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Uromastyx hardwickii

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Hardwicke's or Indian spiny-tailed lizard (Uromastyx hardwickii) is a species of agamid lizard found in the Thar desert and surrounding dry areas in Pakistan and India.

Taxonomy

Local names

Distribution

The northern half of the plains of India to Pakistan. It ranges from Uttar Pradesh in the east to Rajasthan in the West. Also, the Kutch area of Gujarat.

Habitat

Inhabits the dry and desert tracts.

Status

Locally common.

Description

The Spiny-tailed lizard has a rounded head with a flat snout. It is usually yellowish brown, sandy or olive in colour. It may have black spots and vermiculations and a distinctive black spot on the front of the thigh. It has a dorso-ventrally flattened body with wrinkled skin. It has distinctive tail whorls of spiny scales with large spines on the side which give the lizard its name. The tail is bluish-grey (in Jaisalmer) to sand-coloured (in Kutch).

Sexual Dimorphism

Male ranges from 40 to 49 cm in length while it is 34 to 40 cms in the case of the female. The male has a longer tail than the female.

Habits

Generally found in firm ground rather than pure sand dunes, the spiny-tailed lizard is often found living in colonies, sometimes on the outskirts of villages. It prefers elevated patches of land especially in Kutch where it is invariably found on isolated patches of high ground (called Bets) above the monsoon water level.

Birds of prey are a major predator of the lizard in the desert.

Burrow

The spiny-tailed lizard excavates a sloping zig-zagging tunnel of 6 to 8 cms diameter and over 2 metres long for itself. The tunnel has an entrance which is flush with the ground and ends in a small chamber.

The lizard basks close to the entrance of its burrow. It is very alert and smoothly slides into its burrow at the first hint of danger. The spiny-tailed hibernates through the winter and emerges in spring. By the time it is ready for hibernation, the lizard puts on long strips of fat on each side of the backbone which presumably enables it to survive the long winter months.

Food

The spiny-tailed lizard is largely herbivorous and its teeth are adapted for a plant diet which comprises the flowers and fruits of the khair (Capparis aphylla); the beans of Prosopis spicigera; the fruit of Salvadora persica, and grass. In locust-breeding areas the spiny tailed lizard has been known to feed on nymphs and adults of the locust.

Breeding Biology

Uromastyx hardwickii breed in spring after emerging from hibernation. It lays white pigeon-sized eggs.

Miscellaneous

External links

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References

 


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