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Couzer

Lizard identification

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While checking (gopher) traps today on the farm this guy ran away from me and got his head stuck in a chicken wire. He was a little bugger getting him free, but ran off really fast. Anyone know what kind of lizard he is?

 

In QC

 

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post-2686-0-98737600-1396495166_thumb.jpg

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Clark's and desert spiny lizards are similar in appearance. You usually tell them apart by habitat and behavior. Based on habitat in background, I'd say its a desert spiny lizard (Sceloperous magister).

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Dane you guys are fast, yeah I had no idea what kind he is, just big and fast. This was in Queen Creek next to the houses, planting feed corn right now.

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all he is thinking in those pictures is "if only I were bigger, I would be kicking your a** right now for thinking that you could catch me, I'm the biggest, baddest, sexiest, and........oh ......wait.....you did catch me..............if only I were bigger, I would be kicking your a** right now for catching me!!!"

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I think they turn that color when they mate?

 

Yep, the males do that during breeding season and that's definitely a male!

 

 

Dane you guys are fast, yeah I had no idea what kind he is, just big and fast. This was in Queen Creek next to the houses, planting feed corn right now.

 

Based on what you just described, I'd definitely say its a desert spiny. I miss those guys!

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Guys don't forget about the Chuckwalla they too look simular.

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Nice spiny lizard! Like most lizards they do push-ups to show off their blue belly....fun to watch.

 

I found a small regal horned lizard in my backyard today. We leave our ant hills alive so that the horned lizards can eat them. They just wait on an ant trail and pick them off. Lizards are pretty entertaining for sure!

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It seems like every time I hike Camelback, someone is warning someone else about the Gila monster they just saw. It always turns out to be a Chuckwalla.

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Salt, pepper anf some oil and call him dinner.

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It seems like every time I hike Camelback, someone is warning someone else about the Gila monster they just saw. It always turns out to be a Chuckwalla.

+1

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/>Guys don't forget about the Chuckwalla they too look simular.

Sorry and respectfully, but chuckwallas aren't even close in appearance. And the habitat isn't right.

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