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===Description=== | ===Description=== | ||
The species grows to maximum size of about 10 cm. The head is covered with large, smooth plates. Body scales are small, while belly scales are rectangular (Brennan, ARIZONA). The dorsal side is covered with many small dark spots tending to form rows. The eyes are large and round with a vertical pupil (similar to a snake's eye). | The species grows to maximum size of about 10 cm. The head is covered with large, smooth plates. Body scales are small, while belly scales are rectangular<ref>{{cite web|last1=Brennan|first1=Tom|title=Arizona Night Lizard Xantusia Arizonae|publisher=Reptiles and Amphians of Arizona}}</ref> (Brennan, ARIZONA). The dorsal side is covered with many small dark spots tending to form rows. The eyes are large and round with a vertical pupil (similar to a snake's eye). | ||
The species is a secretive lizard. It feeds, reproduces, and lives most of it's life in seclusion. Population of night lizards at low elevations become active in the spring and through the summer, while higher elevation populations may not become active until late spring (Arizona, p. 1). Daily activity patterns are difficult to determine due to their secretive behavior. Some of the night lizard's predators include larger lizards, many snakes, and birds. | The species is a secretive lizard. It feeds, reproduces, and lives most of it's life in seclusion. Population of night lizards at low elevations become active in the spring and through the summer, while higher elevation populations may not become active until late spring (Arizona, p. 1). Daily activity patterns are difficult to determine due to their secretive behavior. Some of the night lizard's predators include larger lizards, many snakes, and birds. |
Revision as of 18:13, 10 December 2014
Arizona night lizard | |
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Conservation status | |
Least Concern (IUCN 3.1) | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Order: | Squamata |
Family: | Xantusiidae |
Genus: | Xantusia |
Species: | X. arizonae |
Binomial name | |
Xantusia arizonae |
The Arizona night lizard is a small smooth-skinned gray-brown lizard with dark spots that sometimes form partial lines down the back. The lizard has a slightly flattened head. The scales of the underside and tail are larger than those of the upper side. The lizard grows to a length of 6 to 10 cm.
Despite its name, the Arizona night lizard is primarily active during the day. The lizard's range extends across west-central Arizona. It is usually found in rock crevices or under plant debris. Its diet consists of insects and spiders. The young of the lizard are born live, usually one or two around August or September. As the lizard tends not to move about and generally avoids humans, not much is known about it.
Description
The species grows to maximum size of about 10 cm. The head is covered with large, smooth plates. Body scales are small, while belly scales are rectangular (Brennan, ARIZONA). The dorsal side is covered with many small dark spots tending to form rows. The eyes are large and round with a vertical pupil (similar to a snake's eye).
The species is a secretive lizard. It feeds, reproduces, and lives most of it's life in seclusion. Population of night lizards at low elevations become active in the spring and through the summer, while higher elevation populations may not become active until late spring (Arizona, p. 1). Daily activity patterns are difficult to determine due to their secretive behavior. Some of the night lizard's predators include larger lizards, many snakes, and birds.
Ecology
The Arizona night lizard is found under exfoliating rock in granite outcrops (Pappenfuss et al. 2001). The night lizard species occurs primarily in rock-crevice habitat, but also has been found in Neotoma nests and in decaying Yucca baccata. The habitat extends from the Arizona Upland Sonoran Desert scrub to the Interior Chaparral.
The diet consists primarily of ants, with flies, beetles, bugs, and soft-bodied larvae. They separate themselves from other organisms, which is why there is little info on the Xantusia arizonae (Hammerson, Xanatusia).
References
- Template:IUCN2011.2
- Bezy, Robert L. "The Night Lizards (Xantusia) of Arizona". Sonoran Herpetologist. Retrieved 30 December 2011
- ^ Arizona Game and Fish Department. 2003 . "Xantusia arizonae". Unpublished abstract compiled and edited by the Heritage Data Management System, Arizona Game and Fish Department, Phoenix, AZ. 1-2 pp.
- Brennan, Tom. "ARIZONA NIGHT LIZARD Xantusia arizonae". Reptiles and Amphibians of Arizona. Retrieved 30 December 2011
- Brennan, Tom. "Arizona Night Lizard Xantusia Arizonae". Reptiles and Amphians of Arizona.
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