Biology:Cape grass lizard

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Short description: Species of lizard

Cape grass lizard
Chamaesaura anguina anguina 15448395.jpg
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Cordylidae
Genus: Chamaesaura
Species:
C. anguina
Binomial name
Chamaesaura anguina
Chamaesaura anguina03.jpg

The Cape grass lizard (Chamaesaura anguina), also known as the Cape snake lizard or the highland grass lizard,[3] is a species of lizard in the genus Chamaesaura. It widely found in southern Africa, inhabiting grasslands.[2] In one of the countries it lives in, Eswatini, it is listed as a Near Threatened species.[4]

The Cape grass lizard is ovoviviparous.[2] A discovery has shown females are not breeding at the same time in a year.[5]

This lizard has three subspecies. They are the C. a. anguina, the C. a. oligopholis, and the C. a. tenuior.[2]

Distribution

The Cape grass lizard is widely distributed in the grasslands of southern Africa. It has been reported in South Africa , Eswatini, Angola, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, the Republic of the Congo, and Uganda.[2] The grasslands that the Cape grass lizard inhabits often have wildfire.[5]

Breeding

The Cape grass lizard is ovoviviparous,[2] meaning eggs will stay inside the mother until they are ready to hatch. The average clutch size is three to seventeen eggs.[5] A discovery has revealed that females are breeding throughout the year. This adaptation is probably to prevent the total loss of reproductive gain in a year due to fire.[5]

Subspecies

The Cape grass lizard has three known subspecies.[2]

  • C. a. anguina - This subspecies was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1758.[2]
  • C. a. tenuior - In 1895, Albert C. L. G. Günther described this subspecies.[2]
  • C. a. oligopholis - Laurent described this subspecies in 1964.[2]

Conservation

The Southern African Red Data and the IUCN Red List do not mention the Cape grass lizard. However, the Swaziland Red Data has the lizard listed as Near Threatened. The Transvaal grass lizard is also listed as a Near Threatened species.[4]

See also

References

Wikidata ☰ Q2061329 entry