Thorny Devil

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(Redirected from Moloch lizard)
Thorny lizard
Conservation status: Secure

Image:Thorny Devil.jpg

Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Reptilia
Order:Squamata
Suborder:Sauria
Family:Agamidae
Genus:Moloch
Species: horridus
Binomial name
Moloch horridus
John Edward Gray, 1841

The thorny devil (Moloch horridus) is also known as the thorny lizard, or the moloch. It is the sole species of genus Moloch. It grows up to 16 cm in length, is coloured in camouflaging shades of desert browns and tans (colours changing from pale when warm, to darker colours when cold), and is entirely covered with conical spines (mostly uncalcified). It also features a spiny "false-head" on the back of the neck, which may make it more difficult for predators to swallow.

It inhabits arid scrub and desert over most of central Australia. In particular, it inhabits spinifex-sandplain and sandridge desert within the interior and mallee belt. Its distribution largely coincides more with the distribution of sandy and sandy loam soils than with a particular climate (Pianka and Pianka 1970).

The primary food of the devil are ants, often Iridomyrmex. They collect moisture in the dry desert via night-time condensation of dew which forms on the skin and is channelled to the mouth in hygroscopic grooves between its spines (Bentley and Blumer 1962), and also during rain events.

A clutch of three to ten eggs is laid in September-December (spring-summer) in a nesting burrow about 30 cm underground, and hatches after an incubation of three to four months (Pianka 1997).

Predators include bustards and goannas.

The thorny devil is only distantly related to the morphologically similar North American horned lizards (Phrynosoma).

References

  • Bentley, P. J. and F. C. Blumer. 1962. Uptake of water by the lizard, Moloch horridus. Nature 194: 699-700.
  • Pianka, E. R. 1997. Australia's thorny devil. Reptiles 5 (11): 14-23.
  • Pianka, E. R. and H. D. Pianka. 1970. The ecology of Moloch horridus (Lacertilia: Agamidae) in Western Australia. Copeia 1970: 90-103.


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