fig119

Fig. 119.Ptychozoon homalocephalum. A, Ventral view of the right hand. × 2. B, Side view of a finger to show the peculiar arrangement of the claw-bearing joint.

The tail exhibits many kinds of shape and size. Mostly cylindrical and tapering to a point, it is leaf-like in Gymnodactylus platurus of Australia; provided with many lobes, and used as a parachute in the Malay Ptychozoon. In Nephrurus asper of Eastern Australia the tail is quite short, much shorter than the limbs, much swollen at the base, and very thin towards the end, which carries a round knob. The tail of all Geckos is very brittle and can be quickly regenerated, except the long rat-like tail of the Persian Agamura. In many other desert-forms the tail is long, slender, and laterally compressed, acting in such cases like that of desert-forms among the Lizards.

Many Geckos have a voice, mostly rather feeble, and sounding like a soft "click" or "chick" produced by our tongue. Repetition of this sound resembles in some species the word "gecko." They lay eggs, rather globular, or but slightly oval, hard-shelled, and white, mostly two in number. Naultinus elegans of New Zealand is said to be viviparous. The males are generally larger than the females, and they are further distinguished by the possession of femoral or pre-anal pores.

All Geckos feed upon animals, chiefly upon insects, but the larger forms take anything they can master. With few exceptions they are nocturnal, which, however, does not prevent them from occasionally baking themselves in the sun. They are capable of changing colour, but since their ground-colour is almost universally grey, yellow, or brown, the range of the colour-changes is restricted to the adoption of darker or lighter hues. The skin is shed in flakes and eaten.

Geckos are absolutely harmless; they cannot even inflict painful bites. However, in many countries they are feared as much or even more than the most poisonous snakes. In the south of Spain and Portugal, for instance, where Geckos are plentiful in and outside the houses, and are consequently objects of daily observation, the "osga" is considered a dreadfully poisonous creature. They become very tame, or rather confiding in their regular habits, provided they are not molested. If caught–and they have many enemies among other lizards and snakes–the only safety of these defenceless and mostly small creatures lies in their tail, which, being extremely brittle, is left in the claws or jaws of the pursuer. The remaining stump soon produces a new tail, in shape and size like the old one, but with a different and simpler scaling. I knew of several specimens of the Portuguese Platydactylus facetanus, which, having lost their tails in the act of being caught, were kept in a box for six weeks without food. On their arrival in England they had each grown a new stump nearly half an inch long!

Fam. Geckonidae. Sub-Fam. 1. Geckoninae.–Vertebrae amphicoelous; parietal bones separate; clavicles dilated and perforated. Hereto belong the overwhelming majority of Geckos, only a few of which can be mentioned.

Teratoscincus scincus.–This most peculiar creature, about six inches in length, inhabits the steppes of Turkestan and neighbouring desert-regions of Persia. It is a thorough desert-form. The digits are devoid of adhesive lamellae, but are granular inferiorly and strongly fringed laterally, an arrangement which is rare among Geckos, practically restricted to it with Ptenopus and Stenodactylus, which are likewise deserticolous. This is a beautiful illustration of adaptation to the surroundings. A Gecko, instead of climbing rocks and trees, has lost the climbing apparatus, or has transformed parts of it for running upon loose sand. The body is covered with imbricating, rather large and smooth scales. The tail is round at the base, compressed in its posterior half, covered below and on the sides with scales like those of the body, but on the upper side with a series of large, transverse, nail-like plates. By rubbing these plates upon each other, this Gecko produces a shrill, cricket-like noise, sitting at night in front of his house, perhaps in order to attract grasshoppers. The noise is made by both sexes.

Ptenopus, a Gecko of Damara Land, likewise adapted to desert-life, produces a similar chirping noise by its throat.

Phyllodactylus is a genus of world-wide distribution, occurring in tropical America, Africa, Madagascar, and Australia, extending to the Norfolk Islands and to Lord Howe's Island. One species, Ph. europaeus, occurs on the islands in the Western Mediterranean. The digits are furnished with transverse lamellae, the greater number of which are broken up into small scales forming three longitudinal series. The ends of the digits are dilated, with two large plates inferiorly, separated by a longitudinal groove into which the claw is retracted. The upper parts of the body are covered with juxtaposed scales intermixed with larger tubercles. The abdominal scales are small and imbricating. The cylindrical, tapering tail is slightly prehensile, covered with small scales arranged in verticils. This species is devoid of femoral or anal pores. General colour above grey-brown, with darker and lighter markings; a dark streak on the side of the head, passing through the eye. Under parts whitish. Total length up to 3 inches. The eggs are almost round, measuring 8.7 by 7 mm.

fig120

Fig. 120.Hemidactylus turcicus (left), and Tarentola mauritanica (right). × 1.

Hemidactylus, likewise a widely distributed genus, with many species. The digits are dilated, inferiorly with two rows of lamellae; the clawed joints are slender, bent at an angle, and rising from within the extremity of the dilated portion. H. turcicus, between 3 and 4 inches long.–The upper parts of the body are covered with minute granules, mixed with larger tubercles. The abdominal scales are small and slightly imbricating. The male has several pre-anal pores. The tail is covered above with minute scales and tubercles, below with a series of large transversely dilated plates. The general colour is white below, brown above, with darker spots, and with white specks on many of the tubercles. This species extends from Southern Portugal and Spain to Karachi. Like Phyllodactylus and various other kinds of Geckos, the body is semi-transparent; so much so indeed that the white eggs shimmer through the body in certain lights.

Tarentola mauritanica s. Platydactylus facetanus.–The digits are strongly dilated, with undivided lamellae below, and a flat, nail-like scute on their upper surface near the tip. Only the third and fourth digits are clawed. Femoral or pre-anal pores are absent. The upper parts are covered with scales and granules, and bear several longitudinal rows of strongly keeled, large tubercles; the under parts have hexagonal scales. General colour above greyish-brown, with darker or lighter markings; with a dark streak through the eye. Total length of large males about 6 inches. This species is one of the commonest Geckos in the Southern Mediterranean countries. In Portugal it extends northwards to the Douro. It has been introduced by ships into the ports of Cette, Toulon, and Marseilles. It is easily kept in captivity, like most Geckos indeed, provided they are supplied with a variety of insect-food, water in the shape of drops, and suitable places to hide in. A female, which I had received from Algiers in a little tin box, with a lump of meat (presumably its food!), laid two eggs six weeks after its arrival. This was towards the end of April. Towards the end of June in the same year it again laid two eggs, measuring 13 × 10 mm. Another specimen laid in June in two successive years. These and other Geckos live very well in a greenhouse, or in a large glass cage. They change colour most adaptively. They hunt preferably at night for insects, which are stalked and then suddenly rushed at. Drops of water are taken by a lapping motion of the tongue. For sleeping-places they selected bits of hollow bamboo, but these had to be vacated when some tree-frogs crept into them for the daytime, and the Geckos took to some curved pieces of bark, on the under side of which they slept, with their backs downwards. This is, by the way, a favourite position of rest of most Geckos. But Stenodactylus guttatus of Egypt lies flat on its belly, tucks the fore-feet under and inwards like a cat, rests the head upon them, and stretches the hind-limbs out backwards. The little Geckos are rather intelligent. They take no notice of a finger put against the other side of the glass to which they happen to cling; but when the hand is put inside their cage and approaches them too near, they dart off suddenly. When driven into a corner they wriggle and wag their tails, or even raise the latter, perhaps as an invitation to grasp it, in which case it would of course break off. When caught, they emit feeble sounds, and attempt to bite with the mouth widely open. During the moulting, which takes place at least twice a year, in the spring and in the autumn, the skin peels off in flakes; if, as happens sometimes, the skin upon the lamellae is not stripped off neatly, these refuse to act, and the creature cannot climb until all the old skin has been rubbed off.

In their native haunts they are very regular in their habits. Favourite resorts of theirs are old olive trees or oak trees, the rough and cracked bark of which affords excellent places for hiding in. Hollow trees are of course preferred. Not a single specimen is seen during the early hours of the morning or in the forenoon; but when the sun has become broiling hot, and our own shadow passes over the stem of a tree, we become aware of flitting little shadows which jerk over its surface. These are Geckos which had been basking, motionless; very dark grey, almost blackish, just like the colour of the grey bark upon which the last wet season's moss has been scorched to a black cinder. It is difficult to espy a Gecko whilst it is glued on to such a tree. Only the little beady eyes betray it, watching you carefully. Nothing appears more easy than to catch that motionless thing. You put out your hand and it is gone; like a flash it has moved a foot higher up, or down, to the right or to the left, just where you least expected it to go, and there it clings on motionless as before. It does not seem to run; it glides along, dodging over to the other side of the stem and back again. There is system in its motions, since, taking a last leisurely look around, it gently disappears in a rent or hole. Towards the evening, or when the shadows become longer, the Geckos become lively. One after another appears on the surface, upon the tree, or at the entrance of the cave, and they all move about in their peculiar rushing jerks. Spiders, flies, mosquitoes, moths, form the principal diet, and the hunting goes on well into the night. Where a gecko has been seen once it is sure to reappear the next day at the same hour. Those which take up their abode inside a house become almost domesticated. They are strange sights when hunting for flies, running up and down the papered walls; but we fairly gasp when they come to the upper corner, calmly bend over, and with the next jerk slide along the white-washed ceiling. We are accustomed to flies performing such feats, but at animals five inches long, supple and fat, we are inclined to draw the line. However, that is the way of Geckos, and–be it confessed–the more we ponder over the mechanism of their fingers and toes, the less we comprehend how such little vacua can support or suspend such heavy creatures from a dry and often porous surface.

Gecko.–The digits are strongly dilated with undivided lamellae. All, except the pollex and hallux, have a very short compressed terminal phalanx with a retractile claw. Males with femoral or pre-anal pores. This Eastern genus includes some of the largest of all Geckos.

G. stentor of the Malay countries reaches a length of 15 inches. G. verticillatus s. verus s. guttatus ranges from Eastern Bengal to China and through the Indian archipelago. It grows to about one foot in length. The head is large; the back is covered with small granules and about a dozen rows of large tubercles. The tail, when intact, and the belly are covered with scales, those of the tail being arranged in transverse rows, several of which make up distinct rings. The upper parts of the body are grey or yellowish with red spots and vermiculations. According to Theobald[151] it lays about eight hard-shelled white eggs as big as a musket-ball, cementing them to trees, rocks, or secluded buildings. The cry is "touk-tay," several times repeated, and ending in a long-drawn out, diminuendo, guttural rumble. This animal does not confine itself to insects, but eats young rats also. Dr. Mason has seen it devour smaller species of house-lizards, and Theobald has seen it seize a bat flying round the room, and devour it.

Tennent[152] tells the following story about one of these creatures: "In an officer's quarter in the fort of Colombo, a Gecko had been taught to come daily to the dinner-table, and always made its appearance along with the dessert. The family were absent for some months, during which the house underwent extensive repairs, the roof having been raised, the walls stuccoed, and the ceilings whitened. It was naturally surmised that so long a suspension of its accustomed habits would have led to the disappearance of the little lizard; but on the return of its old friends, it made its entrance as usual at their first dinner the instant the cloth was removed."

Ptychozoon.–The digits have the same structure as described in the genus Gecko, but they are entirely webbed. The extraordinary feature of Ptychozoon is the membranous expansions on the sides of the head, body, limbs, and tail, which are said to act as parachutes. P. homalocephalum, the only species, inhabits the Malay Islands and the Malay Peninsula. It reaches a length of 8 inches. A specimen obtained by F. H. Bauer in Java, in the month of November, laid two eggs a few days after its capture. One young was hatched in the middle of the following May, and two days later another came out of the second egg. The characteristic folds of the skin were already clearly discernible.

Sub-Fam. 2. Eublepharinae.–Differing from the true Geckos by their procoelous vertebrae and the fusion of the two parietal bones into one. The eyelids are not reduced, but remain functional. This sub-family is undoubtedly a heterogeneous assembly, as indicated by the very scattered distribution of its few species (about seven), in India, West Africa, and Central America.

fig121

Fig. 121.Ptychozoon homalocephalum. × ⅔.

Sub-Fam. 3. Uroplatinae, composed of a few species of the genus Uroplates in Madagascar. The distinctive characters of these otherwise typical Geckos are the fusion of the nasal bones into one, the small size of the interclavicle, and the non-dilated shape of the clavicles.

Neither the Eublepharinae nor the Uroplatinae are more nearly related to other Autosauri than are the other Geckos. They are modifications within the sub-order of the Geckones.

Sub-Order 2. Lacertae.Autosauri with procoelous, solid vertebrae, and with the ventral portions of the clavicles not dilated.

Cope,[153] discarding outer appearances as deceptive in the classification of the Lacertae, laid stress upon internal characters, notably the presence or absence of osteoderms, the formation of the skull, and the structure of the tongue. Boulenger[154] has followed and improved upon Cope's arrangement, and has elaborated the classification, which, being used by himself in the three volumes of the Catalogue of Lizards in the British Museum, has also been followed in the present work, with slight alterations in the order of treatment of the families. For our present purpose we diagnose the families as follows, giving preference to such characters as are most easily ascertained:–

Synopsis of the Families of Lacertae.

Fam. 1. Agamidae. Acrodont. Tongue broad and thick. No osteoderms. Old World, p. 515.
Fam. 2. Iguanidae. Pleurodont. Tongue short and thick. No osteoderms. America, Madagascar, Fiji Islands, p. 528.
Fam. 3. Xenosauridae. Pleurodont, solid teeth. Anterior part of tongue retractile. No osteoderms on the body. Mexico, p. 536.
Fam. 4. Zonuridae. Pleurodont. Tongue short, not retractile. With osteoderms at least upon the skull, where they roof in the supratemporal fossae. African sub-region, p. 536.
Fam. 5. Anguidae. Pleurodont, solid teeth. Anterior part of tongue emarginate, retractile into the posterior portion. Osteoderms on body and head, roofing over the supratemporal fossae. Limbs mostly reduced. America, Europe, India, p. 537.
Fam. 6. Helodermatidae. Pleurodont, lower teeth grooved, with poison-glands. Tongue bifid. Osteoderms tiny. Postfronto-squamosal arch absent, p. 540.

Fam. 7. Lanthanotidae.

Pleurodont. Tongue short and bifid. Postfronto-squamosal arch absent. No osteoderms. Borneo, p. 541.
Fam. 8. Varanidae. Pleurodont. Tongue very long, bifid, smooth, very protractile. No osteoderms. Postorbital and temporal arches incomplete. Old World, p. 542.
Fam. 9. Xantusiidae. Pleurodont. Tongue very short and scaly. No osteoderms. Supratemporal fossa roofed over by the cranial bones. No movable eyelids. Central America and Cuba, p. 547.
Fam. 10. Tejidae. Teeth solid, almost acrodont. Tongue long, deeply bifid, with papillae. No osteoderms. Limbs sometimes reduced. America, p. 547.
Fam. 11. Lacertidae. Pleurodont. Tongue long, bifid, with papillae or folds. With osteoderms on the head. Supratemporal fossae roofed over by the cranial bones. Old World, p. 549.
Fam. 12. Gerrhosauridae. Pleurodont. Tongue long, with papillae, but feebly nicked. With osteoderms on the head and body, roofing over the supratemporal fossae. African sub-region, p. 559.
Fam. 13. Scincidae. Pleurodont. Tongue scaly, feebly nicked. Osteoderms on the head and body. Limbs often reduced. Cosmopolitan, p. 559.

The following five "families" are much degraded in conformity with their usually subterranean life, see p. 496:–

Fam. 14. Anelytropidae. Without limbs. Body covered with scales. Mexico and Africa, p. 564.
Fam. 15. Dibamidae. Vermiform, limbless body covered with scales, without osteoderms. Australasia and Nicobar Islands, p. 564.
Fam. 16. Aniellidae. Without limbs; body covered with scales, without osteoderms. California, p. 564.
Fam. 17. Amphisbaenidae. The body is covered with soft skin, forming numerous rings with mere vestiges of scales. Without limbs, except Chirotes with four-clawed fore-limbs, p. 565.
Fam. 18. Pygopodidae. Snake-shaped, with scales. Fore-limbs absent, hind-limbs appearing as a pair of scaly flaps. Australia, p. 567.

These eighteen "families" of the Lacertae fall into four main groups. We naturally assume that the presence of osteoderms and of complete cranial arches indicate more archaic conditions than their absence, just as we conclude that limbless forms have been evolved from creatures with fully developed limbs. We arrange the four groups with their families as follows:–

Group I.

Zonuridae and Anguidae assume a central position, with Iguanidae and Agamidae as two parallel families of highest development. Aniellidae as the most degraded forms. Helodermatidae and Lanthanotidae as rather primitive and solitary survivals.

Lacertae Group I.

Group II. Xantusiidae–Tejidae–Amphisbaenidae.
Group III. Scincidae–Gerrhosauridae–Lacertidae.–Here also Anelytropidae and perhaps also Dibamidae as degraded Scincoids.
Group IV. Varanidae, which are in many respects the most highly developed of all.
Pygopodidae are of obscure relationship.
fig122

Fig. 122.–Map showing the distribution of the Agamidae.

Fam. 1. Agamidae.–Acrodont, Old-World Lizards, with a broad and short tongue. The teeth are usually differentiated into incisors, canines, and molars. The orbit is closed posteriorly; the temporal fossa is bridged over by an arch which is formed chiefly by the squamosal and the well-developed jugal; the postorbital mostly remaining small, and the postfrontal and supratemporal bones being either absent or not present as separate elements. The limbs are well developed. The eye, provided with complete eyelids, is distinctly small and has a round pupil. The skin is devoid of osteoderms, although large and numerous spines are often present, especially on the head and on the tail. The Agamidae, of which about two hundred species, arranged in about thirty genera, are known, exhibit a great diversity of mostly flat-bodied, terrestrial and more laterally compressed, arboreal forms. The majority are insectivorous, a few Agamas have a mixed diet, while Uromastix and some others are chiefly, if not entirely, frugivorous and herbivorous. They are an exclusively Old-World family, avoiding the cooler parts of the Palaearctic sub-region, and also, a very curious fact, Madagascar. The majority live in Australia and in the Indian and Malay countries, comparatively few in Africa, chiefly the genus Agama.

fig123

Fig. 123.Draco volans. × ⅔.

Draco ("Flying Dragon").–The body is much depressed and the sides extend as a pair of large wing-like membranes, which are supported by five or six of the much-elongated posterior ribs, and can be folded up like a fan. On the throat are three pointed appendages, a short one on either side and a long one in the middle. The tail is very long and slender, but not brittle. About twenty species of this extraordinary genus inhabit the various Indo-Malayan countries; one, D. dussumieri, occurs in Madras. D. volans of the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java, and Borneo is about 10 inches long, 5 of which are taken up by the tail. The male has a small nuchal crest. The upper parts of this pretty creature have a metallic sheen, with small dark spots and undulating cross-bands upon the rich brown ground-colour. The wings are orange with black markings. The gular sac of the male is orange, that of the female is blue.

The "Flying Dragons" use their wings as parachutes, but their sailing powers are said to be very moderate. Certainly they do not fly by moving the wings, but when at rest upon a branch, amidst the luxurious vegetation and in the immediate neighbourhood of gorgeously coloured flowers, which partly conceal them by their likeness, they greatly resemble butterflies, especially since they have the habit of opening and folding their pretty wings.

Ceratophora.–This exclusively Ceylonese genus is remarkable for a flexible, erect, and pointed appendage which arises from the top of the snout; it is best developed in the males, vestigial or absent in the females. Gular appendages are absent. The trunk is crestless, slightly compressed, and covered with partly keeled scales. The tail is slender and very long, about two-thirds of the total length of the animal. The general colour is olive-brown, with irregular darker markings and with light streaks on the head and thighs. C. stoddarti and C. tennenti are about 10 inches long, the former without, the latter with, little scales upon the rostral appendage.

Lyriocephalus, with L. scutatus (Fig. 124) of Ceylon as the only species, is remarkable for its Chameleon-like appearance. A splendid case of convergent evolution, but most improbably of mimicry. The tympanum is quite hidden. The head is raised into a pair of sharp bony edges. On the top of the nose is a thick globular lump, recalling the genus Ceratophora, and also various Malagasy Chameleons. The back and sides are covered with very small granular scales, intermixed with several rows of enlarged scales as in Chameleo pumilus, and there is a serrated crest along the back from neck to tail. The under parts are covered with large keeled scales with sharp points directed backwards, especially on the tail. The whole body is laterally compressed. The pollex and the fifth toe are strongly opposed to the other digits. The general colour is greenish above, whitish below. Total length about one foot.

Calotes, with many species in India and in the Malay Islands, is distinguished by a crest on the neck and back. Many of the males have a gular sac. The tail is extremely long. These lizards are remarkable for their changes of colour.

fig124

Fig. 124.Lyriocephalus scutatus. × ⅔.

C. versicolor ranges from Afghanistan through the whole of India to Southern China, and attains a length of 14 inches, 11 of which are taken up by the tail. It possesses no gular sac, but has a well-developed crest. The whole body and tail are covered with strongly keeled scales. When the lizard is irritated, or swallowing its food, the head and neck become brilliant red, whilst the usually brownish tint of the body is converted into pale yellow. Mr. Annandale has favoured me with the following observations on C. emma:–"In the Malay Peninsula the Europeans misname this lizard Chameleon. The colour-changes appear to be brought about by emotions, although the lizard is often darker towards evening than it is at mid-day. The males are very pugnacious, and change colour as they fight. At the time of courtship a curious performance is gone through by the male, the female remaining concealed in the foliage hard by. He chooses some convenient station, such as a banana leaf or the top of a fence, and advances slowly towards the female. His colour is then pale yellowish flesh-colour, with a conspicuous dark spot on each of the gular pouches, which are extended to their utmost. He stands upright, raising the fore part of the body as high as possible, and nodding his head solemnly up and down. As he does so, the mouth is rapidly and repeatedly opened and shut, but no sound is emitted. When he is driven away, caught or killed, the dark spot disappears entirely from the neck. If one male is captured, another takes his place within a few hours."

C. ophiomachus of Southern India and Ceylon reaches 2 feet in length, has a fold of skin in front of each shoulder, and is generally known as the "blood-sucker" on account of the red colour displayed during excitement on the head and neck.

C. mystaceus, chiefly in Burma and Siam, but also in the Nicobar Islands and in Ceylon, has a small gular sac and an oblique fold in front of each shoulder. The specific name seems to refer to the yellowish lips. Mason[155] gives the following vivid account of it:–

"This is a very common species in gardens in Toung-ngoo. A pair made their home in the mango trees near my study window. The female blundered into the house a few days ago, but I found her a very unattractive animal of a uniform earth-brown colour. The male, however, is sometimes a beauty. He may be often seen jerking his head up and down, with the head, pouch, and whole front of the body a glowing ultramarine blue, contrasting beautifully with the reddish-brown of the hinder part of the body and tail. From the nose to the shoulders, below the eye, is a broad white band, which is interrupted by three reddish-brown patches, in line with the white band, before reaching the uniform reddish brown of the hinder part of the body. Occasionally the white band below the eye assumes a brownish colour, and the animal appears to have a brown band down each side. He does not always, however, appear in this gay dress. While I am writing, I see him coming down the trunk of one of the trees in a very faded garment. His skin suggests a bright calico after it has been washed, whose colours succumb to soap. The blue is there, but it is no longer the bright blue of yesterday. It has changed to a dull light indigo colour. He runs across the grass to the foot of another tree, and stops on the bare ground at its base, where for a minute or more he bites with great energy at a struggling grasshopper, and while thus exercising himself the blue fades out from his body altogether, and his whole body takes the colour of the brown earth on which he stands. After tarrying a minute or two he ran up the other tree, and the dull light blue colour seemed to return to him."

Agama with many species in Africa and Asia; some in South-Eastern Europe. The body is somewhat depressed. There is a fold across the throat and a pit on either side; the presence of a gular sac is variable. A dorsal crest is absent or but feebly developed. The males have pre-anal pores.

A. sanguinolenta.–The body is covered with strongly keeled and pointed scales. On the sides of the head are a few spine-like scales. The ear-opening is partly concealed by a fringe of spinous scales. The males have a gular pouch. This is a typical inhabitant of the deserts and steppes of Turkestan. Zander[156] has observed the habits and many changes of colour of this lizard. The usual garb is earthy brown above, with somewhat darker and rather indistinct markings. The under parts are whitish. Sometimes the creature changes to dirty white, at other times into blackish or grey brown. Bluish-red stripes may appear on the sides of the body; blue lines begin to show on the throat, and ultimately the whole belly, originally white, may become ultramarine blue. When the general tone happens to be sulphurous yellow, blue often appears on the tail and limbs. Brick red appears on four longitudinal rows of patches on the sides of the body. Sometimes the whole animal assumes a vinous tinge, or it is at first greenish before turning into blue. The change begins on the tail and limbs, extends over the head, and at length reaches the back. Red appears in both sexes, more frequently in the female; blue almost entirely in the male. Sunlight and warmth only intensify the colours. Adaptive coloration, besides the usual sandy garb, has not been observed. The lizards live on soil which is baked as hard as bricks, or in cavities of old walls, provided there is vegetation. They require vegetable food, besides insects, grazing on grass, and having a fondness also for Mesembryanthemum cardiforme. Very large males reach a total length of one foot. They are pugnacious, especially during the time of breeding. The male inflates its gular sac into the size of a walnut, stands up upon its four limbs, with its head slightly lowered and turned to one side. Then it darts upon the foe which it has been eyeing for some time.

fig125

Fig. 125.Agama stellio. × ½.

A. stellio is the commonest Agama in Egypt, Asia Minor, and in some of the Grecian Islands, where the Greeks still call it korkordilos, just as they did in the time of old Herodotus. The Arabic name is hardun. This lizard is easily recognised by the irregular folds on the neck, which are beset with spinous horny scales. It grows to a length of 15 inches. The general colour is brown, with dark patches on the back. When basking they become almost black; in the breeding season the male assumes red tints on the head and neck.

Phrynocephalus.–This is a typical Agamoid of the steppes and deserts of Asia. The head is short and thick, the ear is hidden. The body is depressed, devoid of a dorsal crest; on the throat is a transverse fold but no sac.

A. Zander[157] has made interesting observations upon the habits of several species.

Ph. helioscopus lives on hard stretches of soil, which are absolutely bare of vegetation, the soil being baked as hard as a paved road. The lizards live on any insects they can get hold of, chiefly, however, upon mining ants. When chased they run with short jerks, carrying the tail high or rolled up.

Ph. interscapularis occurs, in Transcaspia, on the shifting, loose sand. It runs so fast that one scarcely sees anything but its shadow. The tail is rolled upwards. With short jerks it suddenly changes its direction, stops behind a few blades of grass, or in the open, makes a few shaking, wavy movements, and covers itself lightly with sand. Shortly after that the top of the head appears, the grains of sand rolling off between the strong supraciliary ridges, and the little creature, only about 3 inches long, peeps out of its temporary hiding-place.

Ph. mystaceus, which inhabits Transcaspia and parts of Southern Russia, often faces its aggressor, raising itself upon its fore-limbs, curling and uncurling its tail in its excitement, and holding its mouth widely open. The creature, which attains a length of 9 inches, inclusive of the long tail, then assumes a markedly changed aspect. The flaps of skin at the corners of the mouth swell up into a half-moon-shaped transverse plate, the hinder surface of which is covered by the outer skin, while the front is a continuation of the rosy lining of the mouth, which thereby appears hugely enlarged. When biting it hangs firmly on to the finger. This frightening attitude is interesting, since it occurs in a much more developed condition in the following genus.

Chlamydosaurus kingi.–This peculiar Agamoid, which inhabits Queensland and Northern and North-Western Australia, is easily recognised by the large frill-shaped dermal expansion on either side of the neck. The two halves are confluent on the throat. The whole frill can be erected, and is worked by the much-elongated arches or horns of the hyoid apparatus, which extend into the flaps of skin, somewhat like the ribs of an umbrella. The specially modified hyoidean muscles spread out and fold the frill. When this curious creature is pursued it folds the frill and runs in a semi-erect position upon its hind-limbs, with its fore-limbs hanging down. However, it cannot keep up this peculiar gait for long, and it then suddenly turns to bay, frequently at the root of a tree, which it can climb with ease. When standing at bay it spreads out the shield to its full extent, in the middle of which appears the widely opened mouth, which is red inside and armed with powerful teeth. Altogether this lizard presents a formidable aspect, and is an enemy not to be despised, considering that it is strongly built and grows to nearly 3 feet in length. For a further account of the habits and of the mechanism of the frill see De Vis.[158]

fig126

Fig. 126.Chlamydosaurus kingi. × ¼.

Physignathus.–This is a water-loving genus, inhabiting well-watered districts with luxuriant vegetation in Australia, Papuasia, Siam, and Cochin China. The body and the very long tail are laterally compressed and furnished with a low, serrated crest. Ph. lesueuri of Queensland reaches a length of about 18 inches. The general colour is dark olive above, with darker and lighter cross-bands, and with a broad black band reaching from the eye to the shoulder. The under parts are pale olive, with small black dots. The throat, although devoid of a special sac, is frequently bulged out by the hyoid apparatus, as shown in Fig. 127, taken from a specimen in the Zoological Gardens in London.

Uromastix is a typical desert-form, inhabiting the dry and sandy tracts of North Africa, Arabia, Syria, Persia, and North-Western India. The genus is easily recognised by the short and thick tail, which is covered with whorls of large spinous scales, while the much-depressed body and head are almost smooth, being covered with very small scales. The tympanum of the ear is quite exposed. The incisors are large, uniting in the adult into one or two pairs of large cutting teeth, separated from the molars by a toothless space. There is a transverse fold on the throat. Pre-anal and femoral pores are well developed.

fig127

Fig. 127.Physignathus lesueuri. × ⅓.

These "Spiny-tailed Lizards" live chiefly upon vegetable food, leaves, grass and fruit, but they vary this diet with insects, at least in captivity, where they become rather partial to meal-worms. They are absolutely terrestrial and diurnal, preferring sandy places, where they bask or rather roast themselves in the sun; for the night, at the approach of rain, or on dull and chilly days, they retire into their burrows, which they dig in the sand or in the hard ground, unless they hide in the cracks of rocks. They have a regular mania for digging with their strong limbs and short, curved claws. Although they love a great amount of heat, and become stiff when cooled down to about 16° C. = 60 F., they can stand several degrees of dry frost without injury. During the cold season they hibernate. The spiny tail is used for defence. The lizard lies as a rule in such a position in its hole that the tail blocks the narrow passage; when touched with the hand it deals out jerky side-blows with the tail. The bite is deliberate and very painful.

U. hardwicki is a native of North-Western India and Beluchistan, occurring especially in Sindh and Rajputana, for instance near Delhi and Agra. This species is of a delicate sandy colour, with dark dots or vermiculations, interspersed, occasionally, with pale blue specks. The under parts are whitish on the tail with a greenish hue. A distinctive and obvious mark is a large blackish patch on the anterior side of the thigh. Total length up to one foot.

I have several times received consignments of the Indian Spiny-tailed Lizard through the kindness of friends, but I must confess that they are far less easily kept than one is led to believe from certain exaggerated accounts. They are lovely, most interesting, and surprisingly tame creatures. I received one lot in the month of June. They made burrows in the dry soil, basked in the sun and on the grassy sods of their roomy cage, and showed great curiosity. When approached, they at first scrambled off or sank down flat, shut their eyes and feigned death. They then opened their tiny yellow eyes a little, while others peeped out of their retreats to see if all was safe, or attracted by some noise. Soon they became so tame that they crawled over my hand. But the difficulty consisted in feeding them. They greedily lapped up drops of water. Their dung consisted of the indigestible parts of some species of Equisetum or Mare's tail, mixed with fragments of beetles and ants. Lettuce, cabbage, cauliflower, grass, the flowers of red and white clover, Mare's tail, wheat, rice, and Indian corn were offered, but they only took a few blades of grass and the hard Indian corn, besides meal-worms. This is all the more astonishing since other specimens are known to partake freely of herbaceous food. None of them survived the late autumn, and most of them succumbed to a disease known as intussusception of the gut. They certainly could not complain of the want of heat, since the bottom of their cage was kept permanently warm by a lamp, and in the autumn they invariably slept in the warmest part of the soil, avoiding the cool regions which would have given them a chance of hibernating.

Another consignment arrived in the month of February. None of them ate anything or survived the early summer.