THE REPTILES
CALIFORNIA WHIP-TAILED LIZARD. Cnemidophorus tigris mundus
Camp
Field characters.Body
and especially tail long and slender; legs stout, the hinder pair much
the larger; toes long; a well marked fold of skin across throat; back
and sides of body covered with minute rounded bead-like scales; under
surface of body with flat rhomboid scales arranged in eight lengthwise
rows; tail with ridged or keeled scales. (See pl. 57c.)
Coloration varying with age, striped in young, becoming spotted in
adults. Ground color of body blackish, with lengthwise stripes (young)
or with scattered small spots of buff, yellow or white (adults); sides
of head and legs blotched with dusky; under surface white, with scale
edgings of black; tail dark brown above, yellowish beneath. Head and
body measuring to 4 inches; tail to 10 inches.
Occurrence.Resident in
small to moderate numbers on west side of Yosemite region, chiefly in
Upper Sonoran Zone. Recorded from Pleasant Valley eastward to Smith
Creek, 6 miles east of Coulterville, and to foot of Big Oak Flat road in
western part of Yosemite Valley. To be seen on surface of ground in open
gravelly or sandy places.
The swiftest of all the lizards in the Yosemite
region is the California Whip-tailed Lizard which occurs at certain
locations in the western part of the section. This reptile is ordinarily
thought of as an inhabitant of desert regions, and in truth it is; but
it also occurs, or did occur formerly, on much of the floor of the San
Joaquin Valley, and it penetrates into the foothills wherever there are
conditions suitable for its existence. Its distribution in the Yosemite
section is not continuous. We found it at Pleasant Valley, about
Coulterville, at Smith Creek, in the neighborhood of Kinsley, and at two
locations in the lower end of Yosemite Valley, namely, at the foot of
the Coulterville grade and at the foot of the Big Oak Flat grade.
The whip-tailed lizard is specialized in somewhat the
same manner as the kangaroo rat, and to achieve the same result. Its
whole organization is modified for the attainment of speed in running on
the surface of the ground. The body is slender and the tail is fully
twice the length of head and body together, and finely and evenly
tapered to the end. (See pl. 57c.) The legs are stout, especially
the hinder pair, and the toes are long, particularly those of the hind
feet. When frightened, one of these animals appears to get over the
ground, for a short distance at least, faster than a man can run. Its
usual procedure is to start up suddenly, make a rapid dash of 50 to 100
feet or so, then stop abruptly, often dodging around behind a bush at
the instant of stopping. The long tail serves as a counter poise and
perhaps also as a rudder, in movement. The sudden start, extremely swift
run and quick stop are, to the human eye, confusing, and may have the
same effect on any animal, such as the Road-runner, which might attempt
to prey on the lizards. When undisturbed the Whip-tail forages about
with jerky movements of the body. The tail is then usually dragged on
the ground and leaves a characteristic trail between the marks of the
feet. When pursued, one of these lizards will often take shelter in some
hole in the ground, usually at the base of a bush. One was seen to enter
a ground squirrel burrow. In places where there are no open rodent
burrows, and where the soil is sufficiently loose, Whip-tails dig their
own burrows.
At Smith Creek a small whip-tailed lizard was seen in
a pool of water, where it had evidently jumped when frightened by the
approach of the observer. The animal was obviously unadapted to this
element, for after a few strokes it sank to the bottom and was
drowned.
The Whip-tail subsists upon insects. Some of these,
such as grasshoppers, are obtained by stalking, just as a carnivorous
mammal such as a coyote stalks a ground squirrel. Other prey, such as
cutworms (moth larvae) and beetle larvae, are picked up by the Whip-tail
from the surface of the ground about the bases of plants. This lizard
does not climb at all, even over rocks.
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