The respiratory surface area (S
AR) per kilogram body mass (M
B), the harmonic mean thickness of the air-blood barrier (
htR) in the gas exchange tissue, and the anatomical diffusion factor (ADF=S
AR/
htR per M
B) were calculated for four juvenile Nile crocodiles. The ADF of three small specimens (mean M
B=3.59 kg) was 625 cm
2·

m
–1·kg
–1. The values varied considerably among individuals and were similar to that of a 5.68-kg specimen (593 cm
2·

m
–1·kg
–1). Only 9% of the ADF is located in the anterior third of the lung, which because of its conical shape makes up only 14 percent of the total lung volume. Particularly in the middle third of the lung, the proximal region near the intrapulmonary bronchus displays a greater ratio of respiratory/non-respiratory surface areas than do more distally located sampling sites. The
htR is also significantly smaller proximally than distally. The cumulative ADF per unit M
B is greater than that previously reported for this species on the basis of overall estimates of S
AR and
htR, but is still less than that of lizards and testudinids. The disposition of ADF between distal air storage region and the intrapulmonary bronchus is consistent with a bidirectional cross-current gas exchange model.
Key words Crocodile - Lung - Morphometry - Strategy - Evolution