Hardwicke's bloodsucker (Calotes minor) is an agamid lizard and found in South Asia.
Physical structure: This is a small stocky and pot-belly lizard with a short tail. Its head large and elongated, flat above, sloping towards snout.[1] Its dorsal scales larger, strongly imbricate and keeled, pointing backward and upward, ventral scales smaller than dorsal; upper head scales larger, unequal, strongly keeled or tubercular.[2] Females are larger than the males.
Color pattern: Dorsal color is olive-brown with three rows of dark-brown light edged spots on the back and base of the tail; spots of middle row are most prominent and rhomboidal; a white streak on each side of the neck is bifurcating behind and an oblique one from the eye to the angle of mouth; limbs are with dark-brown cross bars; throat is profusely spotted with dark-brown and orange; belly is yellowish-white with numerous orange dots.[2] Color inside the mouth is ink-blue.[3] Females are more brilliantly colored during breeding season.
Length: Maximum:18 cm,[1] Common:10 cm. (Snout to vent 6 cm.)[1]
Found in Bangladesh (southeast part of the country), India (Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Odissa) and Pakistan (Sindh).
Bengali: আগামা গিরিগিটি, পাতি রক্তচোষা, পাতিয়াল গিরিগিটি (Patial girigiti), হার্ডউইকের গিরিগিটি।
English: Hardwicke's bloodsucker, Hardwicke's short-tail agama, dwarf rock agama, and lesser agama.
Hindi & other Indian languages: ?
Urdu & Sindhi: ?
This lizard is terrestrial and sometimes arboreal; inhabits frequently fragmented dry forest, arid environments, barren desert and desolate areas across the Indo-Gangetic plains.
This lizard is diurnal and crepuscular. It shelters in burrows close to the roots of thorny bushes. Generally it is found sitting on stones, but it can climb up shrubby vegetation. It is sluggish in movements, often not attempting to escape when approached.[2] It is a docile species.[4]
This lizard is mainly insectivorous; feeding on grasshoppers and their nymphs, earwigs, beetles, bugs, arthropods and spiders.[2] Sometimes it also eats flowers.
This lizard is oviparous; the breeding season extends from April to June; it lays four to six hard shelled white eggs in burrows under the roots of vegetation.
There are no known practical uses of this species, but it plays a role in the eco-system by eating various types of insects and otherwise.
This lizard is non-venomous and completely harmless to humans.[5]
The species-name minor, a Latin word, meaning 'less' or 'smaller', also referring to the smaller size of this agamid.[6]
This lizard has a reputation for being particularly harmful, which is totally baseless and has contributed much to its depletion.