the tools you have on hand (smartphone, binoculars, etc.), use this fact sheet as a simple way to classify the body condition of alligators.

Figure 1. American alligator in the Everglades.
Figure 1.  American alligator in the Everglades.
Credit: Justin Dalaba, UF/IFAS

 

Why do we care?

The American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) plays an important role in the Everglades. Alligators affect nearly all aquatic life in an ecosystem as top predators and help provide habitat for other animals as ecosystem "engineers." Without the holes and trails that alligators build, there would be fewer refugia, or hiding places, for fish and wading birds during the dry season, and without their nest mounds, there will be less of the high ground that land animals need during flooding in the Everglades. For more information on the importance of alligators in the Everglades, visit https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/publication/uw358.

In turn, alligators are also affected by their environment. Changes in depth, timing, and flow of freshwater can affect their health (indicated by relative fatness) and their abundance. Alligators' responses to these changes make them an effective indicator species: when their populations decline or when individual alligators look thin, it's a sign that their Everglades ecosystem would benefit from restoration of more natural patterns of water levels and flows.

The natural freshwater flow through the Florida Everglades is highly modified by man-made canals and levees (for more information, visit: https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/publication/uw349). Monitoring ecological indicators like the American alligator tells managers how different areas of this large ecosystem are doing. This fact sheet serves as a guide on scoring alligator body condition and reporting sightings of very skinny alligators to researchers and managers.

Body condition describes an animal's overall physical health and provides insight into how an animal is coping with its environment. For the American alligator in the Everglades, critical environmental factors include water quality, prey availability, and water temperature. The use of a body condition scoring system (BCS) is a simple way to assess an alligator's body condition from a safe distance.

Body Condition Score

To make it easy for citizen scientists to report very skinny alligators in the greater Everglades, biologists have developed a body condition score (BCS) from 1 to 3, where 1 = very skinny (emaciated), 2 = thin or slender (usual for Everglades alligators), and 3 = normal for their entire range.

The following anatomical terms are important to understand when describing the physical body condition of alligators:

  • Limbs—Four total; two front and two rear legs
  • Jowls—Lower cheek area between the end of the snout and front limbs
  • Spinal column—Dorsal area between front and rear limbs
  • Tail girth—Thickness of tail behind rear limbs

Energy reserves are stored as muscle and fat, especially in the jowls and base of the tail. Healthy alligators have full jowls and plump tails, while unhealthy alligators have shrunken jowls and thin tails.

Use the following body condition scores to classify the health and condition of an alligator based on appearance of their physical anatomy:

BCS 01—Very skinny (emaciated)

  • Shrunken jowls and thin neck
  • Very bony with thin limbs
  • Very visible spinal column
  • Wrinkled skin
  • Very bony or thin tail
Figure 3. Lateral view of an emaciated alligator, showing shrunken jowls.
Figure 3.  Lateral view of an emaciated alligator, showing shrunken jowls.
Credit: UF/IFAS

 

Figure 4. Top view of an emaciated alligator showing visible spinal column.
Figure 4.  Top view of an emaciated alligator showing visible spinal column.
Credit: UF/IFAS

 

Figure 5. Top view of an emaciated alligator showing thin tail and bony limbs.
Figure 5.  Top view of an emaciated alligator showing thin tail and bony limbs.
Credit: UF/IFAS

 

BCS 02—Thin or slender

  • Lean jowls
  • Thin limbs
  • Barely visible spinal column
  • Lean tail and tail girth
Figure 6. Lateral view of thin alligator, showing lean jowls and thin neck
Figure 6.  Lateral view of thin alligator, showing lean jowls and thin neck
Credit: UF/IFAS

 

Figure 7. Top view of a thin alligator, with the spinal column barely visible.
Figure 7.  Top view of a thin alligator, with the spinal column barely visible.
Credit: UF/IFAS

 

Figure 8. Top view of a thin alligator showing lean tail and limbs.
Figure 8.  Top view of a thin alligator showing lean tail and limbs.
Credit: UF/IFAS

 

BCS 03—Normal

  • Full, fleshy, or bulky jowls
  • Muscular, fleshy limbs
  • No visible spinal column
  • Plump tail and larger tail girth
Figure 9. Lateral view of a normal alligator, showing full and fleshy jowls.
Figure 9.  Lateral view of a normal alligator, showing full and fleshy jowls.
Credit: UF/IFAS

 

Figure 10. Top view of a normal alligator, with the spinal column not visible.
Figure 10.  Top view of a normal alligator, with the spinal column not visible.
Credit: UF/IFAS

 

Figure 11. Top view of a normal alligator showing plump tail and muscular limbs.
Figure 11.  Top view of a normal alligator showing plump tail and muscular limbs.
Credit: UF/IFAS

 

How can you help?

If you see a very skinny alligator:

  1. Take a picture from a safe distance (recommended at least 20 feet)
  2. Note the exact coordinates at the location (can drop a pin on smartphone map)
  3. Add your observation to the Alligator Body Condition project on iNaturalist by visiting: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/alligator-body-condition

Scan this QR code or visit https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/alligator-body-condition to report sightings of very skinny alligators and help resource managers better understand this problem.

 

For More Information Contact

Frank J. Mazzotti

UF/IFAS Fort Lauderdale Research & Education Center

3205 College Ave., Davie, FL 33314

Email: fjma@ufl.edu

https://crocdoc.ifas.ufl.edu/

Also Available in: English

Publication #WEC415

Release Date:April 23, 2020

Reviewed At:May 23, 2023

Related Experts

Dalaba, Justin R

University of Florida

Squires, Michiko

staff

University of Florida

Brandt, Laura A

staff

University of Florida

Mazzotti, Frank

Specialist/SSA/RSA

University of Florida

Program Material

About this Publication

This document is WEC415, one of a series of the Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, UF/IFAS Extension. Original publication date December 2019. Visit the EDIS website at https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu for the currently supported version of this publication.

About the Authors

Michiko Squires, wildlife biologist; Avishka Godahewa, wildlife biologist; Justin Dalaba, science writer and outreach coordinator; UF/IFAS Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center; Laura A. Brandt, wildlife biologist, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Davie, FL; and Frank J. Mazzotti, professor, Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, UF/IFAS Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center; UF/IFAS Extension, Gainesville, FL 32611.

Contacts

  • Frank Mazzotti
  • Venetia Briggs-Gonzalez