L
Species Profile

Lizard

Squamata

From geckos to dragons-lizard power
Kurit afshen/Shutterstock.com

Lizard Distribution

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Invasive Species
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Found in 157 countries

Lizard, Chameleon panther on dry leaves with black backround,

At a Glance

Order Overview This page covers the Lizard order as a group. Stats below are general traits shared across the order.
Also Known As Saurian, Scaled reptile, Lagarto, Lézard, Eidechse, Lucertola
Activity Diurnal+
Lifespan 8 years
Weight 100 lbs
Status Not Evaluated
Did You Know?

"Lizards" is a common-name grouping within Squamata (often excluding snakes), not a single formal taxonomic clade.

Scientific Classification

Order Overview "Lizard" is not a single species but represents an entire order containing multiple species.

Lizards are a broad, common-name grouping of squamate reptiles characterized (in many lineages) by external ear openings, movable eyelids, and typically four limbs, though many groups are limb-reduced or limbless. They occupy nearly all warm and temperate terrestrial habitats and exhibit wide ecological diversity (insectivores, herbivores, omnivores, and predators).

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Reptilia
Order
Squamata

Distinguishing Features

  • Ectothermic reptiles with keratinized scales
  • Typical lizard traits: movable eyelids and external ear openings (not universal)
  • Many have tail autotomy (tail-shedding) as an anti-predator strategy
  • Diverse locomotion: climbing toe pads (geckos), gliding membranes (some agamids), limb reduction/limblessness (several lineages)

Physical Measurements

Males and females differ in size

Length
98 ft 5 in (11 ft 6 in – 984 ft 3 in)
10 in (1 in – 8 ft 6 in)
Weight
0 lbs (0 lbs – 198 lbs)
0 lbs (0 lbs – 154 lbs)
Tail Length
7 in (0 in – 5 ft 3 in)
5 in (0 in – 4 ft 3 in)
Top Speed
22 mph
running

Appearance

Primary Colors
Secondary Colors
Skin Type Keratinized overlapping scales and scutes (often with granular, keeled, or tuberculate textures); periodic shedding (often in patches), with specialized adhesion lamellae in many geckos, and heavier osteoderm reinforcement in some groups.
Distinctive Features
  • Informal common-name grouping within Squamata (often excluding snakes in common usage), spanning geckos, iguanians, skinks, lacertids, monitors, and chameleons.
  • Body size range (smallest to largest): roughly ~3-300 cm total length; mass from under 1 g to ~70-90 kg.
  • Typically four-limbed with a long tail, but many lineages are limb-reduced or fully limbless (converging on snake-like forms).
  • Common (but not universal) traits: external ear openings and movable eyelids; some groups lack one or both (e.g., many geckos have fixed spectacles).
  • Tail autotomy is widespread, especially in geckos and skinks; regenerated tails often differ in scale texture and coloration.
  • Ecology/behavior spans diurnal to nocturnal, arboreal to fossorial, saxicolous, and some semi-aquatic; habitat breadth covers deserts, forests, grasslands, alpine margins, and urban areas.
  • Diet ranges from insectivory and other invertebrates to herbivory, omnivory, and vertebrate predation (notably in larger monitors).
  • Reproduction varies: mostly egg-laying, but live-bearing evolved repeatedly; clutches range from single/few eggs to large clutches depending on lineage.
  • Lifespan range across species: commonly ~2-50+ years, with small species shorter-lived and large-bodied taxa often much longer-lived.
  • Specialized traits occur in major lineages: gecko toe pads and vocalizations, iguanian dewlaps and head-bobbing, chameleon independently mobile eyes and projectile tongues, monitor forked tongues and high endurance.

Sexual Dimorphism

Sexual dimorphism is common but highly variable among lizard lineages. Males often show larger heads, brighter breeding colors, and display structures, while females may be larger-bodied for fecundity and typically show subtler patterning.

  • Enlarged femoral or precloacal pores and more prominent scent-marking structures in many groups.
  • Larger heads/jaws and thicker necks in many territorial species, supporting combat or displays.
  • More vivid or contrasting coloration, including seasonal intensification during breeding.
  • Display structures such as dewlaps, crests, spines, or enlarged cheek regions in some taxa.
  • Hemipenal bulges at tail base in many species (useful in sexing).
  • Often larger abdomen or overall body volume related to egg production or live-bearing.
  • Duller or more cryptic coloration in many species, though not universal.
  • Reduced prominence of pores and external display structures in many taxa.
  • In some lineages, females are larger than males (reversed size dimorphism).

Did You Know?

"Lizards" is a common-name grouping within Squamata (often excluding snakes), not a single formal taxonomic clade.

Adult size spans from some tiny geckos at ~1.6-2 cm snout-vent length (SVL) to Komodo dragons reaching ~3 m total length.

Diet across lizards ranges from insect-eating specialists to mostly herbivorous iguanas and powerful vertebrate predators like monitor lizards.

Many lizards can shed and regrow their tails (autotomy), though regrowth varies by lineage and the new tail may differ in structure.

Color and skin structure can be extreme: chameleons rapidly shift colors; some geckos and anoles have vivid signaling displays and UV-reflective patterns.

Reproduction is highly variable: most lay eggs, many give live birth, and a few lineages include parthenogenetic (all-female, clonal) species.

Lizards occupy nearly every terrestrial habitat type-from deserts and dunes to rainforests, mountains, and cities-especially in warmer climates.

Unique Adaptations

  • Movable eyelids and external ear openings are common in many lizard lineages, but with notable exceptions (e.g., geckos often have a transparent spectacle instead of eyelids; some burrowers have reduced openings).
  • Limb reduction and elongate bodies evolved repeatedly (notably in many skinks and other burrowing lineages), producing "lizard-like" forms that can be partly limbed to fully limbless.
  • Specialized toe pads with microscopic setae enable gecko adhesion via van der Waals forces; this has evolved into one of nature's most effective climbing systems.
  • Chameleon innovations: independently moving eyes, ballistic tongues, grasping hands/feet, and prehensile tails in many species-suited to arboreal, precision hunting.
  • Cranial kinesis and jaw specializations vary widely; some lineages have strong crushing bites (e.g., many monitors) while others are adapted for plant processing (many iguanas).
  • Salt-management adaptations in some coastal/desert lizards (notably in several iguanian lineages) help excrete excess salts.
  • Tail specializations beyond autotomy: some use tails for balance and climbing, fat storage, display, or defense (spines/armor in certain groups).

Interesting Behaviors

  • Thermoregulation by behavior: basking, shade-seeking, changing posture/color, and timing activity to keep body temperature in a workable range (with major variation from nocturnal geckos to sun-loving iguanas).
  • Display communication: head-bobs, push-ups, dewlap extensions (e.g., many anoles), throat/crest flaring (many iguanians), and tail waving; signals can be territorial, courtship, or deterrence.
  • Adhesive climbing and microhabitat use: many geckos and anoles exploit vertical surfaces, tree canopies, and rock faces; others are sand-swimmers or burrowers (common in skinks and other fossorial forms).
  • Predator evasion strategies: tail autotomy; sudden sprinting with stop-and-go motion; crypsis and disruptive coloration; threat displays, hissing, and (in some) painful bites.
  • Sit-and-wait vs active foraging: ambush predation is common in many iguanians; active, wide-ranging hunting is typical of monitors-illustrating major ecological variation within "lizards."
  • Social and reproductive diversity: from largely solitary species to those forming loose aggregations; mating systems range from territorial polygyny to more flexible arrangements; some species show parental guarding of eggs.
  • Seasonality and dormancy: in temperate zones many reduce activity or brumate; in arid zones activity may track rains and insect flushes.

Cultural Significance

Lizards often mean adaptability, tail regrowth, alertness, and the line between wild and home. They appear in art across cultures: Mesoamerican iguanas and geckos; Southeast Asian and Pacific geckos; South and Southeast Asian monitors and geckos tied to luck. Chameleons, Komodo dragons and large iguanas are conservation icons.

Myths & Legends

Hopi tradition tells of the Lizard (often identified as a "Lizard"/reptile figure among clan symbols), associated with survival and earth connection; lizard imagery appears in clan and motif contexts in the U.S. Southwest.

In Aboriginal Australian traditions, lizards-especially goannas (monitor lizards)-feature prominently in Dreaming stories, including creation journeys, landscape formation, and law-teaching narratives tied to specific places and songlines.

In Indigenous New Zealand tradition, a reptilian or monstrous being (often translated as "reptile" or "lizard") appears in stories linked to sacred places and ancestral encounters, and is sometimes described as a giant lizard-like creature.

In parts of India, household geckos are woven into folk omen traditions, where their calls or the direction of a sighting can be interpreted as auspicious or cautionary-an enduring strand of everyday folklore.

In Filipino folklore, the house gecko is commonly treated as a familiar household presence tied to luck, omens, and protective home associations in popular tradition.

In some East African and southern African folk traditions, chameleons and lizard figures appear in stories explaining mortality and delayed messages-tales in which small reptiles become messengers whose timing shapes human fate.

Mediterranean and European folk belief sometimes treats lizards as protective "house" animals or weather-signs, reflected in proverbs and rural sayings that link lizard activity to seasonal change and sun.

Conservation Status

NE Not Evaluated (IUCN Red List statuses are assessed at the species level. Lizards are a diverse group within the order Squamata, so no single IUCN status applies to all lizards.)

Has not yet been evaluated against the criteria.

Population Unknown

Protected Under

  • CITES (multiple species listed across Appendices I-III; coverage varies widely among families and countries)
  • National threatened-species laws and regulations (e.g., endangered species acts, harvest bans, protected-area statutes)
  • Regional wildlife trade and habitat directives in some jurisdictions (implementation and enforcement vary)
  • Protected areas and island biosecurity/eradication programs are critical for many endemic lizard lineages

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Gekko gecko

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Common wall lizard

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Podarcis muralis

Widespread lacertid lizard in Europe; common in urban stone habitats.

Common (European) slow worm

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Anguis fragilis

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Komodo dragon

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Varanus komodoensis

Largest living lizard; monitor lizard from Indonesian islands.

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Veiled chameleon

8%

Chamaeleo calyptratus

Arboreal chameleon with prehensile tail and color change; Yemen/Saudi Arabia.

Life Cycle

Birth 6 hatchlings
Lifespan 8 years

Lifespan

In the Wild
1–40 years
In Captivity
2–60 years

Reproduction

Mating System Polygyny
Social Structure Solitary
Breeding Pattern Seasonal
Fertilization Internal Fertilization
Birth Type Internal_fertilization

Behavior & Ecology

Social Aggregation Group: 3
Activity Diurnal, Nocturnal, Crepuscular, Cathemeral
Seasonal Hibernates

Temperament

Highly variable across Squamata; many are wary and flee-prone
Often territorial, especially adult males in resource-rich habitats
Some species are relatively tolerant of conspecifics at shelters or basking sites
Predatory species may be bold ambush hunters; others are cryptic and secretive
Stress responses commonly include freezing, bluff displays, biting, tail autotomy, or fleeing

Communication

generally limited in many lizards; some produce hisses, squeaks, clicks, or chirps
geckos commonly vocalize for territorial and mating contexts Chirps, barks, clicks
visual displays: head-bobs, push-ups, dewlap extension, lateral flattening, posture changes
color change and pattern contrast for signaling dominance, stress, or courtship in some taxa
tail displays: waving, curling, lashing; plus tail autotomy as a defensive signal/distraction
chemical cues: pheromones via femoral/precloacal pores; tongue-flicking to sample scents
tactile interactions during courtship and combat: nips, mounting, grappling
substrate vibrations or drumming in some species during displays or aggression

Habitat

Biomes:
Tropical Rainforest Tropical Dry Forest Savanna Desert Hot Desert Cold Mediterranean Temperate Grassland Temperate Forest Temperate Rainforest Boreal Forest (Taiga) Alpine Freshwater Wetland +7
Terrain:
Mountainous Hilly Plateau Plains Valley Coastal Island Riverine Volcanic Karst Rocky Sandy Muddy +7
Elevation: Up to 17060 ft 5 in

Ecological Role

Ecologically diverse consumers spanning insectivores, herbivores, omnivores, and small-to-mid predators; they function as both predators and prey across most warm/temperate terrestrial ecosystems, with some semi-aquatic and island specialists.

Regulation of insect and other invertebrate populations (including pest control) Trophic link as prey for birds, mammals, snakes, and larger reptiles Seed dispersal and plant recruitment (in fruit/flower-feeding species) Pollination in limited nectar-feeding systems (localized/rare but documented in some regions) Nutrient cycling via predation, scavenging, and deposition (feces/uneaten material) Influence on community structure through mesopredation on small vertebrates and invertebrates

Diet Details

Main Prey:
Insects Arthropods Other invertebrates Small vertebrates Eggs Fish Carrion +1
Other Foods:
Leaves and shoots Flowers and nectar Fruits and berries Seeds Plant sap Algae and other aquatic plant matter

Human Interaction

Domestication Status

Wild

No lizard has been fully domesticated like dogs, cats, or farm animals. But many species — especially geckos, bearded dragons, anoles, some skinks, and monitor lizards — have been kept and bred in captivity for generations. People breed them for color, pattern, or temperament, making them partly adapted to life with humans.

Danger Level

Moderate
  • Bites/scratches: common risk across many species; severity ranges from minor to serious lacerations/crush injuries in large monitors/iguanas.
  • Venom (rare within 'lizard-like' squamates): helodermatids (Gila monster, beaded lizard) can deliver medically significant envenomation; generally uncommon in human encounters but high consequence when it occurs.
  • Zoonotic pathogens: Salmonella and other enteric bacteria can be carried asymptomatically; risk increases with poor hygiene, improper enclosure sanitation, and high-risk household members.
  • Allergic/respiratory irritation: feeder insects, dusty substrates, and some husbandry materials can contribute to human allergy/asthma triggers.
  • Invasive species impacts: released/escaped pets (species-dependent) can harm ecosystems, indirectly affecting human interests (agriculture, native biodiversity).

As a Pet

Suitable as Pet

Legality: Lizard pet rules vary by place. Common captive-bred species (leopard geckos, crested geckos, bearded dragons) are legal. Native/protected, CITES-listed, venomous (Gila monster, beaded lizard), large monitors, and invasive iguanas may be banned or controlled. Wild-caught trade is restricted and discouraged.

Care Level: Moderate

Purchase Cost: $20 - $10,000
Lifetime Cost: $500 - $50,000

Economic Value

Uses:
Pet trade (captive-bred and, in some regions, wild-caught) Ecotourism and wildlife viewing Research and education Biological pest control (insect consumption in human-modified habitats) Leather and other wildlife products (limited, species-dependent, often regulated) Public health/medical research interest (e.g., venom studies in helodermatids; general physiology/thermoregulation research)
Products:
  • captive-bred pets (multiple families: geckos, agamids, skinks, chameleons, varanids, iguanids)
  • terrarium equipment and feeder-insect industries
  • tourism revenue in biodiversity hotspots and iconic-species ranges
  • regulated skins/leather for certain large-bodied species in some markets
  • educational exhibits and outreach programs

Relationships

Ecological Equivalents 5

Animals that fill a similar ecological role in their ecosystem

Salamanders and newts Caudata Often occupy similar insectivorous predator niches in forest-floor and riparian habitats. Ecologically similar despite distant taxonomic relationship (amphibians vs. reptiles).
Frogs and toads Anura Overlap broadly with small-to-medium lizards as sit-and-wait or active insect predators. Many share warm-season activity patterns and reliance on cover.
Shrews Soricidae Small, high-turnover, terrestrial insectivores that can overlap in microhabitat and prey base with small ground-dwelling lizards.
Small insectivorous birds Exploit many of the same arthropod prey resources in shrubs and trees; niche overlap is especially pronounced in arboreal and edge habitats.
Small predatory arthropods Lycosidae Examples include wolf spiders (Lycosidae). In some ecosystems they occupy comparable mesopredator roles in the ground layer, consuming many of the same insects; they can also be prey for small lizards.

Types of Lizard

15

Explore 15 recognized types of lizard

Lizards are reptiles of the order Squamata.

This includes the lizard suborder which bears the scientific name Lacertilia, the snake suborder Serpentes and the worm lizard suborder Amphisbaenia. Lizards are paraphyletic, which means that a small number of species share more in common with their sister suborders than they do with their own order of Lacertilia.

There are more than 7,000 distinct lizard species in the world and the number is being revised upwards on a constant basis. While it might be assumed that limbed lizards descended from limbless snakes, the opposite is true, and it is lizards that are the forebears of the snake family, not the other way around. Some form of this reptile is found on every continent of the world except for Antarctica.

6 Incredible Lizard Facts!

Monitor lizard looks off to left

These reptiles are ectothermic, which means that their body temperature is not fixed as in mammals but is dependent on environmental conditions.

  • Adult lizards range in length from the 2 cm (0.8 inches) of the smaller geckos to the 3 meters (10 feet) of the monitor lizards and weigh anywhere from less than ½ gram (.02 ounce) to 150 kg (330 pounds).
  • With the sole exception of the Marine Iguana of the Galapagos Islands, all species bear the classification of land-based animals. Even the Marine Iguana spends much of its time sunning itself on rocks.
  • Among those of the venomous lizard classification, the Gila Monster and the Beaded Lizard of the Southwestern United States and the Sonoran desert of Mexico are the most widely known. Some species of monitor lizards also possess various degrees of toxic venom.
  • Several species possess the ability to voluntarily detach their tails, used primarily as a way of distracting predators, and then regenerate them at a later date.
  • A number of species possess the ability to change color in order to camouflage themselves from predators or blend in with their surroundings in order to trap their own prey.
  • As a general classification, these reptiles are ectothermic, which means that their body temperature is not fixed as in mammals but is dependent on the environmental conditions around them. Lizards all have ranges of ideal body temperatures where they function with maximum efficiency and are much less active when they cannot attain the proper degree of internal body heat.

Scientific Name

Types of Green Lizards - Jeweled Gecko

Lizards are reptiles of the order Squamata, which comes from the Latin “squamates”, scaly or having scales.

Lizards are reptiles of the order Squamata, which comes from the Latin “squamates”, scaly or having scales. There are three suborders of Squamata: snakes, amphisbaenians (worm lizards), and lizards. Together, the three suborders comprise nearly 11,000 species and are the second-largest group of vertebrates on the planet today.

Characteristics of Lizards

Lizards Look LIke Dragons - Armadillo Lizard

Lizards can range in size from less than an inch to 10 feet in length and have incredibly varied appearances.

Scales and Appearance

As their presence in order Squamata makes clear, the primary characteristic of these reptiles is their scaly skin. The scales themselves, made of keratin, act as an armor to seal in water that would otherwise evaporate, and protect it from varied environments, like dry deserts, for example.

The scales can come in a variety of structures, such as plate-like, smooth and overlapping, and ossified. As a lizard grows, it will shed its tough skin in pieces. Some lizards have spiny scales that protect them from predators.

With some exceptions, lizards have four legs, long tails, external ear openings, and movable eyelids. Their bodies are rounded, their necks short, and their heads are elevated. A notable feature of this reptile as well as all the other members of the order Squamata is the ability to open both its upper and lower jaws. This allows them to swallow much larger prey than is possible among those animals with just a movable lower jaw.

The popular image of a lizard as a low-slung creature that either writhes slowly or scampers quickly along close to the ground only applies to a limited number of lizard species. Among the thousands of variants, there are also lizards with long hind legs that run as bipeds, others that glide with skin flaps extended as rudimentary wings, and even other species which have no limbs and move in the same manner as a snake.

Males often display various types of ornamentation such as permanent horns and crests as well as features of a temporarily deployable nature such as large mane-like frills and crests that are designed to attract females or to frighten away predators by making the animal appear much larger and more threatening than it truly is.

Long tongues are seen in many species. Some of these are intended for use as sensory probes employed in hunting while other limited numbers of species that do not have eyelids use their lengthy tongues as something similar to a windshield wiper for their eyes.

In general, lizards have very good eyesight. Of all lizard species, chameleons have some of the most developed eyesight. They can see in a 360-degree field of vision and also in a wide range of colors and into the UV spectrum.

These reptiles come in many different colors, including species with bands of color, species with a tail of a different color when they are young, and several species that are capable of changing their color to better blend in with their surroundings.

This last attribute, best known in the chameleon, is both an offensive and defensive attribute. It allows the individual lizard to foil predators looking for it and also disguises itself so that its own prey can be lured close enough for capture.

Venom

10 Most Venomous Animals - The Mexican beaded lizard, one of the two species of venomous beaded lizards found principally in Mexico and southern Guatemala

The Mexican beaded lizard, one of the two species of venomous beaded lizards found principally in Mexico and southern Guatemala

Some lizards produce venom in their oral glands. Nine different toxins that are produced by snakes can also be found in lizards. One example is the toxins found in rattlesnake venom–the same toxins are present in the venom of a bearded dragon, which is a popular pet among lizard enthusiasts. Other venomous lizards include the Komodo dragon, Gila monster, Mexican bearded lizard, iguana, and lace monitor.

Scientists originally thought that some of these lizards simply thought that the harmful bacteria in the saliva in their mouths gave them their toxicity, but recent studies have put more lizards in the category “venomous” than before.

Lizard venom is not as dangerous to humans as it is to animals who fall victim to a toxic lizard’s bite. Symptoms can include a sudden drop in blood pressure, loss of consciousness, hemorrhaging, kidney failure, nerve failure, and muscle breakdown, leading to the animal’s death.

Behavior

Komodo dragon

The Komodo dragon is one of the largest lizards in the world today.

Although there are species that are plant-eaters at least in part, they are primarily predators who feed upon insects and other small creatures. Yet the largest lizard species, the Komodo Dragon of Indonesia, has been known to bring down and feed upon very large creatures such as water buffalo.

Characteristically, these lizards are generally classified as “sit and wait” hunters. This means that they take up station at a favorable place and then wait for their prey to come to them. Once a prospective victim comes within reach, they will either leap out and snap at it with their open jaws or use their long tongues to seize it and bring it into their mouth.

Apart from being a symbol of a mating call, they usually bob their heads as a way to look more intimidating to prey and predators. Males lead solitary lives and defend their chosen territorial hunting ranges from other males. Females can range freely but are often found in groups living in near proximity to a dominant male.

Due to their ectothermic nature, lizards are well known for sunning themselves in warm areas. This raises their body temperature towards the optimum level and allows them to perform functions such as hunting, mating, or fighting at full capacity. These reptiles prefer to live in places that are easily defensible such as holes or rock crevasses.

Their scaly skin allows scant evaporation so lizards require very little water apart from the moisture they glean from their food or even from the licked-off dew accumulating on their own bodies. This makes them ideally suited for the desert conditions where many lizard species are found.

Largest and Smallest Lizards

Animals that reproduce asexually – Komodo dragon

The Komodo dragon is the largest lizard in the world.

The largest lizard species in the world is the Komodo dragon which can measure 10 feet in length. The largest Komodo dragon on record weighed 365 pounds. Most of the largest lizard species are monitor lizards, but some iguana species can grow to be quite large as well. Blue iguanas weigh around 31 pounds and reach 5 feet in length.

On the other end of the spectrum, the smallest lizard is the nano chameleon which measures less than an inch and lives in a small area of Madagascar. Incredibly, scientists first classified the nano chameleon as a species in 2021!

There are a number of extremely small chameleons on the northern end of Madagascar. It’s believed they shrunk as an adaptation to habitat loss.

Types Of Lizards

While it would be impossible to provide an inclusive list of species everywhere, here are a few examples of the types of lizards that can be found in different parts of the globe.

Monitor Lizard

Found in Africa, Asia, and the island chains leading to and including Australia, there are more than 70 distinct species of monitor lizards. Monitors are the largest of the lizards and include the famous Komodo Dragon as well as such others as the Nile Monitor of Egypt and the Perentie of Australia.

Caiman Lizard

South America is home to the Caiman Lizard, which inhabits swampy lowlands and feeds primarily upon shelled creatures such as crayfish, freshwater clams, and snails. The Caiman lizard dumps these creatures into the back of its mouth, where its powerful jaws crush the shell of its prey. The broken shell is spat out and the soft parts of the creature are swallowed.

Frilled Lizard

The famed Frilled Lizard is found in Australia and New Guinea. When in danger, the Frilled Lizard fans out the frill of skin that normally lays flat behind its neck and creates the illusion of a much larger and more menacing creature than it really is. It is also known for running on its hind legs with its tail and forelegs held in the air.

Armadillo Lizard

The unique Armadillo Lizard is from South Africa. When in danger, it curls up and presents an armored ball that foils predators. Its overlapping scales give the appearance of it being a very tiny dragon. In addition, the Armadillo lizard is one of the few social reptiles that live in groups rather than as solitary hunters.

Sand Lizard

Now protected from further habitat destruction, the UK’s rare Sand Lizard is found among sand dunes and on sandy outcroppings on the verge of heathlands. As with many other threatened species, increasing population density is the primary cause of its downfall.

Additionally, here is a list of other types of lizards:

Habitat

These reptiles inhabit every continent on Earth except for Antarctica. Certain species have been found in far northern reaches above the Arctic Circle and others at the inhospitable southern tip of South America.

With thousands of species on the planet, there are lizards adapted for virtually all environmental and climatic conditions. In regions where their food sources are abundant, such as in tropical jungles, they can attain very large sizes. In places of limited supplies, smaller species tend to predominate.

There are lizards that prefer living in trees while others inhabit open areas where large quantities of sunshine are readily obtainable. Most of these reptiles are daylight species although there are a few night-specific lizards such as the gecko and one species, the Galapagos Marine Iguana, which lives primarily in the ocean.

Diet

What Do Lizards Eat
Lizards mostly eat insects, but some species can also eat rodents, frogs, birds, and other lizards and reptiles.

Lizards are largely predatory in nature and are often so-called “sit and wait” hunters who remain motionless until their prey comes within reach. At this point, they dart out and grab it in a surprise attack before it can escape.

What do lizards eat?

Most lizards are carnivorous and feed upon insects, ants, and other invertebrates. Larger lizard species feed upon small animals such as mice and other rodents, and snails. Still larger species such as the monitor lizards can prey upon much larger quarries such as frogs, birds, fish, larger mammals, and even snakes.

Around 2% of lizard species are primarily vegetarians as adults, although younger members will eat meat and then gradually adopt a vegan diet as they reach adulthood. Fruit is often eaten even by carnivorous species, and bird and reptile eggs are frequently sought by larger lizards.

Predators and Threats

In nature, animal species must balance their own need to feed against the need of other species to use them as a food source. Just as predatory lizards are always on the hunt, so too are other predators searching for them.

Human Predators

Humans are one of these reptiles’ biggest predators. Some see lizards as pests so they constantly try to get rid of them, especially in residential environments. It’s advisable to get rid of lizards using humane methods instead of killing them since some species are endangered already.

What eats lizards?

Closeup of sharp-shinned hawk in profile with blue sky backdrop

Large birds such as hawks are the primary threat to most lizard species.

Due to a lizard’s ability to move very swiftly when in danger, most lizard predators need to be fast-moving themselves.

Large birds such as hawks are the primary threat to most lizard species. Their keen eyesight allows them to detect movement from very far away. This leads to lizard defenses such as changing colors to match terrain and remaining absolutely motionless in exposed locations.

Most canine and feline species, certainly including dogs and domestic cats, will eat lizards.

Although not dependent upon lizards as their primary food source, the swiftly-striking mongoose is well-suited for hunting lizards.

Just as lizards eat snakes, so too do snakes return the favor and eat lizards. Larger lizards are also known to prey upon smaller species.

The regal jumping spider, weighing in at only 2-3 gms, has been known to capture lizards more than three times its own size.

Since lizard meat is often considered to be a delicacy in some cultures, humans are the ultimate apex predator for lizards. This is particularly true of the iguana, which is prized for its meaty tail.

Environmental Threats

Since the vast array of species are generally engineered for life in a specific environmental zone and they are ectothermic, climate change can offer a serious threat to many species by either unfavorably altering the heat balance of the region or severely decreasing their preferred food supply.

Human-created sprawl also invades prime lizard habitats via such things as urbanization or deforestation. This can also lead to increases in predator population brought about by nearby habitat disruption of another species. This brings a large number of threatened species into a formerly balanced ecosystem. As human populations continue to grow, additional pressure is placed upon those lizards which are considered to be a human food source.

Threatened Lizard Species

The Tarzan Chameleon has been nearly wiped out by habitat destruction of forest cover in favor of agricultural development.

In a rapidly altering world, it is estimated that nearly 20% of all reptile species, which includes lizards, are threatened to one degree or another. Among the most severely at risk are:

The Tarzan Chameleon of Madagascar, scientific name Calumma tarzani, is generally green or yellow but adopts a striped pattern when threatened. The Tarzan Chameleon has been nearly wiped out by habitat destruction of forest cover in favor of agricultural development and gold mining in the region.

The Jamaican Rock Iguana, scientific name Cyclura collei, was actually believed to be extinct until a small colony was rediscovered in 1990. Currently numbering only about 100 individuals, the Jamaican Rock Iguana population collapsed by being hunted for food and faced with human-sponsored habitat invasion through the introduction of non-native predators such as dogs and pigs into the area. Human development activity in the region also reduces and degrades its remaining habitat potential.

Reproduction, Babies, and Lifespan

Baby Lazarus Lizard (Podarcis muralis) held in a person's hands.

Baby Lazarus Lizard (Podarcis muralis) held in a person’s hands.

No one rule completely covers these reptiles’ reproduction methods.

The majority of species use male sperm fertilization of a female’s internal eggs as a method of reproduction. In general, these eggs are laid in a safe place and abandoned thereafter, although some species employ females to brood upon the eggs until hatching.

About 1 out of every 5 types employ viviparity or live birth from eggs developed inside the female body and then born as functional members of the species rather than being hatched from eggs laid outside the body.

A few species reproduce via parthenogenesis or reproduction from eggs that do not require male fertilization. In rare cases, this has even been known to occur in non-parthenogenic lizard species where the female does not have access to a male.

When it comes to the sex selection of the embryo, the eggs are known to be temperature-dependent in some cases. High temperatures during incubation produce more females and vice versa in low-temperature conditions.

The number of eggs laid by the female can vary from 5 percent of body weight up to as much as 50 percent. Depending on the size of eggs in the particular species, this can result in a clutch of as many as 50 small eggs or as few as a single large one.

Once laid, most eggs hatch within about 3 months’ time. Upon birth, the infants have no family life. They are totally on their own as miniature versions of the adult they will eventually grow into.

Make sure to read our complete guide on baby lizards called ‘What’s a Baby Lizard Called + 4 More Amazing Facts.’

Population

It is impossible to say how many lizards there are in the world. Some severely endangered species have been counted as part of their protection and recovery effort.

It is almost certainly true that the number of lizards overall continues to decline even as the number of identified lizard species continues to climb.

Lizards In The Zoo

South Dakota might seem an unlikely place to find the world’s largest reptile zoo. Located 6 miles south of Rapid City, Reptile Gardens is officially the place.

Zoo Miami is located in the heart of the reptile country and is a great place for the family to visit.

Another underappreciated zoo is the Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium in Omaha, which boasts both the world’s largest indoor desert and largest indoor rain forest.

Origin and Evolution of Lizards

Until the 13th century, lizards were categorized under the broad umbrella of reptiles, which included snakes, amphibians, and worms that laid eggs. In the early seventeenth century, James Macartney used the term Sauria, adapted from Sauriens which was coined by Alexandre Brongniart to describe a class of reptiles that were essentially lizards and crocodiles.

Although the denomination may be new, however, the origin of lizards is not. The earliest known lizard fossil, Tikiguania belonging to the iguanian species, was found in the Tiki Formation in India. However, there is doubt about the age of the fossil since it resembles modern-day agamid lizards.

They are related to Rhynchocephalia, an order of lizards whose only living species is the tuatara found in New Zealand.

Lizards and Human

Lizards have been a source of fascination due to their unique abilities specific to each species, such as the ability to grow lost limbs, blend in with the environment, see 360 degrees, climb vertically and stick to the ceilings upside down, walk on water and asexual reproduction.

They have been studied through the ages to determine if these qualities can be deciphered. Although they look scary, lizards are mostly harmless to humans, with the exception of Comodo Dragons who have been known to stalk and attack humans.

Despite all of the drawbacks, lizards are quite popular as pets. Especially the bearded dragons, chameleons, geckos, iguanas, monitors, tegu, and green anoles are some of the species that are popular as pets.

View all 131 animals that start with L

Sources

  1. Wikipedia / Accessed March 6, 2021
  2. Britannica / Accessed March 6, 2021
  3. Facts King / Accessed March 6, 2021
  4. World Atlas / Accessed March 6, 2021
  5. Animals Network / Accessed March 6, 2021
  6. Smithsonian's National Zoo & Conservation Biology Institute / Accessed March 6, 2021
  7. National Geographic / Accessed March 6, 2021
  8. Everything Reptiles / Accessed March 6, 2021
  9. Bio Expedition / Accessed March 6, 2021
  10. The Wildlife Trusts / Accessed March 6, 2021
  11. Reptile Gardens / Accessed March 6, 2021
  12. Critter Control / Accessed March 6, 2021
Rebecca Bales

About the Author

Rebecca Bales

Rebecca is an experienced Professional Freelancer with nearly a decade of expertise in writing SEO Content, Digital Illustrations, and Graphic Design. When not engrossed in her creative endeavors, Rebecca dedicates her time to cycling and filming her nature adventures. When not focused on her passion for creating and crafting optimized materials, she harbors a deep fascination and love for cats, jumping spiders, and pet rats.
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Lizard FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions)

If you have a lizard trapped in a home or a garden, transporting it generally isn’t difficult. When catching a lizard, first look to identify it. Remember that there are only 3 truly venomous lizards in the world – the Gila monster, Mexican beaded dragon, and Komodo dragon. Both beaded lizards and Gila monsters may be found in the Southwest of the United States. Once you’ve identified it, use supplies like thick leather gloves or a container to capture it. Finally, you can set a trap to capture it before releasing it into the wild.