Posts Tagged ‘Genus Iguana’

A Place in the Sun part 2

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

For a better understanding and another opinion of the relationship between what layman call “Iguana delicatissima” and “rhinolopha,” read James D. Lazell Jr., 1973, “The Lizard Genus Iguana in the Lesser Antilles,” Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Volume 145, Number 1. Lazell is satisfied that there are two species, I iguana and I. delicatissima, and further that “rhinolopha” is not a valid species but rather that some iguanas just happen to have horn-like scales on their snouts. Dr. Lazell goes on in this 28-page illustrated dissertation to describe not only the structural features of these animals but also their natural history, and he makes an important point for pet keepers by remarking that he has seen wild iguanas eating birds’ eggs and carrion, but never papaya or citrus fruits.

The name iguana according to the eleventh edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica is derived from the Spanish equivalent of the Carib Indian name for these lizards, iwana. This name – iguana – was applied in 1825 to a fossil of a giant extinct herbivorous reptile, the Iguanodon. The Iguanodon, an extinct contemporary of the dinosaurs, and its modern namesake have in common a peculiar form of tooth, being round at the root and blade-like with serrated edges toward the tip. The teeth are described as pleurodont – that is, they are fastened to the inner surface rather than the top edge of the lower jaw.

This business of systematically classifying iguanas gets sticky,  and with the aim of clarifying  the issue you might want to refer to the informal arrangement in the next chapter. Bear in mind that this chapter is primarily about the true iguana, Iguana iguana, and in passing we will make reference to the dozen or so typical iguanas.

Uglogical

http://uglogical.com/

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A Place in the Sun

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

The common green iguana is one species within one genus of a family of lizards found mostly in the New World. This green iguana and the other typical iguanas are tropical and semi-tropical and active during daylight hours (diurnal). Their eyes have round pupils and well developed lids. Their tongues are short, thick and only slightly notched, as contrasted to the long forked tongue of, for instance, the monitor lizards. It lays eggs, in common with most other iguanids (oviparous). Only a few give birth to living young (viviparous). They are frequently but not always brightly colored; they often have spines, frills or crests, and many can distend their throats. They can alter their color somewhat, some species more than others. Some may favor trees (arboreal) and others favor the land (terrestrial). Two are from the Galapagos Islands, and one of these is semi-marine, eats seaweed and would probably rather die than climb a tree.

For a beginning herpetologist or hobbyist pet keeper, the best iguana is the common green iguana – scientifically: Iguana iguana iguana. If you don’t go out of your way when you choose a pet in a pet shop, this is what you probably will get. Good. The only other iguanas that resemble it are Iguana iguana delicatissima which lacks the circular shields found below the eardrums of Iguana iguana iguana, and Iguana iguana rhinolopha which has a slight protuberance at the snout. So there you have it – genus Iguana, species iguana, and subspecies perhaps iguana or delicatissima or rhinolopha.

Uglogical

http://uglogical.com/

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