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Mexican Beaded Lizard

(Heloderma horridum)

 

Category: Reptiles

 

 

The Mexican beaded lizard is one of two dangerously venomous lizards in the world and is found mainly in Mexico and southern Guatemala. They are larger and not as brightly colored as their close relative, the Gila monster. These lizards are semi-arboreal and feed primarily on bird and reptile eggs raided from nests.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaded_lizard

http://www.reptilesmagazine.com/Lizard-Species/Beaded-Lizard/

 

Data & Facts

Scientific Classification
Kingdom - Animalia
Phylum - Chordata
Class - Reptilia
Order - Squamata
Family - Helodermatidae
Genus - Heloderma
Species - H. horridum

 
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Interesting Animal Facts

The Tongue-tastic Chameleon

The Chameleon is known for its ability to change colors, but that is not the only amazing feature they possess. Chameleon tongues are twice the length of their bodies (can you imagine having a 10-12 foot long tongue?) and they use it for hunting! When it sees a tasty bug, the chameleon coils the muscles in its tongue in much the same way a hunter tightens the string on their bow, then the tongue shoots out, striking with incredible speed, sticking to the hapless insect as it is dragged back to the chameleon’s mouth. And believe it or not, smaller chamelons are sometimes even stronger and faster than their larger cousins: the tiny Rhampholeon spinosus’s tongue accelerates at a rate equivalent to your car going from 0-60 miles per hour in 1/100 of a second, and it rarely misses its target!

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