
Desert Spiny Lizard on Willow Tree (Corn Creek).
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General
Description: A
large, stocky lizard with large, spiny scales and crossbars on the
back. While most are smaller, I've seen then with bodies the size of
chipmunks at the top of the Sheep Range.
Taxonomy:
Phrynosomatid Lizard Family (Phrynosomatidae).
Technical
Description:
Body size 3.5 to 5.5 inches, stocky; tail longer than head and body.
Dorsal scales large and spiny. Dorsal
color light with dark crossbars and flecks; some scales
yellow. Side of neck with black triangular-shaped
mark. Ear opening partially covered with long, pointed scales.
Males
have a deep blue patch on the throat and dark blue
patches, edged in black, running down the sides of the belly and
joining to cover the groin. In females, the blue throat
and belly patches are weak or absent. |

Note black wedge on neck (Grand Canyon).
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Diet:
Feeds on ants, beetles, flies, grasshoppers, other lizards, and plant
material.
Habitat:
Occurs in a variety of upland and riparian habitats, especially Mojave
Desert Scrub and Pinyon-Juniper
Woodlands with rocks or trees to climb. Less common in the Creosote-Bursage
Flats habitat type).
Range:
Southeastern
California, southern Nevada, southwest Utah, and northern and western
Arizona; arid to semiarid habitats from sea level to 6000 ft. |

Note scales with spines (male; Grand Canyon). |
Breeding:
Mate during early summer; eggs hatch in late summer.
Similar
Species: No
other species in southern Nevada has the enlarged, spiny scales seen on
spiny
lizards. Western Fence Lizard looks similar, but without the enlarged
scales.
Comments: |

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Incomplete line of scales identifies spiny lizards. |

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Male ventral color pattern. |

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Male showing enlarged postanal scales and enlarged femoral pores. |

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Female with reddish head during breeding season. |

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Female ventral color pattern -- no blue (note reddish head
during breeding season). |
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Postanal scales not enlarged on female. Note large scales on rear of thigh (smaller in many other species). |

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Big male with breeding colors. |