See you later, frozen alligator!
“Wow! Welcome to Gator Country under extreme, extreme conditions,” the television personality said at the start of the clip, which featured Saurage dressed warmly for the colder-than-normal weather.
As he walked on a bridge toward the camera, it panned over to show what was lurking beneath the frozen surface at their Beaumont adventure park and reptile rescue center.
A warning sign (stock image).Michael Paulsen/Houston Chronicle via Getty
Michael Paulsen/Houston Chronicle via Getty
“We know how to deal with floods. We know how to deal with hurricanes, but folks, this is what’s really tough on an alligator,” he said.
His video then zoomed in to show multiple alligators below a sheet of ice with their snouts exposed above the surface. Saurage explained that this is “what happens to alligators when it gets [to] sub-freezing temperatures.”
An alligator in Texas (stock image).Wild Horizons/Universal Images Group via Getty
Wild Horizons/Universal Images Group via Getty
The conservationist continued, letting his viewers know that this is a natural occurrence, calling the animals “so genius” for their ability to “poke their heads through the ice so that they can breathe.”
According to Saurage, when their nostrils are exposed through the frozen surface, the alligators are “taking about one breath every minute.”
“Their heart rate is down to three beats per minute. That animal is suspended in hibernation,” he said, asking, “Is that not fascinating?”
However, “hibernation” isn’t quite the correct term since reptiles brumate.
“Brumation is to reptiles what hibernation is to mammals,” perNationwide Pet Insurance. According to the company, the state of dormancy, which typically happens in winter, is “essential” for reptiles’ survival.
Though temperatures in Texas and other parts of the south are expected to return to normal in the coming days, theNational Weather Servicepreviously said the Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles would be experiencing “a harsh taste of winter.”
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Earlier this week, the organization warned that the area should brace for arctic air. Rare winter storms have not only caused alligator brumation in Texas, but have also brought uncommon snow toFloridaandLouisiana.
The arctic freeze forced Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to declare a state of emergency for his state, whileNew Orleansthis week tied a snowfall record previously set approximately 130 years ago.
source: people.com