Posts Tagged ‘Monitor Lizard’

A Giant Scavenger

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011


The Komodo “dragon,” named for the East Indian island where it was first found, is the largest living lizard. A voracious and undiscriminating carnivore, it will eat any kind of carrion, as well as living animals. Lethargic when it has fed, this monitor lizard shows surprising spurts of speed when hungry, and uses its long, strong tail with lethal dexterity.

Its fangs are too small to get a grip on a human. You can dig up a scarlet snake a foot underground, or chase a coach-whip over many acres, or see a slender twig on a bush turn into the air-thin grace of Opheodrys, the rough green snake. Most of the typical snakes on the place lay eggs, but some bear their young alive. Some eat any living prey they can catch and swallow, but the hog-nosed snakes lean heavily on toads for food, the king snake eats other snakes, and the red-bellied, shiny horn snake in the pond eats mostly salamanders.

The remaining snakes of the farm and of the world constitute two groups among which the production and injection of venom have become highly refined adaptations. These are the vipers and the cobras, the latter group including the coral snakes and sea snakes. The cobras and their relatives (family Elapidae) are found around the world in tropical regions. They kill prey by venom injected through fixed hollowed or grooved fangs located toward the front of the upper jaw. They are generally slender as compared with vipers, and except for one Australian species their heads are not markedly broadened or heart-shaped. Some of them, like the mambas of Africa, are big, swift, obstreperous and even warlike. Others are timid burrowers or foragers in leaf mold, like most of the American coral snakes. The king cobra of India with its frightening hood reaches a top length of about 18 feet, but some of the burrowing elapids may be only a few inches long, with a gape of mouth too narrow for biting people. In Australia, the cobralike snakes by far outnumber the typical snakes. There is a fantastic variety of species there, including such creatures as the dreaded tiger snake, the death adder and the 12-foot taipan, perhaps the most aggressive snake in the world.

The poisonous snakes with the most elaborate venom-injection apparatus are the vipers (family Viperidae). They are found on all the continents except Australia; in fact, most poisonous snakes temperate regions are vipers. There are two well-marked groups of them: the true vipers (subfamily Viperinae), confined to the Old World; and the pit vipers (subfamily Crotalinae), which have both American and Asiatic members but are mainly concentrated in the New World. Most vipers are stout-bodied snakes with the wedge-shaped or heart-shaped head generally thought of as the mark of a poisonous snake. The pit vipers include such imposing animals as the rattlesnakes and the tropical American fer-de-lance and bushmaster. Their name is derived from a sensory depression, or pit, in the side of the snout between the eye and the nostril. This is elaborately supplied with nerves and blood vessels and is an organ specialized for detecting the presence and range of warm objects. Most pit vipers eat warm-blooded prey, and the pit is no doubt used primarily in feeding, but like the rattle of the rattlesnake it is perhaps also of value as a means of avoiding injury under the hoofs of big mammals.

 

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Reptile Skins Seized

Saturday, October 2nd, 2010


Immigration and Checkpoints Authority officers found 11 packages of reptile skins aboard a barge in Singapore. Hidden in two boxes, the skins were from reticulated pythons, blood pythons and a species of monitor lizard. A 24-year-old Indonesian man who was a member of the barge’s crew admitted to owning the skins, and because some were from protected animals he faces a fine of up to $5,000 and/or a prison sentence of up to two years if convicted.

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Water & Moisture

Friday, February 26th, 2010


The iguana drinks water often , usually two or more times a day. Low humidity in the iguana’s surroundings will most likely if not probably make itself more than evident by the lizard’s increase intake and use of water. Spraying water on the leaves of plants in the iguana’s terrarium as a means of attempting to furnish a greater as well as adequate supply of water will fall more than far short of the intended goal of giving the animal a sufficient amount of water and moisture . Thus the iguana should always be provided with a water bowl that should be thoroughly cleaned and refilled on daily on a regular as well as ongoing basis. This habitat might well include additional containers of water in which the iguana can leisurely soak its entire body and tail section. If the size of the environment permits it, the iguana might be permitted a body of water in which it can swim. A hatching iguana which measures close to 8 inches ( that is 20 cm) can usually be expected to grow 1 to 1 1/2 inches per year (2.5 – 3.8 cm) for the very first year or two. After the second year the rates of growth decline to an average of 1 inch (2.5 cm) each month. A fully grown iguana might might reach a max length of around 6 1/2 feet ( approx 203 cm) although in the ranges of 5 feet ( 152 centimeters) is probably more typical of the sizes attained by many if not most specimens during a lifespan that plausibly ranges from to 25 years.

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Reptile zoos in Delft, part II; Sauria » Netherlands » ZooChat – Tupinambis rufescens – Rode teju – Red Tegu – Rote Teju However it was probably a Varanus salvator – Watervaraan – Water monitor lizard – Bindenwaran Back downstairs again, the last row of enclosures are; …

Pet Iguana Care | Iguana Care – They like to be in and around water areas. They enjoy drinking water from the dishes provided. The dishes have to be cleaned regularly and disinfected so that they do not suffer from bacterial infections. Your iguana needs to be bathed …

Free water and unwelcomed conversation on the Rio Carlos – I bet you didn’t think there are giant iguana’s on the Charles River. But there are and I have the photographic proof. On May 22 the Flora Burn once again took to the Charles River for an evening of paddling. This time we traveled down …

Iguana Care Sheet | Iguana Care – The iguana’s cage would include basking limb, water, hide box. Young iguanas like to drink fresh water. 4) The diet would include fresh greens like collards, mustard, turnips, dandelion greens. You could also feed him a salad made from …

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