Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Jurassic Park

These pictures are pretty poor quality, but I had to post about these weird critters we saw on one of the islands we visited while we were in Malaysia. The beaches were all fairly wooded after a short area of sunshiny sand. On this island, back where the woods started in earnest, these monitor lizards were lurking. We didn't see them at first, then suddenly there was motion in the brush. After we saw the first one, suddenly we realized that there were a number of them hanging around. The thing that made them so cool and scary was that they were quite large, several feet long. They seemed kind of snake-like, but then they would stand up on their legs and could run very quickly. Needless to say, we kept Gwen quite near us that day when she napped on the beach. Fortunately, the monitors kept in the shadows and never ventured out on the sand.
monitor, any of various dragonlike, mostly tropical lizards. A monitor lizard has a heavy body, long head and neck, long tail that comes to a whiplike end, and strong legs with sharp claws. Its slender, forked tongue is protrusible. Monitors range in size from the 8-in. (20-cm) short-tailed species of W Australia to the 10-ft, 300-lb (3-m, 136-kg) Komodo dragon, the giant among living lizards, that lives only on the small Indonesian island of Komodo. Some monitor species spend their lives in trees, and others inhabit lakes and rivers; they can be found on the oceanic islands and continents of the Eastern Hemisphere in all types of warm habitats, from tropical forest to desert. They feed on various kinds of animal matter, including eggs, rats, frogs, and decaying meat. The larger species will attack small deer and pigs. They often tear the prey with claws and teeth, but generally swallow it whole or in large chunks. Monitors lay from 7 to 35 leathery eggs, usually in holes in the ground or in trees. They are classified in the phylum Chordata, subphylum Vertebrata, class Reptilia, order Squamata, family Varanidae, genus Varanus.

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