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Contains articles and advice on a wide variety of snake species. Answers and addresses questions on species husbandry, captive status, breeding, news and conservation issues concerning lizards.

An Accomplished Lizard Vocalist – the Tokay Gecko, Gekko gecko

Introduction
Tokay GeckoAlthough many lizards are quite vocal, perhaps none is so capable and well known as the Tokay gecko.  In fact, the species draws its common name from the loud cries of “Tokay! Tokay!, given (most often in the wee hours of the morning) by the extremely territorial males.  Ranging throughout much of south and Southeast Asia, and introduced to Hawaii, Florida and Martinique, the Tokay does not mind human company.  It is often more common in homes and other buildings than in more natural settings, even within such bustling cities as Hong Kong and Miami.

Rentable Geckos?
Tokay geckos are aggressive, 12 inch long predators, and do not hesitate to tackle small snakes, treefrogs, other lizards, nestling birds and mammals.  Roaches are, however, particularly favored – a dietary preference that often endears them to their human hosts, despite their noisy ways.  Some years ago a pet store in New York City began renting them to customers for just that reason.  However, the geckos’ propensity to proclaim their territory via “song”, most often at 4 AM, and their willingness to bite (and unwillingness to release their hold!) doomed the scheme to failure.

Early Morning Singers
I once released a group of Tokay geckoes into a large zoo exhibit as a roach control measure (well, to be honest, mainly because I liked to watch them go about their business at night – few lizards can keep up with roach reproduction!).  In those days I was often at the zoo until all hours of the night, dealing with emergencies and satisfying my curiosity about the nocturnal goings on there.  As has been reported by sleepless gecko hosts worldwide, the males did indeed call most frequently (and vigorously) between the hours of 2 and 4 AM.

You can read more about the natural history of Tokay geckos and related species at:
http://www.tigr.org/reptiles/search.php?submit=Search&genus=Gekko

The Monitor Lizards (Family Varanidae) – Family Overview and Species Accounts, Part II

Click here: The Monitor Lizards (Family Varanidae) – Family Overview and Species Accounts, Part I, to read the first part of this article.

Monitor Intelligence
Monitor lizards exhibit an extraordinary degree of intelligence and retain what they have learned for long periods.  Gould’s monitors (V. gouldii) have been observed taking indirect routes when chasing rabbits.   Rather than running directly after the rabbit, they veer off in a direction that takes them away from the animal, but leaves the lizard in a position to intercept the rabbit at the mouth of its burrow!

Parentie monitors (V. giganteus) seeking animals hidden within burrows do not dig away at the burrow entrance (as would a foolish dog!) but rather sniff the ground several feet away.  Once they locate the underground position of their prey, they dig directly down to reach it, keeping an eye on the entrance as well.

An Experience with a Bright Monitor
I have often had the good fortune to observe monitor intelligence in action.  While working at the Bronx Zoo, I once looked up from a phone conversation to see a 6 foot long crocodile monitor (V. salvadorii) go shooting by, followed by an equally fast-moving coworker of mine.  We cornered the animal behind a large cage, where he remained as long as we were in view.  As soon as we moved off to either side, he cautiously peered around the cage and looked both right and left, to fix our new positions.  The lizard most definitely did not want either of us sneaking up on him, and made sure he saw both of us at all times.

Mangrove MonitorThe stout fellow was recaptured – with more wear and tear to us than he!  Monitors are incredibly strong – a 7 foot long water monitor (V. salvator) I worked with was able to move along with myself and 2 other strong men trying to pin him down – this despite being rather seriously ill.

Monitor Venom
In 2005, Dr. Bryan Frye and researchers at Australia’s Melbourne University discovered that several species of monitor lizards, including the Komodo dragon, V. komodoensis and the lace monitor V. varius, produce venoms of varying strengths.  Lace monitor venom was subsequently shown to cause the lizard’s prey to rapidly loss consciousness by affecting the blood’s pressure and clotting ability.

Until this discovery, bacteria in the mouth of the Komodo dragon were thought to be responsible for the quick onset of death seen in deer, goats and other large animals bitten by these lizards.  While such bacteria no doubt add to the trauma associated with a bite, it now seems certain that venom delivers the knockout blow.  A combination of venom and bacterial infection is also the likely source of the strong reaction often associated with bites inflicted by monitor lizards upon people.

The Bearded Dragon, Pagona vitticeps, a popular pet species not related to the monitor lizards, was also shown to produce mild venom – other members of the lizard family Agamidae are being studied.

An interesting article on Florida’s introduced Nile monitor lizards is posted at:
http://www.naherpetology.org/pdf_files/292.pdf

The Monitor Lizards (Family Varanidae) – Family Overview and Species Accounts, Part I

Introduction
Larry the Nile Monitor from Forgotten Friend Reptile SanctuaryHerpetologists and hobbyists alike have long known that there is something “different” about the family of lizards known collectively as “monitors” (or, in Australia, “goannas”).  One cannot observe a monitor for long without getting a sense of the animal’s intelligence – they scrutinize the world differently than do other reptiles, and their reactions to new situations are surprisingly quick and complex.  Recent studies have confirmed that monitors are unique, and, in many ways, the most intelligent and advanced of the lizards.

In years past pet keepers were limited to a very small number of monitor species from which to choose.  An explosion of interest in the group has radically changed that situation, and today animals rarely seen even in zoos are being commercially bred in huge numbers.  Happily, there are monitors even for those without much room – and the very smallest types still exhibit true monitor behavior, intelligence and “attitude”.

Today I’ll present an overview of the group as a whole.

Species Diversity
Sixty eight species of monitor lizards, all classified within the family Varanidae and the genus Varanus, range across Asia, Africa and Australia.  Although generally associated with warm climates, one species, the desert monitor (V. griseus) may be found as far north as Kazakhstan – at roughly the same latitude as southern Vermont.

In Australia, where over 2/3 of the world’s species are found, monitor lizards have evolved to fill a wide range of ecological roles held elsewhere by other lizards and by large, predatory birds and mammals.  Huge Australian species such as 8 foot long parentie monitor, V. giganteus, and the lace monitor, V. varius, are the dominant predators in their habitats,  as are Komodo dragons, V. komodoensis, on the islands of Komodo, Padav, Rinca and Flores.

At 8 inches long, the short-tailed monitor, or pygmy goanna,
V. brevicauda, is the smallest member of the group.  The infamous Komodo dragon is the world’s largest lizard.  It occasionally tops 10 feet in length, but is dwarfed by extinct monitor species which may have measured over 20 feet long.

General Physical Characteristics
Water Monitor Eating a FishAll monitors share a similar body plan – a long neck and relatively small head, sturdy body and limbs and a long, powerful tail, and most measure in the range of 2 to 5 feet in length.

The tongue is deeply forked and is flicked out repeatedly.  As with snakes, the tongue carries airborne chemical cues to the Jacobson’s organ, thus conveying information about the environment and other animals.

Male monitor lizards compete for females by grappling, often rising onto their hind legs during tests of strength.  All species lay eggs.

Diet
All monitors are alert, effective predators, with the various species taking an incredibly huge array of prey – termites and other insects, snails, spiders, crayfish and other invertebrates, birds and their eggs, frogs, turtles, snakes, hatchling crocodiles and other reptiles and amphibians, and rodents, weasels, tree kangaroos and other mammals to the size of adult deer.  Large monitors living near developed areas also prey upon domestic dogs, cats, chickens, ducks, pigs and goats, and consume carrion and offal as well.  The Philippine monitor lizard, or bataans (V. olivaceus), is unique in feeding upon fruit at certain times of the year.

On rare occasions, the Komodo dragons have attacked and killed people.  In fact, current restrictions on the long-held tradition of feeding goats to these huge lizards (a tourist attraction with possible links to local religious beliefs) is possibly at the root of the recent rise in attacks on people and livestock.

Habitats
Monitor lizards have evolved to occupy a wide variety of habitats – there are arboreal specialists, such as the green tree monitor, V. prasinus, aquatic species such as the mangrove monitor, V. indicus, and grassland dwellers such as the savanna monitor, V. exanthematicus.  There are also many generalists – Gould’s monitor, V. gouldii, a large lizard that occupies nearly all of Australia, is equally at home in grasslands, open forests, river valleys, cliff-sides, semi-deserts and nearly all other habitats within its huge range.

The Nile monitor, V. niloticus, is native to sub-Saharan Africa but is now thriving in southern Florida, where released pets have established breeding populations.  Approaching 7 feet in length, this aggressive predator is severely impacting the local ecology by out-competing and preying upon a wide variety of native species.

Wide-Ranging and Isolated Species
The size of the ranges of the different species varies greatly in extent.  For example, the blue tree monitor, V. macraei is limited in distribution to Batantan Island off Papua New Guinea while the 9 foot long Asian water monitor, V. salvator, is found from India through Bangladesh, Myanmar, southern China, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia.

 

North America’s Colorful, Venomous Lizard – The Gila Monster, Heloderma suspectum

Gila MonsterOverview
Every so often I like to cover a species that, while not recommended as a pet, is well worth a closer look.  One such lizard that I have had the good fortune of working with is endemic to North America, the strikingly-marked Gila Monster.

Note: Gila Monsters are bred in captivity and sometimes appear for sale in the pet trade.  Please do not let your interest in these admittedly fascinating creatures lead you to purchase one.  They are venomous, and, despite recurring rumors to the contrary, have caused human fatalities.  Gilas are considered by many to be somewhat docile and slow moving.  Having long cared for them as a zoo herpetologist, I can assure you that this is not so.  They are often inactive, but can bite with amazing speed – and, in contrast to many snakes, there is no preparatory coil or other movement to warn of their intentions. If anything, their generally calm demeanor can lull one into a sense of false security – indeed, Gila bites are among those most frequently suffered (and covered up!) by zoo keepers.  Observe them in public collections and the wild, but please leave captive care to zoos.

Physical Description
This stoutly built creature is the USA’s heaviest native lizard, outweighed only by Florida’s introduced Green Iguanas and Nile Monitors.

The scales, underlain by boney plates known as osteoderms, are bead-like in appearance.  The body is marked in widely varying patterns of pink, black yellow and orange blotches.   The blunt tail serves as a food-storage vessel – during lean times it may lose 20% or more of its mass.  Adult size ranges from 9 to 24 inches.

Range
Two subspecies, the Reticulate Gila Monster and the Banded, are recognized.  They are found in western, central and southern Arizona and adjacent New Mexico, southwestern Utah through Nevada and from southwestern California to Sinaloa in northern Mexico.

Habitat
Although typically thought of as a desert-dwelling species, Gila Monsters do not live in overly dry, central desert areas.  Rather, they frequent arid desert fringes and habitats that are referred to as “succulent or vegetated deserts” – areas that usually support a heavy growth of succulent plants, cacti, grasses and shrubs.  They may also be found in semi-arid plains and rocky foothills, lightly wooded thickets and about farms, usually near streams, springs or other sources of moisture.  Gilas sometimes enter oak forests and in Sinaloa, Mexico, inhabit the lower slopes of mountains and nearby beaches.

Gilas may forage above-ground but are otherwise largely fossorial.  They occupy burrows dug by gophers and other mammals or those of their own making, abandoned woodrat nests and cavities below large rocks.

Despite the arid climate prevalent in their range, Gila Monsters favor areas of high humidity and spend the vast majority of their time in fairly moist underground retreats.  When kept in dry zoo exhibits, Gilas will soak in water bowls for hours on end.

Gila Monsters are diurnal in the springtime but become largely nocturnal as summer progresses.  During the hottest parts of the year they generally appear above ground only after rains.

Status in the Wild
Gila Monster populations are declining due to habitat loss and, in some cases, collection for the pet trade.  They are protected by law in all states within their range, are listed on CITES Appendix II and classified as Near Threatened by the IUCN.

Diet
Gilas feed on slow-moving animals – most commonly young mammals still in the nest, i.e. ground squirrels, kangaroo rats, pocket gophers, rabbits and cactus mice.  They also take the eggs and chicks of doves, quail and other ground-nesting birds, lizards and their eggs, tortoise eggs, locusts and other large insects and carrion.

These lizards are well-adapted to a harsh environment in which food is often scarce.  They gorge when food is available, consuming up to 50% of their bodyweight, and in some areas eat but 3-4 large meals annually.

Reproduction
Mating occurs in April and June, with 3-12 eggs being laid from July through August.  The eggs are buried in the sand, usually in a location exposed to full sun.  The eggs do not hatch until the following May – 10 months after being laid.  This long incubation period is a function of seasonality within the Gila’s range…artificially incubated eggs have hatched in as few as 30 days.

Longevity
Captive longevity exceeds 28 years; unknown in the wild.

Lizard Venoms
The Beaded Lizard, H. horridum, 4 subspecies of which dwell in Mexico and Guatemala, is a close relative of the Gila and the only other member of the family Helodermatidae.  These 2 species were, until recently, considered to be the only venomous lizards (please see below).  In contrast to venomous snakes, the venom glands of Gila Monsters and Beaded Lizards are in the lower jaw and the teeth are grooved rather than hollow.  Venom flows into the mouth through ducts that open between the teeth and gums.  In order to insure the venom’s introduction into a prey animal or enemy, both lizards retain a firm grasp when biting.

In 2005, researchers at Australia’s Melbourne University discovered that the Bearded Dragon, Pagona vitticeps, produces a mild venom (other Agamids are being studied).  Several monitor lizards, including the Komodo Dragon, Varanus komodoensis and the Lace Monitors V. varius, were also found to produce venoms of varying strengths.  Studies of Lace Monitor venom have revealed that it causes the lizard’s prey to rapidly loss consciousness by affecting the blood’s pressure and clotting ability.  This venom is likely the source of the strong reaction, previously attributed to oral bacteria, that is often associated with bites inflicted by monitor lizards upon people.

Miscellaneous
A synthetic version of a chemical found in the saliva of the Gila Monster is the basis of an important medication used to treat Diabetes Type II.

The species name, suspectum, was coined in 1869 by renowned herpetologist and paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope – upon noting the Gila’s grooved teeth, he “suspected” that it was venomous!  The genus name, Gila, is taken from the Gila River Basin in Arizona.

You can read more about the Gila Monster and the reptiles and amphibians that share its habitat at the web site of the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum:
http://www.desertmuseum.org/books/nhsd_gila.php

Image referenced from Wikipedia Commons at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Gila_monster2.JPG and posted by Blueag9

The Skinks (Family Scincidae) – An Overview of the Largest Lizard Family

Prehensile-Tailed SkinkIntroduction
The family Scincidae, the skinks, contains over 1,200 species – more than any other family of lizards.  Skinks range throughout the Eastern and Western Hemispheres, reaching their greatest diversity in Southeast Asia, Australia and Africa.  Among its members we find some of our most common pet reptiles and least-known lizards.  The following information is meant to introduce you to their wonderful diversity of forms and lifestyles.

The Unusual Giant
The group’s largest member, the Prehensile-Tailed Skink, Corucia zebrata, reaches 28 inches in length and is unique in a number of ways – it is entirely arboreal, has a prehensile tail, is limited in range to the Solomon and surrounding islands, feeds on leaves, gives birth to 1 (rarely 2) large offspring after a gestation period of 8-9 months, and seems to have a complex social structure that includes parental care of the young.

Lifestyle and Diet
Typical skinks are elongated in form with small legs and shiny scales.  Most are secretive and, although often diurnal (active by day), spend a good deal of time below rocks, logs or leaf litter.  Legs are absent or reduced in many species, including the various African and Middle Eastern “Sandfish” (Shenops and other genera) which seem to swim as they wriggle through shifting sand dunes.  Most skinks are insectivorous, but many also take fruit, carrion and small mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians.  Several consume vegetation exclusively.

Skink Reproduction
Almost half of the known species bear live young, and a number of these have evolved a primitive placenta.  Many oviparous (egg-laying) skinks guard their eggs, and there is evidence that females may move the egg clutch in response to disturbances.

A Few That Break the Mold
Quite a few skink species depart from the group’s typical body plan and lifestyle.  New Guinea’s Fojia Skink, Fojia bumui, for example, has plate-like scales down the center of the back and granular scales along the sides.  It clings to vertical rock surfaces along streams, dives after small invertebrates that swim by, and climbs into bushes to sleep on large, sturdy leaves.  The genus Egernia contains at least 23 species that live in extended family groups and exhibit complex social behavior.  There are also aquatic, arboreal and fossorial skinks, some of which have scale-covered, sightless eyes.

Carl Kauffeld and New York City’s Lizards
While growing up in NYC, I was pleased to learn that New York State is home to 2 skink species – the Five-Lined Skink, Eumeces fasciatus and the Coal Skink, E. anthracinus. They are, in fact, the state’s only native lizards – Staten Island’s Eastern Fence Lizards were introduced there by none other than the Staten Island Zoo’s famed reptile man, Carl Kauffeld (to provide a source of food for lizard-eating snakes) and the Italian Wall Lizard of the Bronx, Queens and Nassau County is a pet trade escapee (I have observed free-living Wall Lizards for some time now…more on them to come).

 

Further background information on skinks, with links to individual species, is available at:
http://www.tigr.org/reptiles/families/Scincidae.html

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