Meet Calumma uetzi, one of three new species of chameleons we described in The Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society today! Is it the most beautiful chameleon species? Well, you’ll have to decide for yourself. But certainly it has an impressive
Here, a male is giving a female the full colourshow, and she is not. having it.
You can read a little more about the new species and request the PDF here!
‘Krakatoa, a 75-pound, 7.5-foot long Komodo Dragon, celebrates his eighth birthday with fellow eight-year-olds from R.B. Hunt Elementary School at his enclosure at the St. Augustine Alligator Farm and Zoological Park in St. Augustine, Fla. The children sang Happy Birthday to the large lizard as he was presented with a meat cake topped with mice.’
with other eight year olds
I’ve reblogged this picture before, and it never hit me up until this…
But someone walked into work that morning, clocked in, and was told it was their job to go put the birthday hat on the Komodo Dragon.
Oh, they woulda been giddy about it I promise you. Komodo dragons and salt water crocodiles are the two top contenders for smartest reptiles on Earth, and while the salt water croc’s intelligence revolves primarily around stalking tactics and hunting, Komodo dragons actually have a social intelligence akin to dogs that doesn’t seem to shine through so well in the wild but hoo boy, in captivity.
Many Komodo dragons like to play with things like squeak toys, and grabbing things out of the hands or pockets of their keepers to play tug-a-war. They recognize different humans and different outfits, and form a bond with their keepers. And since they’re not eating festering meat, their bites would lack the infectious lethality of those in the wild if they DID decide to bite for some reason. The worst that’s come from captive-born Komodos that I’m aware of was a curious nip at a reporter one didn’t recognize.
The festering-meat-bacteria-bite thing was actually dismissed as a myth. Like other monitor species they actually do have a venomous bite. Their native home is full of swamps and stagnant water so when their prey (deer or water buffalo) would run away after getting bitten they’d go hide in water just buzzing with infectious organisms. Their natural venom acts as a blood-thinner, causing the wounds they inflict to bleed out and send the prey into shock.
Komodo Dragons are really smart though, I’ve seen the one at my local zoo play tug-of-war with a towel the zookeeper specifically used for that.
The northern spiny-tailed gecko is a lizard endemic to Australia. These geckos are nocturnal and their diet is relatively unknown, but they have been observed eating arthropods. Spiny-tailed geckos also
have the ability to squirt a harmless, smelly, fluid from their tails. This is used as a deterrent for birds and other predators.
This species can vary from a uniform grey color, with few black or orange scales, to rich brown, with a mottled pattern of grey, white, and orange scales.
This is a great video showing some of my favorite things about legless lizards: their tongues look like a cross of a snake and gecko tongue, they have cute blinky eyes, their jaws are much more solid than snakes and they can chew, and many have tougher scales than snakes which is why they have that seam on the sides, it gives them flexibility to eat and breath.
Always love that ‘be a legless tube’ is successful enough a niche in nature that it keeps happening repeatedly.