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The oriental garden lizard (Calotes versicolor), also called the eastern garden lizard, Indian garden lizard, common garden lizard, bloodsucker or changeable lizard, is an agamid lizard found widely distributed in Indo-Malaya. It has also been introduced in many other parts of the world.
Calotes nigrilabris (W. Peters, 1860) – black-cheek lizard; Calotes nigriplicatus Hallermann, 2000; Calotes paulus (M.A. Smith, 1935) – small forest lizard; Calotes pethiyagodai (Amarasinghe, Karunarathna & Hallermann, 2014) Calotes sinyik PATEL et al. 2024 [7] Calotes versicolor (Daudin, 1802) – Oriental garden lizard, changeable lizard ...
Oriental garden lizard (Calotes versicolor) Afghanistan, Pakistan, India (Andamans), Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Malay peninsula, Indo-China, China, Sumatra Rough-horned lizard ( Ceratophora aspera ) Sri Lanka
A blue-crested lizard (Calotes mystaceus). Armored pricklenape (Acanthosaura armata) Brown pricklenape (Acanthosaura lepidogaster) Emma Gray's forest lizard (Calotes emma) Indo-Chinese forest lizard (Calotes jerdoni) Medog bloodsucker (Calotes medogensis) Blue-crested lizard (Calotes mystaceus) Oriental garden lizard (Calotes versicolor ...
A male Oriental garden lizard Hardwick's spiny-tailed lizard Ceylon chameleon Persian spider gecko Leopard gecko Mediterranean house gecko Snake-eyed lizard Ocellated skink Bronze mabuya Yellow monitor Thar desert monitor. There are 86 species of Lacertilia (lizards and relatives) in Pakistan. Family Agamidae (agamas) - 22 species
3.1.1.1.3 Calotes nemoricola (Nilgiri forest lizard / നീലഗിരി ഓന്ത്) 3.1.1.1.4 Calotes versicolor (oriental garden lizard / ഓറിയന്റൽ ഗാർഡൻ ലിസാർഡ്)
C. jerdoni. Physical structure: A compressed-bodied lizard. This species resembles Calotes maria in pholidotic (scale) and other characters except that it has 45-57 scales round the body; gular scales much larger than the ventral scales; there is an oblique curved fold covered with small granular scales in front of the shoulders; nuchal crest less prominent; the hind-limb reaches to the eye or ...
The species is similar in biology and physiology to the oriental garden lizard. In a sub-adult male, the tail can grow to a length of 15 mm and the snout-vent length can reach 60 mm. [6] The head of the species has a length that is 50% longer than the width. On the skull are two separate spines on each side of the back of the head.