Malayan Water Monitor Lizard (Varanus salvator), Common Water Monitor, Two-banded Monitor, No-Mark Lizard

uploaded by Mistifarang March 19, 2009 at 08:11 pm
3510 views | 3 comments | 20 recommendations

this morning seen at the same plot where I have seen the Cobras opposite of my house. Length 1-1.5 mtrs. Disappeared under the foundations of an abandoned house.
Location: suburbs Bangkok near rice-fields and klongs (small rivers).

In Thailand they are under the category "Reserved Wild Animals" which means that it is illegal to hunt or possess them.

The following text I found in
www.naturia.per.sg/buloh/verts/monitor_lizard.htm"Malayan Water Monitor Lizard (Varanus salvator)
Asian/Water/Common Water Monitor, Two-banded Monitor, Rice/Ring/Plain/No-Mark Lizard

Among the largest lizards in the world, Malayan Water Monitors can survive in habitats that wouldn't be able to support other large carnivores.

They are so successful because they are cold blooded and hence make more efficient use of food. In addition, they eat anything that they can swallow. From tiny insects, to crabs, molluscs, snakes, eggs (of birds and crocodiles), fish including eels up to 1m long. They also eat birds, rodents, small mouse deer, even other monitor lizards. They are particularly fond of carrion. They even eat rubbish, human faeces, and even dead bodies. They eat prey almost as big as themselves: one 1.2m long ate a snake 1.3m long.

The Water Monitor's main hunting technique is to run after prey that it has spotted, rather than stalking and ambushing. Like snakes, they have a forked tongue that they stick in and out regularly to "smell" their prey and other tasty titbits.

Water Monitor Lizards are highly mobile. They swim well (keeping their limbs to the side of the body, and propelling themselves through sinuous undulations of the flattened tail). They have even been seen swimming far out at sea. They can remain underwater for up to half an hour. They run fast for their size as they have powerful leg muscles. In fact, they are faster than most of us can run.

They also climb well, to search for food as well as to escape predators, using their strong curved claws. The young usually stay in trees for safety. If cornered up a tree, they will jump into the safety of a stream or river. They usually hide in a burrow built in a river bank. The entrance starts on a downward slope but then increases forming a shallow pool of water. The average length of the burrow is about 9.5 m, the average depth is about 2m. In the burrow, the average temperature is around 26 degrees Celsius.

Water Monitors are rarely found far from water. Both fresh and saltwater. They are particularly common in mangroves, banks of large rivers. Also found in grasslands, forests, swamps, beaches and even cultivated land. From sealevel up to 1,100m high. They are among the first large vertebrates to colonise new islands.

Breeding: Water Monitor Lizards breed rapidly. Larger females produce a larger clutch than smaller ones, up to 40 eggs a year in 2 or more clutches. Mating involves a lot of biting and scratching. Females lay their eggs 4 to 6 weeks after breeding. 3 to 25 white, soft-shelled eggs are laid, with an average of 15 per clutch. Eggs are laid in termite mounds (both active or abandoned mounds), along rotting logs or hollow stumps or in burrows. Eggs take 2.5-10 months or more to incubate.

Juveniles are more brightly coloured with bright yellow markings on the body and yellow bands on the tail contrasting against a darker body. But they are more secretive and less commonly seen. Males grow faster than females, become longer and heavier. In ideal conditions, they reach maturity in 2 years at 1-1.3m for males and 0.5-1.2m for females. Water Monitors can live for up to 15 years.

Role in the habitat: As scavengers, Water Monitors keep the habitat neat and tidy, and also control populations of their prey. They in turn provide food for larger carnivores such as crocodiles and birds of prey. Small young Water Monitors are particularly vulnerable even to large birds such as herons.

When attacked, Water Monitors try to intimidate predators by lashing out with their tails, inflating their throats, hissing loudly, turning sideways and compressing their bodies. When cornered, they will bite and claw. Unlike other lizards, they do not drop their tails in self defence.

Water Monitors are a source of protein and income to poor rural people. Sustainable harvesting is possible because even in places where they are hunted, they are still rather common.

Status and threats: Water Monitors are not considered endangered although they are commonly hunted for their meat and skin and have been exterminated over most of mainland India. Elsewhere, populations have declined sharply. Habitat destruction also affects them. Up to 1.5 million skins are legally exported each year mainly from Indonesia to Europe, Japan and the US to be made into fashion goods. One explanation why they remain plentiful despite this is becuase the skins of medium-sized Monitors are preferred. Those of larger Monitors are too thick and tough, thus possibly sparing large females who lay more eggs. Their meat is considered delicious and a bewildering array of potions are made from various parts of their bodies, ranging from cures for diabetes to aphrodisiacs and deadly poisons used in assassinations. The gall bladder is brewed for a medicinal tea to treat heart and liver problems. Skin ointments are made from the rendered fat. In Sri Lanka, the locals protect them because they eat the crabs that would otherwise undermine the banks of the rice fields."

Photo Properties
NP! ID: 2251169
Title: Malayan Water Monitor Lizard (Varanus salvator), Common Water Monitor, Two-banded Monitor, No-Mark Lizard
File Size: 450 × 500 – 182.08 KB

Created: Thu, 03/19/2009 - 8:11pm
Modified: Thu, 03/19/2009 - 8:11pm

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