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General Description: These dark
little lizards have many small black spots on the back arranged in
longitudinal lines. The eyes are lidless, and the pupils are vertical. These lizards are secretive; look for them under debris.
Taxonomy: Night Lizard Family (Xantusiidae). |
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Technical Description: Body size small
(1.5 to 2.5 in; total length 5 in.), slim. The body color is dark
(olive, gray, or brown) with small black spots on the back that tend to
form lines. Eyes with vertical pupils; eyelids absent. Skin soft. Head
scales large and symmetrical; dorsal scales small and granular; ventral
scales large, square, and smooth.
Diet: Termites, ants, beetles, scorpions, centipedes, and flies. |
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Habitat: Mojave Desert Scrub in areas with Blackbrush or with Honey Mesquite and Catclaw Acacia (wash habitats); also Pinyon-Juniper Woodlands with sagebrush (Upper Sonoran Life Zone). Associated with Joshua Tree, Mojave Yucca, Banana Yucca. Secretive and dependent upon cover, this species primarily lives beneath and among fallen leaves and branches of Yucca, Utah Agave, Joshua Trees, and other debris. |
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Range: This species is distributed
throughout the Mojave and Colorado deserts in southern California,
southern Nevada, southwestern Utah, and southward into Baja California
and northwestern Mexico. Also scattered in Utah and Arizona. This
subspecies occurs in southern Nevada and southeastern California.
Breeding: Offspring are born live during September and October. |
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Similar Species: In southern Nevada,
there are no other dark little lizards with many small black spots on
the back arranged in longitudinal lines.
Comments: Secretive and often found
beneath the bark of dead Joshua Trees, these lizards are generally
thought to be nocturnal; however, they are primarily diurnal
or crepuscular. During the heat of summer, they may become
nocturnal. |
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Note the vertical pupil. |
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Ventral scales large, square, and smooth. |
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Gular fold pronounced. |
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