The Nile Crocodile is essentially African, ranging from the Senegal to the Cape and to Egypt. It is also very common in Madagascar. Nothing is known about its occurrence in Arabia, but a few specimens of rather small size seem still to exist in Syria, in the Wadi Zerka, an eastern tributary of the Jordan.
Even in historical times the Crocodile must have been very common in lower Egypt, to judge from the number of mummies preserved by the old Egyptians. Now it is practically exterminated, and there are scarcely any left below Wadi Halfa.
Fig. 110.–Ventral view of a young Crocodilus niloticus, showing the arrangement of the bony scutes and the two openings of the musk-glands on the lower jaw. The upper right-hand figure shows on a larger scale the disposition of the nuchal scutes and the first row of dorsal scutes.
Such a conspicuous and dangerous creature has naturally always enjoyed notoriety. It is well described in one of the oldest writings of the world, the Book of Job. "Canst thou draw out leviathan with an hook? or his tongue with a cord which thou lettest down?... His scales are his pride, shut up together as with a close seal. One is so near to another, that no air can come between them. They are joined one to another, they stick together, that they cannot be sundered.... Lay thine hand upon him, remember the battle, do no more." Bows and arrows, spears and clubs, are of little avail against such a monster; the dragging out of a hooked, full-grown specimen requires many men and is a formidable task. Of course firearms have changed all this, and its invulnerability to bullets is nonsense. It is true that a bullet sent into the head is generally ineffective, since it is a hundred to one that the bullet does not hit the small brain, and even if it does, the creature sinks to the bottom and is lost to view until decomposition sets in and the gases developing in the body cause it to float.
Herodotus has quaint stories about these crocodiles and their worship. Amongst other stories he mentions that the bird Trochilus, supposed to be the Pluvianus aegyptius, a kind of Plover, slips into the gaping mouth to pick off the leeches which infest the reptile's gums. "In Egypt it is called Champsa, but the Ionians call them κοκοδρίλοι on account of the resemblance to the lizards which live on their garden walls." This is in fact the origin of the name crocodile, κόρδυλος being the ancient Greek for lizard and newt. With reduplication κορκόρδυλος and by metathesis ultimately κροκόδειλος. The Arabic name is ledschun.
The story about the Plover seems to be true. These birds are sometimes seen sitting upon basking crocodiles, and since the latter are in the habit of resting, perhaps half asleep, with the mouth wide open, it is possible that these agile birds do pick their teeth, and that they, being also very watchful, by their own cry of warning and by fluttering off on the approach of danger, give the alarm to the crocodiles and thus benefit them in more than one way.
But the equally old story about the Ichneumon or Mongoose is an idle invention. Mongooses are partial to eggs, but they certainly prefer those of hens and other birds to those of the crocodile, which are far too hard and strong to be broken by such a little animal. Moreover, as we shall see presently, the eggs are far too well concealed.
The best account of the habits of these crocodiles is the one given recently by Voeltzkow,[[142]] who has spent a long time in Madagascar to collect material for the study of their development.
He says that C. niloticus is not only the most common reptile, but perhaps the most common vertebrate in Madagascar. It occurs in every pool and river in great numbers, especially upon the sandbanks of the Betsiboka River, where one may see more than one hundred within one hour's paddling down stream. The largest specimen measured by Voeltzkow was 13 feet long; the largest in the National Collection is a little less than 15 feet.