
Crocodile Monitor
SPECIES
Der Papuawaran (Varanus salvadorii), gelegentlich auch als Baumkrokodil bezeichnet, ist eine Art der Schuppenkriechtiere (Squamata) aus der Gattung der Warane (Varanus). Mit einer Gesamtlänge von bis zu rund 2,5 m ist dieser Endemit von Neuguinea eine der größten bekannten rezenten Echsen. Da ausführliche Freilandbeobachtungen fehlen, ist die Art nur wenig erforscht.
via GBIF · IUCN
The crocodile monitor (Varanus salvadorii), also known as the Papuan monitor or Salvadori's monitor, is a species of monitor lizard endemic to New Guinea. It is the largest monitor lizard in New Guinea and is one of the longest lizards, verified at up to 255 cm (100 in). Its tail is exceptionally long, with some specimens having been claimed to exceed the length of the Komodo dragon, however less massive.
The crocodile monitor is an arboreal lizard with a dark green body marked with bands of yellowish spots. It has a characteristic blunt snout and a very long prehensile tail. It lives among the mangrove swamps and coastal rainforests of the southeastern part of New Guinea, feeding opportunistically on everything from birds and small mammals to eggs, other reptiles, amphibians and carrion. Its large, backwards-curving teeth are better adapted than those of most monitors for seizing fast-moving prey. Like all monitors, it has anatomical features that enable it to breathe more easily when running than other lizards, and is sometimes considered one of the most agile monitor species.
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).