10 Most Colorful & Beautiful Lizards In The World
Number 10. Super fan-throated lizards are small, colorful
reptiles found in the dry shrublands and coastal areas of South Asia.
The male superb fan-throated lizards possess a flap of skin under their lower jaw, called
the dewlap. Before the mating season, dewlaps start developing
bright blue, black, and orange-colored patches, which have earned this lizard its name.
Often, males are seen perched on rocks in open rocky areas, such that their dewlap is
visible to all lizards in the surroundings, both of the same and the opposite sex.
This behavior indicates that male lizards are likely signaling to multiple receivers.
Their reproductive success, by finding mates and fending off competitors, depends on successfully
communicating this signal.
Super fan-throated lizards |
Number 9. Found in most of sub-Saharan Africa, agama lizards are active during the day and usually bask in the morning sun to regulate their body temperatures. If the temperatures soar higher, then they withdraw to shady places or burrows. If threatened, they can run quickly and hide among crevices, or may attempt to conceal themselves by changing their bright colors to blend with the surroundings. Agamas live in social groups including a lead male, about half a dozen females, and subordinate males. Because of this, male agamas are territorial and must fight other males to claim their space. Subordinate males can only gain their own group if they eliminate the existing lead male (the "cock") or establish a colony outside all other cocks' territory. Only the cock is allowed to mate with the females and the center of a cock's territory is usually marked by the presence of a physical object, such as a tree or boulder, on which the lizards congregate.
agama lizard |
Number 8. Endemic to North American, the five-lined skinks are moderately large lizards with short legs and a streamlined body. The body is generally gray, brown, or black, in background color with five white or yellowish stripes, two on each side and one down the center of the back. Young have a bright blue tail while adult males often lose their stripes and develop reddish or orange coloration on the head. This species is very similar in appearance to the southeastern five-lined skink and broadhead skink and is usually only identifiable by close examination of the scales, where the five-lined skinks have an enlarged row of scales under the tail and four labial, along the upper lip between the nose and eye scales. Preying on a wide variety of insects, spiders, and other invertebrates, this lizard is a ground-dwelling animal. It prefers a moist, partially wooded habitat that provides ample cover or inside walls of buildings, trees as well as sites to bask in the sun.
five-lined skinks |
Number 7. Endemic to South Africa, the Augrabies flat
lizard is also known as Broadley's flat lizard, in honor of herpetologist Donald G. Broadley.
With their flat bodies and short legs, these lizards are able to go under large objects
such as rocks and able to run fast, as long as making impressive jumps and leaps.
Adult males have a bluish head and a greenish back. A darker area in the middle and the
vestiges of the juvenile stripes and spots are also present.
The forelimbs are yellow to orange, the throat is dark blue, and the belly is black in the
front but becomes orange near the tail. All this coloration, while helping them to
attract females, it also enables predators such as kestrels to spot them easily.
These flat lizards have been discovered to have a much higher visual sensitivity to UV
light than other lizards species, allowing males to accurately distinguish between conspecifics
of various fitness. In other words, the higher the UV levels on
a male's throat, the more dominant it is and is less likely to be challenged.
Augrabies flat lizard |
Number 6. Native to Northwestern Madagascar, the gold
day dust gecko is a diurnal species of gecko that inhabits various kinds of trees and houses.
The body color is bright green or yellowish-green or rarely blue.
Typical for this day gecko is the yellow speckles on the neck and the upper back, as
long as the three rust-colored transverse bars on the snout and head.
The males of this species are rather aggressive and can be quite quarrelsome, where they do
not accept other males in their territory. In captivity, where the females cannot escape,
the males may also seriously wound a female. These day geckos feed on various insects and
other invertebrates and are also capable of eating other smaller lizards.
They also eat soft, sweet fruit and pollen and nectar from flowers, often congregating
in groups of many individuals to feed off of one plant.
gold day dust gecko |
Number 5. The common green forest lizard is an agamid
lizard found in the forests of the Western Ghats and the Shevaroy Hills in India, and
Sri Lanka. With the head comparatively large to the rest
of the body, it is a quite large lizard that can reach up to 65cm including the tail.
The green forest lizard is bright green, usually with white stripes on the sides, which may
also vary in color, for example, darker green, and can continue on the tail as well.
The male develops a bright red coloration on the head and throat in breeding season
otherwise the head is just bright green or more yellowish-green to brown in males and
females. To a certain extent, the animals are able
to change their color. This is especially true for the males in the mating season but
also stress or excitement has an influence.
green forest lizard |
Number 4. The green thorny-tail iguana is an arboreal
species of lizard from the Amazon rainforest and forests in the Guiana Shield.
This lizard is a relatively small iguana where it can reach about 9cm (3.5 in) in snout to
vent length. With a relatively short spiny tail, the green thorny tail iguana mainly feeds on ants. Overall appearance, it is green with black
spots and bands, which allow it to blend in properly with the dark and green background
of the forest it inhabits, thus making it harder for this lizard to be
spotted by predators.
green thorny-tail iguana |
Number 3. Found in dry, open regions of Mexico and the
south-central United States, the collared lizard is distinguished by the two black collars
around its neck. Adult males have bright green scales as well
as tan, olive, brown, bluish, and yellow scales while the females are less colorful.
These lizards prefer spending most of their time on and around rocky areas because these
areas provide shelter from the sun and predators. Like many other lizards, including the frilled
lizard and basilisk, collared lizards can run on their hind legs, and are relatively
fast sprinters. Record speeds have been around 16 miles per
hour (26 km/h). They also do not lose their tail very easily,
but if they do, it does not grow back.
collared lizard |
Number 2. Endemic to the highlands of the states of
Veracruz and adjacent Puebla, Mexico, Mexican alligator lizards have prehensile tails and
overlapping scales, giving them an extremely prehistoric appearance.
Alligator lizards range from teal blue to deep green with pale yellow bellies and a
yellow ring around each eye. Males tend to be more vibrant than females,
while juveniles are paler and marked with dark, lateral stripes.
This lizard is considered to be moderately common and is regularly recorded, but its
abundance is decreasing. These lizards eat a wide variety of insects
and other arthropods in the wild, while in captivity, they thrive off of crickets, phoenix
worms, hornworms, and other live feeder insects. As they inhabit bromeliads in the canopy of
montane pine-oak and cloud forest, deforestation, and degradation of habitat have caused Mexican
alligator lizards to be considered endangered.
Mexican alligator lizards |
Number 1. When it comes to beauty and coloration, very
few can beat the chameleons. With 171 species of chameleons known today,
it is hard to point out which one is the most beautiful because of its ability to change
its color. However, it is a misconception that chameleons
change colors to match their surroundings. Changing skin color is an important part of
communication among chameleons.
chameleons |
A chameleon's skin changes colors in response
to its emotions, such as anger or fear, changes in light, temperature, or humidity.
The brighter the color, the more dominant the male is, and the more attractive he is
to females. Besides changing skin color, chameleons have
another feature that no other animals have. Their eyes can move independently of each
other, enabling them to look in two different directions at once.
Chameleons have a full 360-degree view and can focus their eyes quickly and enlarge what
they are looking at like a camera lens. The Mount Hanang chameleon (Trioceros hanangensis) is endemic only to the 15 km2 volcanic peak of Mt Hanang in northern Tanzania. These are high altitude reptiles adapted to high UV radiation in the moorland they live in between 2.700 en 3.300 meters
Hanang chameleon |