Namaqua Chameleon

Namaqua Chameleon
Namaqua Chameleon
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Sauria
Family: Chamaeleonidae
Genus: Chamaeleo
Species: C. namaquensis
Binomial name
Chamaeleo namaquensis
Smith, 1831

The Namaqua Chameleon (Chamaeleo namaquensis) is a ground living lizard found in the Namib Desert of Namibia and southern Angola.

Contents

Survival Techniques

The Namaqua Chameleon has evolved several adaptations to cope with desert conditions; they excrete salt from nasal glands to conserve water, and dig holes to aid in thermoregulation. They also use their ability to change colour to aid in controlling temperature, becoming black in the cooler morning to absorb heat more efficiently, then a lighter grey color to reflect light during the heat of the day - or showing both colours at the same time, neatly separated left from right by the spine.

Interspecific Relationships

Prey

Unlike the arboreal chameleons of the genus Chamaeleo, its tail is not prehensile, but otherwise it still hunts in the same way, slowly stalking its prey and catching it with its long tongue. Namaqua Chameleons feed on insects (particularly beetles), crickets, lizards, including young chameleons of their own species, small snakes, and even scorpions, hunting them in both sandy dunes and rocky areas.

Namaqua Chameleon in the Namib Desert

Predators

In turn, Namaqua Chameleons are preyed upon by jackals, hawks and eagles.

Reproduction

The larger female (160 mm) lays around 20 eggs which take about 100 days to hatch.

Conservation

Namaqua Chameleons are listed as CITES II.