NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Interestin­g facts about Nile monitor

- Animalia.bio

NILE monitors are large African lizards. They are the second-largest reptile in the Nile River. Nile monitors have muscular bodies, strong legs, and powerful jaws. Their teeth are sharp and pointed in juvenile animals and become blunt and peg-like in adults.

They also possess sharp claws used for climbing, digging, defence or tearing at their prey. Like all monitors, they have forked tongues, with highly-developed olfactory properties. They have quite striking, but variable, skin patterns, as they are greyish-brown above with greenish-yellow barring on the tail and large, greenish-yellow rosette-like spots on their backs with a blackish tiny spot in the middle. Their throats and undersides are an ochre-yellow to a creamy-yellow, often with faint barring.

Nile monitors are native to sub-Saharan Africa and along the Nile. These lizards are not found in any of the desert regions of Africa as they thrive around rivers and lakes. They prefer to live in woodlands, savannas, grasslands, scrub, mangroves and swamps.

Nile monitors are generally solitary and only sometimes may interact with other monitors outside of the breeding season. They are active during the day and spend their time foraging or basking on the shoreline vegetation, trees, logs or rocks. They are often seen in or close to water. At night they sleep on tree branches, in burrows which they dig themselves or submerged in water. Nile monitors are highly aquatic and can remain underwater for 12-15 minutes.

They are also excellent climbers and quick runners on land. In the colder parts of their range, Nile monitors hibernate, usually in burrows or in rock cracks. When they sense any danger they tend to run away or may even jump into the water from the tree branch. When threatened, juvenile monitors will tail whip as a defensive measure, and as adults, they are capable of inflicting moderate to serious wounds from biting and scratching.

Nile monitors are carnivores (scavengers). They feed on fish, snails, frogs, crocodile eggs and young snakes, birds, mammals, insects and carrion.

Nile monitors are polygynand­rous (promiscuou­s) meaning that both males and females mate with multiple partners. Their breeding season occurs from June until October. During this time males compete with each other for mating opportunit­ies. Females lay up to 60 eggs, usually in termite burrows, mounds or may dig a hole in the ground. The incubation period may last up to sixnine months depending on the environmen­tal conditions. After hatching, baby monitors must dig their way out of the nest and may need to wait for the rain to soften the nest, or the mother may return to her nest to help. After hatchlings emerge, they are completely independen­t and don’t require parental care. They will become reproducti­vely mature at three to four years of age.

Pet trade and hunting are probably the main threats that face Nile monitors. These lizards are heavily hunted for food and leather. In some areas, local people kill Nile monitors to extract fat from specific organs for traditiona­l medicine.

Nile monitors are very important predators and scavengers in their ecosystem, controllin­g population­s of various prey species they prey on. They also feed on crocodile eggs and thus may control crocodile numbers.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe