tropical amphisbaenians & lizards 3-15-06

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Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06 Scurries among the leaves

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Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06. Scurries among the leaves. The Two-headed Lizard, Amphisbaena alba – Trinidad. Amphisbaenas are now equivalent in taxonomic category to lizards. Two species of true chameleons, genus Chameleo – Africa. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Tropical Amphisbaenians &

Lizards 3-15-06

Scurries among the leaves

Page 2: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

The Two-headed Lizard, Amphisbaena alba – Trinidad. Amphisbaenas are now equivalent in taxonomic category to lizards.

Page 3: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Two species of true chameleons, genus Chameleo – Africa.

Page 4: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Chameleons have laterally compressed bodies, prehensile tails, and zygodactyl feet (three toes are fused, and oppose two fused toes, thus allowing for maximum efficiency for walking on a twig.

Page 5: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Lizards change colors by a combination of factors, but amoeboid movement of melanin is most common and secondarily affects other colors.

Page 6: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Neotropical lizards that are closely allied to and look like our Anolis are in the genus Norops - Belize

Page 7: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Brown Anole, Norops sagrei

Page 8: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Brown Anole, Norops sagrei

Page 9: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Anoline dewlaps are important in species recognition, so they vary

Page 10: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

The dewlap, or throat fan, is widely used in lizards, but most highly developed in the anoline lizards. It is “opened” by movement of hyoid cartilages.

Page 11: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

The following Norops dewlaps were scanned from Jay Savage’s new book on the herps of Costa Rica.

Norops altae

Norops biporcatus

Page 12: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

More from Savage:

Norops capitoNorops cupreus

Norops humilisNorops intermedius

Page 13: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Still more from Savage:

Norops pentaprion

Norops polylepisNorops sericeus

Norops oxylophus

Norops tropidolepis

Page 14: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Two more from Savage: Both of these are the same male Norops woodi, showing its ability to change the color of its dewlap.

Page 15: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Jen Clark & her adornments

Page 16: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Tropidurus plica – N South America

Page 17: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

A Tropidurus plica ready to escape.

Page 18: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Tropidurus plica is very cryptic.

Page 19: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

The only iguanid lizard from the Old World, Brachylophus from Fiji

Page 20: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Basilisk lizards are very common in Central America.

Basiliscus plumbifrons – from Savage

Basiliscus biporcatus – from Henderson

Page 21: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Basilisks are called “Jesus lizards” because they can walk (run) on water.

They have flaps on their toes that open and give more surface area since they rapidly run, bipedally, over the water.

I’ve seen them run more than 30 ft over the surface.

Page 22: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Elegant Helmeted Basilisk, Corytophanes cristatus - Belize

Page 23: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Corythophanes hernandezi, Cockscomb.

Page 24: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Sceloporus variabilis male.

Page 25: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Marine Iguana, Amblyrhynchus cristatus - Galápagos

Page 26: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Land Iguana, Conolophus subcristatus - Galápagos

Page 27: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Spiny-tailed Iguana, Ctenosaura similis - Belize

Page 28: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Can you see why they are called spiny-tails?

Page 29: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Iguana, Iguana iguana iguana - Belize

Page 30: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Iguana Conservation Project, Belize Zoo: An attempt to offset the raided nests (see below) and over harvesting for food by the Maya.

Page 31: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Rainbow Lizard, Agama agama - Kenya

Page 32: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Lizard foot shape is an indication of how they move, and on what surfaces.

Page 33: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Gecko toe pad (l) & magnification of structure (r)

Page 34: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Gecko toes work the same, but there are many varieties.

Science News 8-31-02

Page 35: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Yucatán Banded Gecko, Coleonyx elegans - Guatemala

Page 36: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Thecadactylus rapidacauda, a common house gecko.

Page 37: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

One of Belize’s tiniest lizards, Dwarf Gecko, Sphaerodactylus glaucus

Page 38: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Gonatodes caecilae

Page 39: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Island Leaf-toed Gecko, Phyllodactylus insularis – Half Moon Caye, Belize (only)

Page 40: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Festive Ameiva, Ameiva festiva - Belize

Page 41: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Tegú, Tupinambis teguixin - Trinidad

Page 42: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

The largest lizard in the world, the Komodo Dragon (Varanus komodoensis)

Page 43: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Mabuya unimarginata – Maya Centre, Belize.

Page 44: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Kenyan Mabuya:

Page 45: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

Many lizards can lose their tails and regenerate them. When this happens, the break occurs along a fracture plane in a caudal bone, and blood vessels and nerves immediately pinch off. The regenerated tail will have cartilage, not bone.

Page 46: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06
Page 47: Tropical Amphisbaenians & Lizards 3-15-06

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