Tumgik
#Australian lizards
artwithteggy · 14 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I have always loved lizards, and I currently have velvet Geckos and Suzy the baby bearded dragon. These guys inspired me to make a collection of tubby Australian lizards. This is Max the fat bearded dragon and Ash the dinky Blue tongue lizard. These 3d prints are new designs I've been working on this week. Max can swivel his head from side to side and Ash is just Ash.
Tomorrow is photoshoot day and then I will be posting to my Cults3d online store!
98 notes · View notes
wenbochenphoto · 4 months
Text
This shy and fast moving lizard is a land mullet (Bellatorias major). It lives in the rainforests of southeast QLD, and said to be the largest species in the skink family Scincidae. This one is about 50cm long.
5 notes · View notes
moon-rabbiits · 1 year
Text
Blue tongue lizards stealing strawberry's 🍓🦎 in memory of the blue tongues that would steal all our strawberry's before we could eat them.
Tumblr media
3 notes · View notes
steakout-05 · 30 days
Text
after seeing the new TDAC episode i predict Gummigoo will be on the Sexypedia within hours. mark my word.
Tumblr media
967 notes · View notes
ningauinerd · 5 months
Text
I've been doing a lot of volunteer fieldwork with these guys recently so I thought I might as well do an infodump about them here.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
The pygmy bluetongue skink (Tiliqua adelaidensis) is one of the most unique and unusual members of the Tiliqua genus, which includes the true bluetongues as well as the sleepy lizard/shingleback. However, the pygmy bluetongue actually lacks the blue tongue the group is named after, having a pink tongue instead! As its scientific name suggests, it is quite a range restricted species, being found only in open grasslands north of Adelaide, South Australia, as far north as Peterborough. Historically they ranged more extensively across the Adelaide Plains, as far south as Marion, but due to the destruction of suitable habitat they now occur no further south than Kapunda.
While most bluetongues are notable for their large size amongst skinks, with several species regularly exceeding 30 cm in length, the pygmy bluey lives up to its name by measuring a measly average of 9 cm long from snout to vent. This is actually still a fair size compared to the average skink, but it's miniscule by bluetongue standards. Even more notable than their size however are their habits, for they are the only species of lizard that is specialised to live exclusively in old spider burrows! The burrows of both trapdoor and wolf spiders are used, but trapdoor burrows are preferred in most instances.
Tumblr media
Pygmy bluetongues spend the majority of their lives within these spider burrows, leaving only to defecate, seek out mates and disperse. The average length of time a lizard spends in a particular burrow is highly dependant on the individual - some are sedentary and spend many years within a single burrow, while others will move around fairly frequently. As well as places to shelter and raise their young (they have parental care, it's very cute), pygmy bluetongues also use the burrows as ambush sites, waiting at the top for suitable prey, usually a mid-sized arthropod, to stray close enough for them to quickly dart out and drag them into the depths.
Tumblr media
but here's the ambusher
The chief natural predators of pygmy bluetongues are raptors and brown snakes, and sheltering in the burrow is the main defence against both of these threats. Their burrows are often wide enough for a brown snake to enter, but not wide enough for them to open their mouths in - this means all the brown snake usually gets by pursuing a sheltering pygmy is an angry lizard attacking its face, forcing it to retreat.
The lazy lifestyle of the burrow-stealing pygmy bluetongues is certainly unique, and also explains why they have been such an elusive species since they were first discovered by Western scientists in the 1860s. Rarely seen or collected, their habit of inhabiting spider burrows remained undiscovered for the longest time, and by the 1960s they had become so hard to find that they were believed to be extinct. That was until, in 1992, a pygmy bluetongue was found inside the stomach of a roadkill brown snake by amateur herpetologist Graham Armstrong, confirming their status as a Lazarus of the lizard world.
Tumblr media
The historic rediscovery of the pygmy bluetongue (Image credit: Graham Armstrong)
Our previous assumptions of extinction were fortunately premature, but the pygmy bluetongue skink is in serious trouble nonetheless. While they are able to live in a variety of different grassland types, both native and exotic, the extensive modification of their entire distribution through cereal cropping and urbanisation has led to their populations becoming very small and fragmented, giving them a ranking of Endangered on the IUCN Red List. Almost all of these populations are on private land (often grazed by sheep), which makes protecting and/or studying them particularly difficult and complex.
However, when it comes to future threats to the species, climate change is easily the most worrying. As Australia becomes ever hotter and drier, their small remaining distribution is likely to become largely unsuitable, threatening the existence of the entire species. To combat this, researchers are currently investigating the viability of translocating populations further south to areas with cooler climates, providing a safeguard if they do indeed disappear from their remaining natural distribution.
But how do you study a lizard that lives exclusively in small spider holes? Well, if you want to catch them, there's only one tool for the job - the humble fishing rod. Not any special fishing rod either, just a regular rod with a poor mealworm shoddily tied to the end. David Attenborough kindly demonstrates the technique in Life in Cold Blood, although in his case the lizard was steadfast in remaining in the burrow!
Tumblr media
the sacred tool of the mighty lizard fishermen
returned to their abode
Two additional Fun Pygmy Facts: Fun Pygmy Fact #1 - The closest living relative of the pygmy bluetongue is the sleepy lizard!
Tumblr media Tumblr media
cousins!
Fun Pygmy Fact #2 - Wooden artificial burrows purpose-made for pygmy blueys have proven effective, and the lizards inhabiting them even tend to be in better body condition than those in natural burrows!
Tumblr media
857 notes · View notes
antiqueanimals · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Drawing Animals. Written and illustrated by Maurice Wilson. Published in 1964.
Internet Archive
252 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
What I think is going through Comet’s head at all times
119 notes · View notes
snototter · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Australian barking gecko (Underwoodisaurus milii) in Brockton, West Australia
by John Anderson
573 notes · View notes
one-time-i-dreamt · 9 months
Text
The obscure australian children’s book series “The Mysterious World of Cosentino” got turned into a tv show. The only thing I remembered after I woke up was that Professor Camoflauge (the lizard) had an Indian accent.
244 notes · View notes
vintagewildlife · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Australian skink By: Unknown photographer From: WWF Threatened Animals 1986
109 notes · View notes
frogndtoad · 1 year
Text
inspired by @starfoozle's poll - happy national invasive species week! visual supplement below (and some help narrowing down the list) provided by @obeetlebeetle
Tumblr media
560 notes · View notes
sitting-on-me-bum · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
A Victorian grassland earless dragon (Tympanocryptis pinguicolla).
Image credit: Zoos Victoria
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
40 notes · View notes
ataraxianascendant · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
why listen to little song when can have long song
64 notes · View notes
ningauinerd · 7 months
Text
Doing sleepy lizard fieldwork in the Mid Murray today involved bountiful encounters with goofy fellas as usual
This guy is somehow missing the keratin on most of his large tail scales, revealing the bony scutes (osteoderms) beneath. We’re not exactly sure how this occurred, hopefully he’s not scuffed up too bad, but it is quite cool to look at
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Then there’s grumps over here, sucking on his pacifier. We named him Cupcake after his delightful personality
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Cupcake is now getting clamped because he’s naughty and bit someone (actually just taking a measurement of head depth)
Tumblr media
Polite gentleman patiently getting his tail measured (not a sleepy lizard, doesn’t want to be here)
Tumblr media
489 notes · View notes
antiqueanimals · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Australian water dragon (Intellagama lesueurii)
Reptiles and Amphibians of the World. Written by Hans Hvass. Illustrated by Wilhelm Eigener. Originally published in 1958.
Internet Archive
251 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
climbs into my little dig box
99 notes · View notes