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Caimans are nocturnal, preferring to hunt at night. Young caimans eat
a variety of aquatic invertebrates (insects, crustaceans, mollusks). As
they grow, various vertebrates take up a greater percentage of the diet.
These include fish, amphibians, reptiles and water birds. Older animals
are capable of taking larger, mammalian prey. It's been said that an adult
caiman can hunt a wild pig or even a tapir. Scientists have discovered
that when the caiman's habitat becomes drier, during the dry season, caimans
stop feeding. Often, a caiman will eat other caimans under such conditions,
this is known as cannibalism.
Unlike the bigger crocodilians, like the American Alligator and Freshwater
Crocodile, the Caiman population is quite strong. The skin of Caimans
is not ideally suited to tanning, so therefore the caiman is not hunted
as much as its larger cousins.
Yet, the caiman is still threatened by habitat loss. They live in freshwater
habitats in South and Central America, including the Amazon basin. They
prefer still water, but also live in lowland wetlands and rivers. When
people move into the caiman's habitat, the caiman does not respond well.
Caimans need large ranges to hunt their prey.
The caiman is a a protected species throughout much of the world. There
are farms throughout the caimans' habitat that is helping to restore the
caiman to their natural habitat.
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Caiman farms, like this one, breed caimans and reintroduce them into
the wild. Caimans are also common reptile pets, though the spectacled
caiman often grows too large to keep as a pet.
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