Lizard Lovers!!! What do you know about Sand Lizards?  | | Calling all Mylotters! I need some help finding information about Sand Lizards. They are very rare and only found in parts of Europe from what I am understanding. They are extinct in parts of Wales, and endangered in Great Britain.
I don't see any information about keeping them as pets.
I need their weight (can't find that),
I need information about caring for them... ( Since they are illegal to sell in Great Britain can they even be purchased anywhere? I don't see any info here on this.)
I also need their living conditions and habitat
Any health problems associated with the Sand lizard?
Feeding requirements?
Lighting requirements?
Any help or links about this subject would be much appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
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| | | | | | 1. peanutjar (2245) | 2 years ago | Hi oreocokie:) Oh boy,nothing!haha.Ive seen them on national geographic and if i remember right they live in the dessert and bury them selves in the sand,right?They are tiny too?If so then i think those little ones are cute and prefer them over the big ones anytime,hehe.Sorry i am no help to you.:(If it was iguannas,then my brother could tell you.He had one before and it died of old age:(I hated it,it would slap you with its long tales,OW!! Peanutjar:)
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OreoCookie3 (18300) | 2 years ago | Yep, that is them...but I found out they are endangered and cannot be owned as pets. Pretty much the same with the Thorny Devil too...but a Thorny Devil can be owned by someone with a license to handle endangered species... very few are in captivity... I found out.
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| | 2. raydene (5312) | 2 years ago | Hi Doll, I don't know anything about this lizard..I used to live in the desert in S.California and we had lizards all around us but not that one...I always used a heat rock for my igaunas,spineys,chemleons,snakes etc.. Check this for info http://animals.jrank.org/pages/3724/Wall-Lizards-Rock-Lizards-Relatives-Lacertidae-SAND-LIZARD-Lacerta-agilis-SPECIES-ACCOUNT.html xoxoxoxoxoxo
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OreoCookie3 (18300) | 2 years ago | The Sand Lizard is not native to the US... it is found in parts of Russia, the British Isles and other places in Europe, but are extinct in Wales. I had to write an article about this little critter, and found out that they are protected by law and it is against the law to keep them in captivity and to sell them. I don't know why anyone in the pet trade would want an article about them, since they have no pet value... but I just write about what they want and do my best.
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| | 3. bhubaneshwar (5474) | 2 years ago | Hi friend, see if this helps, SAND LIZARD (Lacerta agilis): SPECIES ACCOUNT Physical characteristics: One of the larger members of this family, the biggest sand lizards can grow to almost 12 inches (30 centimeters) long from the tip of the head to the end of their long tail. Most, however, reach only about 8 inches (20 centimeters) long. In the eastern part of its range, the sand lizards may be greenish, but western lizards are usually brown or gray with dark spots and/or stripes. Males of the western sand lizards also show some green along their sides and on their bellies and become brighter green during the mating season.
Geographic range: The sand lizard lives in spotty areas throughout Europe and Asia, from the British Isles to China, and as far south as Greece.
Habitat: The sand lizard is common in places with sandy soils, such as sand dunes and brushy areas, but it can also make its home in clay-type soils along forest edges and in fields and gardens.
Diet: It lives mostly on insects, which it hunts by looking for them while skittering through cover in its habitat. It will also sometimes This shy lizard often darts into holes or tunnels it finds among plant roots when it feels the least bit threatened. (Illustration by Gillian Harris. Reproduced by permission.) eat worms and other invertebrates (in-VER-teh-brehts), which are animals without backbones, as well as fruit and flowers, and once in a while even another sand lizard.
Behavior and reproduction: The sand lizard is active during the day and will run through brush above ground or bask in warm spots, but it usually stays out of sight. This shy lizard often darts into holes or tunnels it finds among plant roots when it feels the least bit threatened. Numerous sand lizards may live together in the same area. In colder climates, they will hibernate from fall to early spring.
During the breeding season in the spring, the males turn into fighters and will battle one another over the chance to mate with a female. The fights usually involve the males grasping each other's necks, and then wrestling until one gives up and leaves. After mating with a male, a female finds a sunny spot where she digs a hole and lays three to fourteen eggs. She provides no care for the eggs or her young. In forty to sixty days, the eggs hatch.
Sand lizards and people: Humans and this lizard rarely see one another.
Conservation status: Although neither the IUCN nor the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service list this species as threatened, some populations are at great risk because of the destruction of their habitat. In western Europe, the lizards typically live in heathlands, which are open areas covered with low plants and shrubs. When the heathlands are destroyed to make way for homes or other human development, the lizards disappear.?
FOR MORE INFORMATION Books: Behler, John, and F. Wayne King. "Typical Old World Lizard Family (Lacertidae)," National Audubon Society Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1979.
Böhme, W., ed. Handbuch der Reptilien und Amphibien Europas. 2 vols. Wiesbaden, Germany: AULA Verlag, 1984–1986.
Branch, B. Field Guide to the Snakes and Other Reptiles of Southern Africa. Capetown, South Africa: Struik Publishers, 1998.
Burnie, David, and Don Wilson, eds. The Definitive Visual Guide to the World's Wildlife New York: DK Publishing, 2001.
Halliday, Tim, and Kraig Adler. The Encyclopedia of Reptiles and Amphibians. New York: Facts on File, 1986.
Mattison, Chris. Lizards of the World. New York: Facts on File, 1989.
Valakos, E.D., W. Böhme, V. Perez-Mellado, and P. Maragou, eds. Lacertids of the Mediterranean Region: A Biological Approach. Athens, Greece: Hellenic Zoological Society, 1993.
Web sites: "Common lizard, viviparous lizard." BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/natu... (accessed on November 19, 2004).
"Lacerta agilis—Sand Lizard." First Nature. http://www.first-nature.c... (accessed on November 19, 2004).
"Lacerta vivipara—Common Lizard." First Nature. http://www.first-nature.c... (accessed on November 19, 2004).
"Sand Lizard." BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/natu... (accessed on November 19, 2004).
"Sand Lizard (Lacerta agilis)." ARKive. http://www.arkive.org/spe... (accessed on November 19, 2004).
DR.B.SARAF Ph.D.
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OreoCookie3 (18300) | 2 years ago | Thank you friend, I already have all that information. I had to give up on that one because they are so endangered that they can not be had as pets. In Wales they are extinct, I believe... I already had everything you stated here, and I appreciate your effort.
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