Image: spacebirdy Shinisaurus crocodilurus |
...
He blinked!
...
...
...
Image: TimVickers |
...
...
...
...
...
I guess this is why the locals call it “the lizard of great sleepiness”.
Image: Josh More |
Is a lizard. Which reaches up to 40 cm (1 ft 4 in) long.
They're mostly Chinese. First discovered in 1928, they were long thought to be entirely restricted to the Dayao mountain range in the habitually scenic Guangxi Province, southern China. Then, in 2003, another population was found in northern Vietnam.
Image: Linie29 |
Chinese Crocodile Lizards are semi-aquatic, dividing their time between cool, shallow, slow-moving water bodies and nearby land.
Image: SchmuckyTheCat |
When something tasty catches their eye, a small fish, tadpole or dragonfly larva, they burst into action with a swish of their powerful tail...
Image: Tiermotive.de |
Chinese Crocodile Lizards still spend a lot of their time on land, perhaps snatching up a snail or worm. However, they also like to just... hang out. And now that they don't have to worry about their next breath of oxygen, they can lounge about for HOURS doing nothing at all!
Video: conservsyndicate
It's a true, reptilian lazy bones of the highest order!
And since they usually live alone with a pool of water all to themselves, there's no-one around to tell them what to do. Bliss!
Image: Hans LAZY! |
Another time is when winter approaches. After all that time sitting alone on a rock doing nothing for hours on end, they congregate in crevices and treeholes to hibernate from November to March. It seems they can only bear each other's company when they're all asleep!
Image: Nathan Rupert |
Females give birth to up to a dozen babies after 8 to 12 months. Thankfully their mother doesn't have to go to any effort because they're immediately active and ready to hunt on their own. They do so in nearby areas for the first few weeks, before leaving to find water pools of their own and a bit of peace and quiet.
Video: turkish breeder
Chinese Crocodile Lizards even enjoy their own space on the evolutionary tree. They are the only living species in the Shinisauridae family, their closest relatives exist as fossils dating back to the Cretaceous. It had been thought that their closest living relatives were a group of lizards known as Xenosaurids but more recent molecular research places them within Platynota, alongside athletic monitor lizards, venomous Gila monsters and fearsome mosasaurs.
I guess the Chinese Crocodile Lizard was happy enough with the tail.
they're beautiful! i'll remember not to try to grab them. :)
ReplyDeletequite interesting critters
ReplyDeleteIs that a picture of a lizard with a grasshopper for a hat? Well that just isn't cricket!
ReplyDelete@TexWisGirl: Good idea! At least where gloves and keep some air freshener handy
ReplyDelete@Porakiya Draekojin: Yup!
@Crunchy: It's probably raining. You can't play cricket when it's raining!
you should do one on the mimic octopus next :D
ReplyDeleteI've been meaning to for YEARS! I'll get there
ReplyDeleteThe Mimic Octopus is a tough one because you can never really be sure you've got one. If I recall correctly, Joe (may I call you Joe?) tried it a few months back only to discover he'd been writing an article about a shoe he found in the highway.
ReplyDeleteSneaky, sneaky octopus.
How embarrassing! At least I wasn't as bad as this one guy who had a pet cat for like 5 years before it ran into the sea and swam away to resume its octopus life
ReplyDeletewell, halloween is coming up, so that might be a good time ;)
ReplyDeleteHa! Well there's not enough time for this Halloween and I'm not sure I should wait another year, though I'm well able to do that! It's so easy to get caught up in a dozen creatures I've never heard of
ReplyDelete