CAPTIVE
CARE SHEET SPECIES: BLUE TONGUE SKINKS
Tiliqa gigas, scincoidies, intermedia
A GOOD
CHOICE OF LIZARD FOR THE BEGINNER.
Grows to a maximum length of 50 cm
DISTRIBUTION:
Australia and Indonesia
HOUSING: The
size of the housing depends on the size of the
animal. A hatchling would want about 24 x 12 inches,
this allows it to find its food easily. Adults
require 36 x18 inches. This can support up to three
animals (1 male, 2 females). Hides could be decorative
piles of rocks, bark tubes or cardboard boxes.
The lizards should be kept at 25- 35C with a drop
of up to 10C at night. Localised heating using
a heat mat which covers 1/2 of the floor area should
be adequate. The substrates which can be utilised
are sand, bark chippings or sawdust. Humidity may
be maintained by spraying the vivarium twice a
week UV light is required occasionally even if
Calcium and D3 supplements are given.
DIET: Water
should always be available in low sturdy dishes
to avoid spillage's. diet can consist of insects,
snails, pinkie mice, lean meat, tinned cat food,
fish, eggs, cockles fruit and vegetables. The animals
will require feeding 3 or 4 times a week. The food
sources should be sprinkled with vitamin supplements
and calcium in the form of ground cuttlefish bone.
BREEDING: If
raised properly, captive bred tongued skinks will
breed at about 2 old. The animals must be healthy,
they have a good fat store in their tail. Females
may be kept together in breeding groups, but only
one male should be present. Males, generally have
wider heads and their bodies when viewed from above
has straight sides Females have a less bulky head
and more rounded sides This is not often obvious
and the only sure way is to wait and see give birth.
The breeding season is January early spring to
induce breeding they should be cooled to 13-18C
for 2 months. Mating will take place within a few
weeks of warming. The males often become aggressive
during mating and fights may break out. It is usually
better to keep the animals separate and bring them
together to mate. This will usually occur immediately
and the pair can be separated again. It is better
to reintroduce the animals on a regular basis as
single matings are seldom successful. During mating
the male bites the female around the neck, this
will result in bite marks and torn skin. The male
will twist his tail under the females to enable
mating to occur.
Blue tongue skinks
are live bearing, the females usually produce about
5-12 babies, the larger the adult the larger the
litter size.
The gestation
period is generally around 100 days, this is dependent
on temperature and some species tend to have a
longer period than others, typically the larger
types.
The babies are
about 15cm at birth and will grow rapidly with
proper feeding and vitamin supplements. Care should
be taken when raising juveniles together as larger
babies will eat all the food and smaller individuals
will be victimised.
SUITABILITY: Generally
these lizards are better pets than the larger Iguanids,
Agamids and monitors. They have a much calmer disposition,
shorter claws and do not grow as large. The omnivorous
diet may also be a reason to keep a Blue Tongue
in preference to a Green Iguana or Bosc Monitor.
AUTHORS K & J.
HOLLINGSWORTH
(11/04/94)
REFERENCES: E.Zimmermann(1986)
Breeding Terrarium Animals
C.Mattison(1991)
Keeping and Breeding Lizards.
PRAS care sheet
number 4
PRAS offers
you this care sheet for your own information,
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