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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Northern Blue-Tongued Skink
They are commonly called blue-tongued lizards or simply blue-tongues or blueys in Australia. As suggested by these common names, a prominent characteristic of these lizards is their large blue tongues that can be bared as a bluff-warning to potential enemies. Blue-tongued skinks are also bred in captivity and sold as house pets. They are relatively shy in comparison with other lizards, and also significantly slower due to their short legs.
Scientific name: Tiliqua scincoides
Conservation Status: Common
Length: 18-20 inches
Weight: 1 pound
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Eastern Green Mamba
The eastern green mamba is a highly venomous snake species of mamba native to the coastal regions of southern East Africa. First described by Scottish surgeon and zoologist Andrew Smith in 1849, it has a slender build with bright green upperparts and yellow-green underparts.
Scientific name: Dendroaspis angusticeps
Conservation Status: Stable
Length: 5-6 feet
Weight: 2-3 pounds
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Dwarf Crocodile
The dwarf crocodile, also known as the African dwarf crocodile, broad-snouted crocodile or bony crocodile, is an African crocodile that is also the smallest extant species of crocodile. Sampling has identified three genetically distinct populations.
Scientific name: Osteolaemus tetraspis
Conservation status: Vulnerable
Length: 4-6 feet
Weight: 40-70 pounds
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Panther Chameleon
The panther chameleon is a species of chameleon found in the eastern and northern parts of Madagascar in a tropical forest biome. Coloration varies with location, and the different color patterns of panther chameleons are commonly referred to as 'locales', which are named after the geographical location in which they are found. Panther chameleons from the areas of Nosy Be, Ankify, and Ambanja are typically a vibrant blue, and those from Ambilobe, Antsiranana, and Sambava are red, green or orange. The areas of Maroantsetra and Tamatave yield primarily red specimens.
Scientific name: Furcifer pardalis
Conservation status: Least Concern
Length: 10-18 inches
Weight: 60-180 grams
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Electric Blue Gecko
Lygodactylus williamsi is a critically endangered species of lizards, endemic to a small area of Tanzania. Common names include Turquoise Dwarf Gecko, William's Dwarf Gecko, or in the pet trade, Electric Blue Gecko. Illegal wild-caught specimens are widely sold in the pet trade, often misdescribed as captive-bred.
Scientific name: Lygodactylus williamsi
Conservation status: Critically Endangered
Length: 8.5 cm
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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The Alabama Red-Bellied Cooter
The Alabama red-bellied cooter or Alabama red-bellied turtle, is native to Alabama. It belongs to the turtle family Emydidae, the pond turtles. It is the official reptile of the state of Alabama.
Scientific Name: Pseudemys alabamensis
Conservation Status: Endangered
Length: 12-14 inches
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Black Toad
The Black Toad, also known as the Inyo Toad or Deep Springs Toad, is a true toad that lives only in scattered oases in the Deep Springs Valley of Inyo County, California
Scientific name: Bufo exsul
Conservation Status: Vulnerable
Length: 2 inches
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Black Banded Sea Krait
The Black-Banded Sea Krait, also known commonly as the Chinese Sea Snake, is a species of venomous snake in the subfamily Laticaudinae of the family Elapidae. In Japan it is known as Erabu Umi Hebi, and in Okinawa as the Irabu. It is found in most of the warm waters of the western Pacific Ocean.
Scientific name: Laticauda semifasciata
Conservation status: Near Threatened
Length: 50 inches
Weight: 1-4 pounds
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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African Fat Tailed Gecko
The African fat-tailed gecko is found in West Africa, from Senegal to Cameroon. Their habitat is dry and arid, although they will spend most of their time in a dark, humid hiding place. In captivity, it is important to provide these geckos with a source of humidity that mimics these conditions.
Scientific name: Hemitheconyx caudicinctus
Conservation Status: Common in the Wild
Length: 7-9 inches
Weight: 45-75 grams
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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The Spotted Turtle
Their broad, smooth, low dark-colored upper shell, or carapace, ranges in its exact colour from black to a bluish black with a number of tiny yellow round spots. The spotting patterning extends from the head, to the neck and out onto the limbs. Males and females can be distinguished by differences in plastron shape and eye and chin colouration.
Scientific name: Clemmys guttata
Conservation Status: Endangered due to Human Impact
Length: 3.5-5 inches
Weight: 1/2 to 1 pound
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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The Speckled Kingsnake
The speckled kingsnake is a nonvenomous species of kingsnake, which is endemic to the United States. The common name is derived from the pattern, which is black, with small yellow-white specks, one speck in the center of almost every dorsal scale. It is also known as the "salt-and-pepper snake".
Scientific name: Lampropeltis holbrooki
Conservation Status: Common in the Wild
Length: 48 inches on Average
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Blue Tailed Skink
The Christmas Island blue-tailed shining-skink, blue-tailed skink, or Christmas Island blue-tailed skink, is a species of skink that is native to Australia's Christmas Island. They are not closely related to the skinks of North America, whose juveniles are known for their blue tails. They are relatively small with a black body with yellow stripes going to a bright blue tail.
Scientific name: Cryptoblepharus egeriae
Conservation Status: Extinct in the Wild
Length: 4-8.5 inches
Weight: 10-18 ounces
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Painted Terrapin
The painted terrapin, painted batagur, or saw-jawed turtle is a species of turtles in the family Geoemydidae. It was formerly in its own genus, Callagur, but has been reclassified to the genus, Batagur.
Scientific name: Batagur borneoensis
Conservation status: Critically Endangered
Length: 12-28 inches
Weight: 50 pounds on Average
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Amazonian Poison Dart Frog
The Amazonian Poison Dart Frog is in the genus Ranitomeya. It was first described by Rainer Schulte in 1999 as Dendrobates amazonicus when he separated it from Dendrobates ventrimaculatus, primarily on the basis of call characteristics.
Scientific Name: Ranitomeya Amazonica
Conservation Status: Threatened by habitat loss and collection for the pet trade.
Length: 16-19mm
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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Bush Vipers
Atheris is a genus of venomous vipers known as Bush Vipers. They are found only in tropical sub-saharan Africa (excluding southern Africa) and many species have isolated and fragmented distributions due to their confinement to rain forests. In an example of convergent evolution, they show many similarities to the arboreal pit vipers of Asia and South America. Seventeen species are currently recognized.
Scientific name: Atheris
Conservation Status: Some species are threatened by habitat destruction
Length: 40-78 cm
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daily-reptile · 4 years
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The Grand Cayman Ground Iguana
The blue iguana, also known as the Grand Cayman ground iguana, Grand Cayman blue iguana or Cayman Island rock iguana, is an endangered species of lizard which is endemic to the island of Grand Cayman.
Scientific name: Cyclura lewisi
Conservation status: Endangered (Population increasing) 
Length: 1.7 – 2.5 ft.
Mass: 31 lbs on Average
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