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Asian water monitor

(Redirected from Java lizard)

The Asian water monitor (Varanus salvator) is a large varanid lizard native to South and Southeast Asia. It is widely considered to be the second-largest lizard species, after the Komodo dragon. It is distributed from eastern and northeastern India and Bangladesh, the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Sri Lanka, through southern China and Hainan Island in the east to mainland Southeast Asia and the islands of Sumatra, Borneo, Java, Lombok, the Riau Archipelago, Sulawesi. It is one of the most widespread monitor lizards.

Asian water monitor
V. s. salvator
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Varanidae
Genus: Varanus
Subgenus: Soterosaurus
Species:
V. salvator
Binomial name
Varanus salvator
(Laurenti, 1768)

The Asian water monitor has a natural affinity towards water, inhabiting the surroundings of lakes, rivers, ponds, swamps and various riparian habitats, including sewers, city parks, and urban waterways. It is an excellent swimmer and hunts fish, frogs, invertebrates, water birds, and other types of aquatic and amphibious prey. Due to its apparently large, stable population, it is currently listed as Least Concern on to the IUCN Red List.

Etymology

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The generic name Varanus is derived from the Arabic waral (ورل), which translates as "monitor". The specific name is the Latin word for "saviour", denoting a possible religious connotation.[2] The water monitor is occasionally confused with the crocodile monitor (V. salvadorii) because of their similar scientific names.[3]

Some common names for the species are Malayan water monitor, common water monitor, two-banded monitor, rice lizard, ring lizard, plain lizard, no-mark lizard and water monitor etc.

Taxonomy

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Stellio salvator was the scientific name used by Josephus Nicolaus Laurenti in 1768 when he described a water monitor specimen.[4]

V. s. salvator, Sri Lanka
V. s. andamanensis, South Andaman, India
V. s. macromaculatus, Bangkok, Thailand
V. s. celebensis, Sulawesi, Indonesia

The family Varanidae contains nearly 80 species of monitor lizards, all of which belong to the genus Varanus.[5] There is a significant amount of taxonomic uncertainty within this species complex. Morphological analyses have begun to unravel this taxonomic uncertainty but molecular studies are needed to test and confirm the validity of certain groupings within this genus. Research initiatives such as these are very important to assess changes in conservation assessments.[1]

Subspecies

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The black water monitor from Thailand's Satun Province and Thai-Malaysian border area was formerly the subspecies V. s. komaini, but now is regarded as a junior synonym and melanistic population of V. s. macromaculatus.[7]

Description

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Young water monitor
 
V. s. macromaculatus
 
Closeup showing split tongue

The Asian water monitor is dark brown or blackish with yellow spots on the underside that fade gradually with age. It has blackish bands with yellow edges extending back from each eye. Its body is muscular, with long, powerful, laterally compressed tails. Its scales are keeled; the ones on top of the head are larger than those on the back. Its neck is long and the snout elongated. It has powerful jaws, serrated teeth and sharp claws.[8]

Adults rarely exceed 1.5–2 m (4 ft 11 in – 6 ft 7 in) in length, but the largest specimen on record from Sri Lanka measured 3.21 m (10.5 ft). A common mature weight is 19.5 kg (43 lb).[8] However, 80 males killed for the leather trade in Sumatra averaged only 3.42 kg (7.5 lb) and 56.6 cm (22.3 in) snout-to-vent and 142 cm (56 in) in total length; 42 females averaged 3.52 kg (7.8 lb) and 59 cm (23 in) snout–vent length and 149.6 cm (58.9 in) in total length.[8] Males are larger than females and attain breeding maturity at a length of 40 cm (16 in) and a weight of 1 kg (2.2 lb); and females at a length of 50 cm (20 in).[8]

A series of adults weighed 7.6 kg (17 lb).[9] Mature individuals in northern Sumatra were estimated to have a mean estimated body mass of 20 kg (44 lb).[10] A sample of 55 Asian water monitors weighed 2–32 kg (4.4–70.5 lb).[11] The maximum weight of captive individuals is over 50 kg (110 lb).[12]

In captivity, Asian water monitors' life expectancy has been determined to be anywhere between 11 and 25 years depending on conditions, in the wild it is considerably shorter.[13][14]

The teeth are compressed, serrated (though irregularly) and recurved. Up to two replacement teeth lie behind each tooth position at a given time, and teeth are replaced every 59 days.[15]

Distribution and habitat

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V. s. macromaculatus in Sunderbans National Park

The Asian water monitor is widely distributed from India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Myanmar and Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, the Chinese Guangxi and Hainan provinces, Malaysia, Singapore to the Sunda islands Sumatra, Java, Bali, Borneo and Sulawesi. It inhabits primarily lowland freshwater and brackish wetlands. It has been recorded up to an elevation of 1,800 m (5,900 ft).[1]

The Asian water monitor is semiaquatic and opportunistic; it inhabits a variety of natural habitats though predominantly resides in primary forests and mangrove swamps. It has been noted that it is not deterred from living in areas near human civilization. In fact, it has been known to adapt and thrive in agricultural areas as well as cities with canal systems, such as in Sri Lanka, where they are not hunted or persecuted. Habitats that are considered to be most important are mangrove vegetation, swamps, wetlands, and elevations below 1,000 m (3,300 ft). It does not thrive in habitats with extensive loss of natural vegetation and aquatic resources.[1]

A population of these monitors have become established as an invasive population in the southeastern parts of the USA.[16]

Behaviour and ecology

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Water monitors robbing eggs from a nest. Illustration by Pierre Jacques Smit from Richard Lydekker's The Royal Natural History, 1893–1896

Water monitors defend themselves using their tails, claws, and jaws. They are excellent swimmers, using the raised fin on their tails to steer through water. When encountering smaller prey items, the water monitor will subdue it in its jaws and proceed to violently thrash its neck, destroying the prey's organs and spine which leaves it dead or incapacitated. The lizard will then swallow it whole. In dominantly aquatic habitats, their semiaquatic behavior is considered to provide a measure of safety from predators. This along with their versatile diet is said to contribute to their plasticity, or ecological adaptability.[1] When hunted by predators such as the king cobra (Ophiophagus hannah) they will climb trees using their powerful legs and claws. If this evasion is not enough to escape danger, they have also been known to jump from trees into streams for safety, a tactic similar to that of the green iguana (Iguana iguana).[13]

Hatchling V. s. macromaculatus
Juvenile V. s. macromaculatus
Adult V. s. macromaculatus

Like the Komodo dragon, the water monitor will often eat carrion,[2][17] or rotten flesh. By eating this decaying flesh, the lizard provides benefits to the ecosystem by removing infectious elements, cleaning the environment.[18] They have a keen sense of smell and can smell a carcass from far away.

While adults are terrestrial, juveniles are primarily arboreal. [19]

The first description of the water monitor and its behaviour in English literature was made in 1681 by Robert Knox, who observed it during his long confinement in the Kingdom of Kandy: "There is a Creature here called Kobberaguion, resembling an Alligator. The biggest may be five or six feet long, speckled black and white. He lives most upon the Land, but will take the water and dive under it: hath a long blue forked tongue like a sting, which he puts forth and hisseth and gapeth, but doth not bite nor sting, tho the appearance of him would scare those that knew not what he was. He is not afraid of people, but will lie gaping and hissing at them in the way, and will scarce stir out of it. He will come and eat Carrion with the Dogs and Jackals, and will not be scared away by them, but if they come near to bark or snap at him, with his tail, which is long like a whip, he will so slash them, that they will run away and howl."[20]

Reproduction

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The Asian water monitor breeds between April and October. The females will lay their eggs about a month after mating in rotting logs or stumps. A clutch can vary from 10 to 40 eggs with an incubation period of 6 to 7 months. When hatched, hatchlings are fully developed and independent. Once males and females reach a length of about 1 meter and 50 centimeters, respectively, they will become reproductively mature and able to breed.[citation needed]

Diet

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They are carnivores, and consume a wide range of prey. They are known to eat fish, frogs, rodents, birds, crabs, and snakes.[2] They have also been known to eat turtles, as well as young crocodiles and crocodile eggs.[21] Water monitors have been observed eating catfish in a fashion similar to a mammalian carnivore, tearing off chunks of meat with their sharp teeth while holding it with their front legs and then separating different parts of the fish for sequential consumption.[22] In Java, they have also been recorded entering caves at night to hunt bats that have fallen from cave's ceiling.[23]

 
V. s. salvator at Kandy Lake (Bogambara lake), Sri Lanka. Possibly obese or gravid, or both.

As carnivores and scavengers,[24] the diet of the Asian water monitor in an urban area in central Thailand includes fish, crabs, Malayan snail-eating turtles (Malayemys macrocephala), Chinese edible frogs (Hoplobatrachus rugulosus), birds, small rodents, domestic cats (Felis catus) and dogs (Canis familiaris), chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus), food scraps and carcass.[25] They are known to feed on dead human bodies. While on the one hand their presence can be helpful in locating a missing person in forensic investigations, on the other hand they can inflict further injuries to the corpse, complicating ascertainment of the cause of death.[26] The stomachs of 20 adult Asian water monitors caught on Redang Island contained mostly human food waste, followed by turtle eggs and hatchlings, crabs and lizard eggs.[27] The monitor does not thrive in these areas, but manage to still live in them. Studies are being conducted in order to understand how these creatures are able to do so in and around human civilization.[28]

In Sri Lanka, human corpses are often scavenged on by V. s. salvator, which can make it hard to identify the deceased, or to run autopsies. For instance, the feeding marks made by a monitor's sharp claws resemble wounds made by bladed weapons.[29] In one case however, the presence of eight dead water monitors near the corpse of a partially scavenged 51 year old man prompted investigation that revealed the possibility that the man died from poisoning after ingesting a bottle of Carbosulfan pesticide, which then poisoned the water monitors that scavenged on his body.[30]

Venom

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V. salvator skull.

The possibility of venom in the genus Varanus is widely debated. Previously, venom was thought to be unique to Serpentes (snakes) and Heloderma (venomous lizards). The aftereffects of a Varanus bite were thought to be due to oral bacteria alone, but recent studies have shown venom glands are likely to be present in the mouths of several, if not all, of the species. The venom may be used as a defensive mechanism to fend off predators, to help digest food, to sustain oral hygiene, and possibly to help in capturing and killing prey.[31][32]

Predation

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Adult water monitors have very few predators; with the exception of human hunters, only saltwater crocodiles (Crocodylus porosus) are known to target them.[33]

Interaction with humans

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V. s. salvator, Sri Lanka

When feeling threatened, Water monitors have been known to attack humans and they should be handled with caution. The bite of a water monitor can inflict a severe injury. Still, Water monitors have been successfully domesticated as pets, and their bites are not known to be fatal. Some pet stores carry them, however some owners have complained when over time their lizard grew far larger than had been anticipated. Generally they have little fear of humans, and neither do they tend to be aggressive towards humans, so long as they do not feel threatened.[citation needed]

In 1999, a 7 year old boy in Pahang was attacked and bitten in the leg while bathing, requiring 18 stitches.[34]

Threats

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Skeleton

Monitor lizards are traded globally and are the most common type of lizard to be exported from Southeast Asia, with 8.1 million exported between 1998 and 2007 for the international leather market.[35] Today the majority of the harvesting of feral water monitors occurs in Southeast Asia, in Indonesia, and in peninsular Malaysia.[36] Efforts to breed or farm Water monitors in captivity on a commercial scale have not been widely successful. The Asian water monitor is one of the most exploited varanids; its skin is used for fashion accessories such as shoes, belts and handbags which are shipped globally, with as many as 1.5 million skins traded annually[1] and between 50,000 and 120,000 skins harvested from the wild in peninsular Malaysia.[36] Other uses include a perceived remedy for skin ailments and eczema,[37] novelty food in Indonesia,[38] and a perceived aphrodisiac,[39] and as pets.[40] In India, several tribal communities hunt these monitor lizards for their meat, fat and skin and the eggs are also harvested. They are often considered as pests and their populations are also threatened by habitat loss and habitat fragmentation.[41]

Conservation

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Roadway crossing sign, Thailand
Young V. s. macromaculatus. Video clip

In Nepal, it is a protected species under the Wild Animals Protection Act of 2002. In Hong Kong, it is a protected species under Wild Animals Protection Ordinance Cap 170. In Malaysia, this species is one of the most common wild animals, with numbers comparable to the population of macaques there. Although many fall victim to humans via roadkill and animal cruelty, they still thrive in most states of Malaysia, especially in the shrubs of the east coast states such as Pahang and Terengganu as the regulations in Malaysian states differ based on wildlife management authorities.[42] In Thailand, all monitor lizards are protected species.[40] It is still common in large urban areas in Thailand and is frequently seen in Bangkok's canals and parks. Because of this, it is currently listed as Least Concern in the IUCN Red List. These classifications have been made on the basis that this species maintains a geographically wide distribution, can be found in a variety of habitats, adapts to habitats disturbed by humans, and is abundant in portions of its range despite large levels of harvesting.[1]

Loss of habitat and hunting has exterminated water monitors from most of mainland India. In other areas they survive despite being hunted, due in part to the fact that larger ones, including large females that breed large numbers of eggs, have tough skins that are not desirable.[43]

In Sri Lanka, it is protected by local people who value its predation of "crabs that would otherwise undermine the banks of rice fields".[43] It is also protected as it eats venomous snakes.[44]

The species is listed in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) meaning international trade (import/export) in specimens (including parts and derivatives) is regulated.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Quah, E.; Lwin, K.; Cota, M.; Grismer, L.; Neang, T.; Wogan, G.; McGuire, J.; Wang, L.; Rao, D.-Q.; Auliya, M. & Koch, A. (2021). "Varanus salvator". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2021: e.T178214A113138439. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2021-2.RLTS.T178214A113138439.en. Retrieved 29 January 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Sprackland, R. G. (1992). Giant lizards. Neptune, NJ: T.F.H. Publications. ISBN 978-0-86622-634-9.
  3. ^ Netherton, J.; Badger, D. P. (2002). Lizards: A Natural History of Some Uncommon Creatures—Extraordinary Chameleons, Iguanas, Geckos, and More. Stillwater, MN: Voyageur Press. pp. 140–141. ISBN 978-0-7603-2579-7.
  4. ^ Laurenti, J. N. (1768). "XC. Stellio salvator". Specimen Medicum, Exhibens Synopsin Reptilium Emendatam cum Experimentis circa Venena [Medical Treatise, Exhibiting an Emended Synopsis of Reptiles, with Experiments Concerning Venoms and Antidotes for Austrian Reptiles]. Viennae: Joan. Thomae. p. 58.
  5. ^ Böhme, W. (2003). "Checklist of the living monitor lizards of the world (family Varanidae)". Zoologische Verhandelingen, Leiden. 341: 4–43. Archived from the original on 2017-12-22. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
  6. ^ Samarasinghe, D. J. S.; Surendran, H.; Koch, A. (2020). "On the taxonomy and distribution of Varanus salvator andamanensis Deraniyagala, 1944 (Reptilia: Varanidae), including a redescription of the type specimens and a discussion about its allopatric co-occurrence with V. s. macromaculatus on the Nicobar Islands". Zootaxa. 4743 (1): 64. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4743.1.5. PMID 32230352. S2CID 214484186. Archived from the original on 2020-12-22. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
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  25. ^ Kulabtong, S. & Mahaprom, R. (2014). "Observation on food items of Asian water monitor, Varanus salvator (Laurenti, 1768) (Squamata Varanidae), in urban eco-system, Central Thailand" (PDF). Biodiversity Journal. 6 (3): 695–698. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2021-05-09. Retrieved 2021-05-02.
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  27. ^ Rusil, M.U.; Chen, G.N.; Booth, D.T. & Lei, J. (2020). "Diet preference and activity of Asian water monitor at Chagar Hutang Turtle Sanctuary" (PDF). Journal of Sustainability Science and Management. 15 (6): 68–74. doi:10.46754/jssm.2020.08.00 (inactive 1 November 2024). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 May 2021. Retrieved 2 May 2021.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)
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  30. ^ Mendis, N.D.N.A.; Banda, Y.M.G (2020). "Death Investigation: Does Post-mortem Scavenging by Animals Always Make it Difficult?". BIAWAK. 14 (1&2): 45–49.
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  37. ^ Uyeda, L.; Iskandar, E.; Purbatrapsila, A.; Pamungkas, J.; Wirsing, A.; Kyes, R. (2014). "Water Monitor Lizard (Varanus salvator) Satay: A Treatment for Skin Ailments in Muarabinuangeun and Cisiih, Indonesia". Biawak. 8 (1): 35–38. Archived from the original on 2020-12-22. Retrieved 2019-07-08.
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  41. ^ Shreya Bhattacharya; Andre Koch (August 2018). "Effects of Traditional Beliefs leading to Conservation of Water Monitor Lizards (Varanus salvator) and threatened Marshlands in West Bengal, India". Herpetological Conservation and Biology. 13 (2): 408–414 – via ResearchGate.
  42. ^ Khadiejah, S., Abu-Hashim, A.K., Musa, F.H., Abdul-Patah, P., Abdul-Rahman, M.T., Ismail, H.I., Wahab, A., and Razak, N.A. (2020). Management and Trade in Asian Water Monitors (Varnanus salvator) in Peninsular Malaysia. Department of Wildlife and National Parks Peninsular Malaysia (PERHILITAN). 87 pages.
  43. ^ a b Ria Tan (2001). "Mangrove and wetland wildlife at Sungei Buloh Wetlands Reserve: Malayan Water Monitor Lizard". Naturia.per.sg. Archived from the original on 2019-01-05. Retrieved 2015-09-15.
  44. ^ Wirz, P. (1954). Exorcism and the Art of Healing in Ceylon. Leiden: Brill. p. 238.

Further reading

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  • Das, I. (1988). "New evidence of the occurrence of water monitor (Varanus salvator) in Meghalaya". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 86: 253–255.
  • Deraniyagala, P. E. P. (1944). "Four New Races of the Kabaragoya Lizard Varanus salvator". Spolia Zeylanica. 24: 59–62.
  • Pandav, B. (1993). "A preliminary survey of the water monitor (Varanus salvator) in Bhitarkanika Wildlife Sanctuary, Orissa". Hamadryad. 18: 49–51.
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