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IMG_0037 Madagascar Spiny Tailed or Collared Iguana (Oplurus cuvieri)

This spiky-tailed iguana is primarily arboreal, or tree-dwelling, and spends much of its time gripping to trunks and branches, where it remains motionless as it scans the surrounding area for prey. When the collared iguana spots an insect, their primary food source, they ambush it, moving quickly to capture it on a nearby tree surface or running to the ground to attack. Collared iguanas have also been observed positioning themselves near an ant trail where they can gain an easy meal by picking up the ants one by one. Occasionally, collared iguanas also eat plant matter, such as flowers found on the ground.

 

When threatened by a bird of prey or a predatory snake, the collared iguana will retreat into a crack or crevice in a tree trunk, and use its armoured tail to form a barrier between itself and the predator.

 

Collared iguanas lay their eggs after the first heavy rain of the rainy season. The female digs a hole, up to around 12 centimetres deep, in open ground where there is no live vegetation, often on a man-made forest trail. Into this hole the female lays a clutch of two to five eggs, with three or four eggs being the most common clutch size. The female then fills the hole with sandy soil and covers the nest with sand, dead leaves and twigs, so that the laying site blends into the surroundings. The female then immediately leaves the nest site. Despite the collared iguana's efforts at disguising the nest, they are still uncovered by snakes which has been seen digging up and eating the collared iguana's eggs. If the eggs survive predation, they will remain in the nest for 61 to 71 days at a temperature of 29 to 31 °C before hatching.

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Uploaded on September 3, 2018
Taken on November 12, 2016