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| Gila Monster (Heloderma suspectum) | |
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Carnivorous, feeding mostly on newborn rodents and rabbits/hares, but also eating birds, lizards, and bird and reptile eggs. They use powerful claws to dig out the nests of these animals. Just 3 or 4 meals (each meal may represent 35% or more of their weight) per year is sufficient; they store fat in their tails that, when metabolized, provides energy and water. Diurnal, mostly from March to June. Hibernate during the winter. Gila Monsters may spend up to 98% of their lives underground (mostly in burrows); water evaporates from their skin easily compared to other lizards, thus staying underground reduces rates of evaporation. Eggs are laid late June to mid August and don't hatch until the following spring (this is the only North American lizard known to have its eggs incubating during the winter). Gila Monsters are both cryptically colored and aposematically colored. Their black snout makes them difficult to see as they look out of their burrow. The pink and black coloration is good camouflage when they are still in the dappled light under a shrub or tree. But that same pink and black coloration offers a good warning when in the open, especially when accompanied by gaping and hissing. The Gila Monster is a protected species and it is illegal to collect, kill, buy, or sell them in Arizona without authorization from the Arizona Game and Fish Dept. |
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