Acanthosaura Explained

Acanthosaura is a genus of lizards, commonly known as mountain horned dragons or pricklenape agamas, in the family Agamidae. The common name "pricklenape" refers to a row of dorsal spines which runs down the back of the neck. They are arboreal lizards found in Southeast Asia. They are medium-sized, their total length (including tail) ranging from about 7.5to, depending on species and individual. As the common name "mountain horned dragons" implies, they tend to prefer higher elevation areas with dense vegetation.

Diet

Mountain horned dragons are insectivorous, consuming only live food. Common foods in captivity include crickets, earthworms, silkworms, mealworms, moths, roaches, wax worms, and grasshoppers. They require a variety in diet and will often refuse food when offered in excessive redundancy.

Typical Acanthosaura feeding behavior is a sit-and-wait style. They will perch 1to off the ground until they spot their prey, which is often down on the ground. A display of aerobatics is not uncommon from Acanthosaura species when hunting food. They will eat and hunt fish, but most will not submerge their heads to catch a meal.

Reproduction

Females of the genus Acanthosaura lay their first clutch of eggs about four months after mating. They may lay up to four clutches total per year, separated by a month or two.

In captivity

Mountain horned dragons are popular pets, and readily available in the exotic pet trade. A. capra is considered the hardiest and most easily kept species of the genus, and is the most common species found for sale in the United States.[1] While not considered to be difficult to breed in captivity, most specimens available are wild caught.However, due to captive breeding, more and more captive bred lizards are available.

Species

Image Scientific Name Common Name Distribution
Acanthosaura armata armored pricklenape, peninsular horned tree lizard Burma, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand
Acanthosaura aurantiacrista Thailand
Acanthosaura bintangensis Bukit Larut Mountain horned agamid, Bintang horned tree lizard Perak, Peninsular Malaysia
Acanthosaura brachypoda Vietnam
Acanthosaura capra green pricklenape Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam
Acanthosaura cardamomensis [2] western Cambodia, eastern Thailand
Acanthosaura coronata crowned spiny lizard Vietnam
Acanthosaura crucigera Boulenger's pricklenape, masked horned tree lizard Burma, Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam
Acanthosaura lepidogaster brown pricklenape Burma, Cambodia, China, Thailand, Vietnam
Acanthosaura liui China
Acanthosaura longicaudata long-tailed horned tree lizard, long-tailed horned agamid China
Acanthosaura meridiona Thailand
Acanthosaura murphyi Central Vietnam[3]
Acanthosaura nataliae Vietnam
Acanthosaura phongdienensis Vietnam
Acanthosaura phuketensis Phuket horned tree agamid southwestern Thailand
Acanthosaura prasina Vietnam
Acanthosaura rubrilabris red-lipped horned tree lizard, red-lipped horned agamid China
Acanthosaura titiwangsaensis Malayan Mountain horned agamid, Titiwangsa horned tree lizard Fraser's Hill and Cameron Highlands, Pahang, and Peninsular Malaysia
Acanthosaura tongbiguanensis China

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Captive care of mountain horned dragons . 2005-04-30 . 2017-01-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170101001013/http://www.froggieb.com/MHDCaresheet.html . dead .
  2. Wood . Perry L. Jr . Grismer . L. Lee . Grismer . Jesse L. . Neang . Thy . Chav . Thou . Holden . Jeremy . A new cryptic species of Acanthosaura Gray, 1831 (Squamata: Agamidae) from Thailand and Cambodia . Zootaxa . 2488 . 22–38 . 2010 . 10.11646/zootaxa.2488.1.2 . (Acanthosaura cardamomensis, new species).
  3. Nguyen, Luan Thanh. Do, Dang Trong. Hoang, Ha Van. Nguyen, Thang Tai. McCormack, Timothy E. M.. Nguyen, Truong Quang. Orlov, Nikolai L..

    fr:Nikolaï Orlov

    . Nguyen, Vu Dang Hoang. Nguyen, Sang Ngoc. 2018. A New Species of the Genus Acanthosaura Gray, 1831 (Reptilia: Agamidae) from Central Vietnam. Russian Journal of Herpetology. 25. 4. 259–274. 10.30906/1026-2296-2018-25-4-259-274. 11 February 2019. (Acanthosaura murphyi, new species).