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Lizard is the common name used for all other than (and to a lesser extent ), encompassing over 7,000 , Retrieved on 2022-06-13 ranging across all continents except , as well as most oceanic . The grouping is as some lizards are more closely related to snakes than they are to other lizards. Lizards range in size from and a few centimeters long to the 3-meter-long .

Most lizards are quadrupedal, running with a strong side-to-side motion. Some lineages (known as "") have secondarily lost their legs, and have long snake-like bodies. Some lizards, such as the forest-dwelling Draco, are able to glide. They are often territorial, the males fighting off other males and signalling, often with bright colours, to attract mates and to intimidate rivals. Lizards are mainly carnivorous, often being sit-and-wait predators; many smaller species eat insects, while the Komodo eats mammals as big as .

Lizards make use of a variety of antipredator adaptations, including , , , and the ability to .


Anatomy

Largest and smallest
The adult length of species within the suborder ranges from a few centimeters for such as and such as to nearly in the case of the largest living lizard, the . Most lizards are fairly small animals.


Distinguishing features
Lizards typically have rounded torsos, elevated heads on short necks, four limbs and long tails, although some are legless.
(2025). 9780520266711, University of California Press.
Lizards and snakes share a movable , distinguishing them from the , which have more rigid . Some lizards such as chameleons have tails, assisting them in climbing among vegetation.

As in other reptiles, the skin of lizards is covered in overlapping scales made of . This provides protection from the environment and reduces water loss through evaporation. This adaptation enables lizards to thrive in some of the driest deserts on earth. The skin is tough and leathery, and is shed (sloughed) as the animal grows. Unlike snakes which shed the skin in a single piece, lizards slough their skin in several pieces. The scales may be modified into spines for display or protection, and some species have bone underneath the scales.

(2025). 9781111425692, Cengage Learning.

The dentitions of lizards reflect their wide range of diets, including carnivorous, insectivorous, omnivorous, herbivorous, nectivorous, and molluscivorous. Species typically have uniform teeth suited to their diet, but several species have variable teeth, such as cutting teeth in the front of the jaws and crushing teeth in the rear. Most species are , though agamids and chameleons are .

The tongue can be extended outside the mouth, and is often long. In the beaded lizards, whiptails and monitor lizards, the tongue is forked and used mainly or exclusively to sense the environment, continually flicking out to sample the environment, and back to transfer molecules to the vomeronasal organ responsible for chemosensation, analogous to but different from smell or taste. In geckos, the tongue is used to lick the eyes clean: they have no eyelids. Chameleons have very long sticky tongues which can be extended rapidly to catch their insect prey.

Three lineages, the , , and , have modified the scales under their toes to form adhesive pads, highly prominent in the first two groups. The pads are composed of millions of tiny setae (hair-like structures) which fit closely to the substrate to adhere using van der Waals forces; no liquid adhesive is needed. In addition, the toes of chameleons are divided into two opposed groups on each foot (), enabling them to perch on branches as birds do.


Physiology

Locomotion
Aside from , most lizards are quadrupedal and move using with alternating movement of the right and left limbs with substantial body bending. This body bending prevents significant respiration during movement, limiting their endurance, in a mechanism called Carrier's constraint. Several species can run bipedally, and a few can prop themselves up on their hindlimbs and tail while stationary. Several small species such as those in the genus Draco can glide: some can attain a distance of , losing in height. (2007), Extraordinary Animals: An Encyclopedia of Curious and Unusual Animals, Greenwood Press. Some species, like geckos and chameleons, adhere to vertical surfaces including glass and ceilings. Some species, like the , can run across water.Pianka and Vitt, 23–24


Senses
Lizards make use of their of , , and like other . The balance of these varies with the habitat of different species; for instance, that live largely covered by loose soil rely heavily on olfaction and touch, while geckos depend largely on acute vision for their ability to hunt and to evaluate the distance to their prey before striking. Monitor lizards have acute vision, hearing, and olfactory senses. Some lizards make unusual use of their sense organs: chameleons can steer their eyes in different directions, sometimes providing non-overlapping fields of view, such as forwards and backwards at once. Lizards lack external ears, having instead a circular opening in which the tympanic membrane (eardrum) can be seen. Many species rely on hearing for early warning of predators, and flee at the slightest sound.
(2025). 9780643106420, Csiro Publishing. .
As in snakes and many mammals, all lizards have a specialised olfactory system, the vomeronasal organ, used to detect . Monitor lizards transfer scent from the tip of their tongue to the organ; the tongue is used only for this information-gathering purpose, and is not involved in manipulating food. Some lizards, particularly iguanas, have retained a photosensory organ on the top of their heads called the , a basal ("primitive") feature also present in the . This "eye" has only a rudimentary retina and lens and cannot form images, but is sensitive to changes in light and dark and can detect movement. This helps them detect predators stalking it from above.


Venom
Until 2006 it was thought that the and the Mexican beaded lizard were the only venomous lizards. However, several species of monitor lizards, including the , produce powerful venom in their oral . venom, for instance, causes swift loss of consciousness and extensive bleeding through its pharmacological effects, both lowering and preventing . Nine classes of known from snakes are produced by lizards. The range of actions provides the potential for new based on lizard venom .

Genes associated with venom toxins have been found in the salivary glands of a wide range of lizards, including species traditionally thought of as non-venomous, such as iguanas and bearded dragons. This suggests that these genes evolved in the common ancestor of lizards and , some 200 million years ago (forming a single , the ). However, most of these putative venom genes were "housekeeping genes" found in all cells and tissues, including skin and cloacal scent glands. The genes in question may thus be evolutionary precursors of venom genes.


Respiration
Recent studies (2013 and 2014) on the lung anatomy of the and found them to have a unidirectional airflow system, which involves the air moving in a loop through the lungs when breathing. This was previously thought to only exist in the ( and ). This may be evidence that unidirectional airflow is an ancestral trait in .


Reproduction and life cycle
As with all amniotes, lizards rely on internal fertilisation and copulation involves the male inserting one of his into the female's .Pianka and Vitt, pp. 108. Female lizards also have hemiclitorises, a doubled clitoris. The majority of species are (egg laying). The female deposits the eggs in a protective structure like a nest or crevice or simply on the ground. Depending on the species, clutch size can vary from 4–5 percent of the females body weight to 40–50 percent and clutches range from one or a few large eggs to dozens of small ones.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 110–111. In most lizards, the eggs have leathery shells to allow for the exchange of water, although more arid-living species have calcified shells to retain water. Inside the eggs, the embryos use nutrients from the . Parental care is uncommon and the female usually abandons the eggs after laying them. and protection of eggs do occur in some species. The female uses respiratory water loss to maintain the humidity of the eggs which facilitates embryonic development. In , the young hatch close to 300 days, and the female returns to help them escape the termite mound where the eggs were laid.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 115–116.

Around 20 percent of lizard species reproduce via (live birth). This is particularly common in Anguimorphs. Viviparous species give birth to relatively developed young which look like miniature adults. Embryos are nourished via a -like structure.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 117–118. A minority of lizards have (reproduction from unfertilised eggs). These species consist of all females who reproduce asexually with no need for males. This is known to occur in various species of .Pianka and Vitt, pp. 119. Parthenogenesis was also recorded in species that normally reproduce sexually. A captive female Komodo dragon produced a clutch of eggs, despite being separated from males for over two years.

Sex determination in lizards can be temperature-dependent. The temperature of the eggs' micro-environment can determine the sex of the hatched young: low temperature incubation produces more females while higher temperatures produce more males. However, some lizards have and both male heterogamety (XY and XXY) and female heterogamety (ZW) occur.


Aging
A significant component of in the painted dragon lizard Ctenophorus pictus is fading breeding colors.Olsson M, Tobler M, Healey M, Perrin C, Wilson M. A significant component of ageing (DNA damage) is reflected in fading breeding colors: an experimental test using innate antioxidant mimetics in painted dragon lizards. Evolution. 2012 Aug;66(8):2475-83. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2012.01617.x. Epub 2012 Apr 9. PMID 22834746 By manipulating levels (using a superoxide dismutase mimetic) it was shown that this fading coloration is likely due to gradual loss with lizard age of an innate capacity for due to increasing DNA damage.


Behaviour
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and thermoregulation
The majority of lizard species are , though some are , notably geckos. As , lizards have a limited ability to regulate their body temperature, and must seek out and bask in sunlight to gain enough heat to become fully active.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 32–37. Thermoregulation behavior can be beneficial in the short term for lizards as it allows the ability to buffer environmental variation and endure climate warming.

In high altitudes, the Podarcis hispaniscus responds to higher temperature with a darker dorsal coloration to prevent UV-radiation and background matching. Their thermoregulatory mechanisms also allow the lizard to maintain their ideal body temperature for optimal mobility.


Territoriality
Most social interactions among lizards are between breeding individuals.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 86. Territoriality is common and is correlated with species that use sit-and-wait hunting strategies. Males establish and maintain territories that contain resources that attract females and which they defend from other males. Important resources include basking, feeding, and nesting sites as well as refuges from predators. The habitat of a species affects the structure of territories, for example, rock lizards have territories atop rocky outcrops.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 94–106. Some species may aggregate in groups, enhancing vigilance and lessening the risk of predation for individuals, particularly for juveniles. Agonistic behaviour typically occurs between sexually mature males over territory or mates and may involve displays, posturing, chasing, grappling and biting.


Communication
Lizards signal both to attract mates and to intimidate rivals. Visual displays include body postures and inflation, push-ups, bright colours, mouth gapings and tail waggings. Male and iguanas have or skin flaps which come in various sizes, colours and patterns and the expansion of the dewlap as well as head-bobs and body movements add to the visual signals. Some species have deep blue dewlaps and communicate with signals. Blue-tongued skinks will flash their tongues as a . Chameleons are known to change their complex colour patterns when communicating, particularly during agonistic encounters. They tend to show brighter colours when displaying aggression and darker colours when they submit or "give up".

Several gecko species are brightly coloured; some species tilt their bodies to display their coloration. In certain species, brightly coloured males turn dull when not in the presence of rivals or females. While it is usually males that display, in some species females also use such communication. In the , head-bobs are a common form of communication among females, the speed and frequency varying with age and territorial status. Chemical cues or are also important in communication. Males typically direct signals at rivals, while females direct them at potential mates. Lizards may be able to recognise individuals of the same species by their scent.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 87–94.

Acoustic communication is less common in lizards. , a typical reptilian sound, is mostly produced by larger species as part of a threat display, accompanying gaping jaws. Some groups, particularly geckos, snake-lizards, and some iguanids, can produce more complex sounds and vocal apparatuses have independently evolved in different groups. These sounds are used for courtship, territorial defense and in distress, and include clicks, squeaks, barks and growls. The mating call of the male as "tokay-tokay!". Tactile communication involves individuals rubbing against each other, either in courtship or in aggression. Some chameleon species communicate with one another by vibrating the substrate that they are standing on, such as a tree branch or leaf.


Defence
Lizards are normally quick and agile to easily outrun attackers.
(2025). 9780761471417, Marshall Cavendish.


Ecology

Distribution and habitat
Lizards are found worldwide, excluding the far north and Antarctica, and some islands. They can be found in elevations from sea level to . They prefer warmer, tropical climates but are adaptable and can live in all but the most extreme environments. Lizards also exploit a number of habitats; most primarily live on the ground, but others may live in rocks, on trees, underground and even in water. The marine iguana is adapted for life in the sea.


Diet
The majority of lizard species are and the most common prey items are small, terrestrial invertebrates, particularly . Many species are sit-and-wait predators though others may be more active foragers.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 53–55. Chameleons prey on numerous insect species, such as , and winged as well as . They rely on persistence and ambush to capture these prey. An individual perches on a branch and stays perfectly still, with only its eyes moving. When an insect lands, the chameleon focuses its eyes on the target and slowly moves toward it before projecting its long sticky tongue which, when hauled back, brings the attached prey with it. Geckos feed on crickets, beetles, termites and .

Termites are an important part of the diets of some species of Autarchoglossa, since, as , they can be found in large numbers in one spot. may form a prominent part of the diet of some lizards, particularly among the lacertas. are also well known for specializing on ants. Due to their small size and indigestible , ants must be consumed in large amounts, and ant-eating lizards have larger stomachs than even ones.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 162. Species of skink and eat and their power jaws and molar-like teeth are adapted for breaking the shells.

(2025). 9781552976135, Firefly Books. .

Larger species, such as monitor lizards, can feed on larger prey including fish, frogs, birds, mammals and other reptiles. Prey may be swallowed whole and torn into smaller pieces. Both bird and reptile eggs may also be consumed as well. Gila monsters and beaded lizards climb trees to reach both the eggs and young of birds. Despite being venomous, these species rely on their strong jaws to kill prey. Mammalian prey typically consists of and ; the Komodo dragon can kill prey as large as . Dragons are prolific , and a single decaying carcass can attract several from away. A dragon is capable of consuming a carcass in 17 minutes.Pianka and Vitt, pp. 41–51.

Around 2 percent of lizard species, including many iguanids, are herbivores. Adults of these species eat plant parts like flowers, leaves, stems and fruit, while juveniles eat more insects. Plant parts can be hard to digest, and, as they get closer to adulthood, juvenile iguanas eat faeces from adults to acquire the necessary for their transition to a plant-based diet. Perhaps the most herbivorous species is the marine iguana which dives to forage for , and other marine plants. Some non-herbivorous species supplement their insect diet with fruit, which is easily digested.


Antipredator adaptations
Lizards have a variety of antipredator adaptations, including running and climbing, , , tail , and .


Camouflage
Lizards exploit a variety of different camouflage methods. Many lizards are disruptively patterned. In some species, such as Aegean wall lizards, individuals vary in colour, and select rocks which best match their own colour to minimise the risk of being detected by predators. The is able to change colour for camouflage: when a light-coloured gecko is placed on a dark surface, it darkens within an hour to match the environment. The in general use their ability to change their coloration for signalling rather than camouflage, but some species such as Smith's dwarf chameleon do use active colour change for camouflage purposes. The flat-tail horned lizard's body is coloured like its desert background, and is flattened and fringed with white scales to minimise its shadow.
(2025). 9780520228252, University of California Press. .


Autotomy
Many lizards, including and , are capable of shedding their tails (). The detached tail, sometimes brilliantly coloured, continues to writhe after detaching, distracting the predator's attention from the fleeing prey. Lizards partially regenerate their tails over a period of weeks. Some 326 genes are involved in regenerating lizard tails. Scientists discover how lizards regrow tails , The Independent, August 20, 2014 The fish-scale gecko Geckolepis megalepis sheds patches of skin and scales if grabbed.


Escape, playing dead, reflex bleeding
Many lizards attempt to escape from danger by running to a place of safety; for example, wall lizards can run up walls and hide in holes or cracks. Horned lizards adopt differing defences for specific predators. They may to deceive a predator that has caught them; attempt to outrun the , which does not pursue prey; but stay still, relying on their cryptic coloration, for whip snakes which can catch even swift prey. If caught, some species such as the greater short-horned lizard puff themselves up, making their bodies hard for a narrow-mouthed predator like a whip snake to swallow. Finally, horned lizards can squirt blood at and predators from a pouch beneath its eyes, to a distance of about ; the blood tastes foul to these attackers.


Evolution

Fossil history
The closest living relatives of lizards are , a once diverse order of reptiles, of which is there is now only one living species, the of New Zealand. Some reptiles from the Early and Middle , like and , are suggested to be squamates, more closely related to modern lizards than rhynchocephalians, however, their position is disputed, with some studies recovering them as less closely related to squamates than rhynchocephalians are. The oldest undisputed lizards date to the Middle Jurassic, from remains found In Europe, Asia and North Africa. Lizard morphological and ecological diversity substantially increased over the course of the . In the , lizard body sizes in North America peaked during the middle of the period.

likely evolved from an extinct group of aquatic lizards known as in the . is a family of aquatic varanoid lizards closely related to the mosasaurs.


Phylogeny

External
The position of the lizards and other among the reptiles was studied using fossil evidence by Rainer Schoch and Hans-Dieter Sues in 2015. Lizards form about 60% of the extant non-avian reptiles.


Internal
Both the snakes and the (worm lizards) are deep within the (the smallest clade that contains all the lizards), so "lizard" is . The cladogram is based on genomic analysis by Wiens and colleagues in 2012 and 2016. Excluded taxa are shown in upper case on the cladogram.


Taxonomy
In the 13th century, lizards were recognized in Europe as part of a broad category of reptiles that consisted of a miscellany of egg-laying creatures, including "snakes, various fantastic monsters, …, assorted amphibians, and worms", as recorded by Vincent of Beauvais in his Mirror of Nature.
(2025). 9780226260709, The University of Chicago Press.
The seventeenth century saw changes in this loose description. The name was coined by James Macartney (1802);James Macartney: Table III in: George Cuvier (1802) "Lectures on Comparative Anatomy" (translated by William Ross under the inspection of James Macartney). Vol I. London, Oriental Press, Wilson and Co. it was the Latinisation of the French name Sauriens, coined by Alexandre Brongniart (1800) for an order of reptiles in the classification proposed by the author, containing lizards and ,Alexandre Brongniart (1800) "Essai d'une classification naturelle des reptiles. 1ère partie: Etablissement des ordres." Bulletin de la Science. Société Philomathique de Paris 2 (35): 81–82 later discovered not to be each other's closest relatives. Later authors used the term "Sauria" in a more restricted sense, i.e. as a synonym of Lacertilia, a suborder of that includes all lizards but excludes . This classification is rarely used today because Sauria so-defined is a group. It was defined as a by , Arnold G. Kluge and Timothy Rowe (1988) as the group containing the most recent common ancestor of and (the groups containing crocodiles and lizards, as per Mcartney's original definition) and all its descendants. A different definition was formulated by Michael deBraga and Olivier Rieppel (1997), who defined Sauria as the clade containing the most recent common ancestor of , , Lepidosauromorpha and all their descendants. However, these uses have not gained wide acceptance among specialists.

Suborder Lacertilia (Sauria) – (lizards)


Convergence
Lizards have frequently evolved convergently, with multiple groups independently developing similar morphology and . have become a model system in evolutionary biology for studying convergence. Limbs have been lost or reduced independently , including in the , , , , , , and ; snakes are just the most famous and species-rich group of Squamata to have followed this path.


Relationship with humans

Interactions and uses by humans
Most lizard species are harmless to humans. Only the largest lizard species, the , which reaches in length and weighs up to , has been known to stalk, attack, and, on occasion, kill humans. An eight-year-old Indonesian boy died from blood loss after an attack in 2007.

Numerous species of lizard are kept as , including , , , and (such as the popular ). such as the and such as the Argentine tegu and are also kept.

are eaten in Central America, where they are sometimes referred to as "chicken of the tree" after their habit of resting in trees and their supposedly chicken-like taste, while are eaten in . In North Africa, Uromastyx species are considered dhaab or 'fish of the desert' and eaten by nomadic tribes.Grzimek, Bernhard. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia (Second Edition) Vol 7 – Reptiles. (2003) Thomson – Gale. Farmington Hills, Minnesota. Vol Editor – Neil Schlager. (for vol.7). p. 48 drinking water out of a dispenser.]]Lizards such as the Gila monster produce toxins with medical applications. Gila toxin reduces plasma glucose; the substance is now synthesized for use in the anti- drug (Byetta). Another toxin from Gila monster saliva has been studied for use as an anti-Alzheimer's drug.


In culture
Lizards appear in myths and folktales around the world. In Australian Aboriginal mythology, Tarrotarro, the lizard god, split the human race into male and female, and gave people the ability to express themselves in art. A lizard king named Mo'o features in Hawaii and other cultures in Polynesia. In the Amazon, the lizard is the king of beasts, while among the Bantu of Africa, the god UNkulunkulu sent a chameleon to tell humans they would live forever, but the chameleon was held up, and another lizard brought a different message, that the time of humanity was limited.
(2025). 9780761415800, Marshall Cavendish. .
A popular legend in tells the tale of how a , with ropes attached, was used to scale the walls of the fort in the Battle of Sinhagad.
(1994). 9780813012957, University Press of Florida.

Lizards in many cultures share the symbolism of snakes, especially as an emblem of resurrection. This may have derived from their regular molting. The motif of lizards on Christian candle holders probably alludes to the same symbolism. According to Jack Tresidder, in Egypt and the Classical world, they were beneficial emblems, linked with wisdom. In African, Aboriginal and Melanesian folklore they are linked to cultural heroes or ancestral figures.

(1997). 9781859860595, Helicon.


Notes

General sources


Further reading


External links
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