Stellagama

<i>Laudakia stellio</i>

Laudakia stellio

Genus of lizards


Laudakia stellio is a species of agamid lizard.[3][1] also known as the starred agama or the roughtail rock agama.

Quick Facts Laudakia stellio, Conservation status ...

Common names

Common names for L. stellio include dikenli keler, hardim, hardun, kourkoutas (Cypriot Greek), kourkoutavlos, painted dragon, roughtail rock agama, short-toed rock agama, sling-tailed agama, star lizard, starred agama, and stellion.[citation needed]

Geographic range

Laudakia stellio can be found in Turkey, Greece, Israel, Palestinian Authority, Cyprus, Lebanon, western Asia and northern Egypt; it has also been introduced to Malta.[1]

Description

Laudakia stellio may attain a total length (including tail) of 35 cm (14 in) or slightly longer.[4]

Behaviour and habitat

Like many agamids, L. stellio can change its color to express its mood. It basks on stone walls, rocks, and trees. It is usually found in rocky habitats, and is quite shy, being very ready to dive into cracks to hide from potential predators.[citation needed]

Etymology

The common name "stellion" comes from Latin stellio, stēlio (stelliōn-, stēliōn-), from stella, star.[5] It may have referred to any spotted lizard.[citation needed]

Mythology

Stellio is mentioned in Ovids Metamorphoses Book 5 line 461. A naughty boy mocks the goddess Ceres for drinking a drink containing honey and barley with too much greed, as she is quite thirsty. Angrily the goddess throws the drink in the face of the boy, and there by changes him into a Stellio or a starred agama. It is an Etiological myth explaining why the starred agama got its spotted skin.

Uses

For the indigenous people of Europe, and perhaps the Middle East, traditionally the excrement of the stellio was a popular medicine for the eyes, also used as a cosmetic, known as cordylea, crocodilea or stercus lacerti (i.e. 'lizard shit'), the faeces being imported to European pharmacies from the Levant – a rarer and more potent form was acquired from monitor lizards in olden days (stercus magni lacerti). The dung was used to improve one's eyesight, as well as take away any itches and cure cataracts (webbe).[5][6]

Subspecies

Stellion

The following 2 subspecies, including the nominotypical subspecies, are recognized as being valid.[2]

  • Laudakia stellio daani (Beutler & Frör, 1980)
  • Laudakia stellio stellio (Linnaeus, 1758)

Nota bene: A trinomial authority in parentheses indicates that the subspecies was originally described in a genus other than Laudakia.


References

  1. Amr, Z.S.S.; Al Johany, A.M.H.; Akarsu, F.; Üzüm, N.; Kumlutaş, Y.; Baha El Din, S.; Lymberakis, P.; Hraoui-Bloquet, S.; Ugurtas, I.H.; Werner, Y.L.; Disi, A.M.; Tok, V.; Sevinç, M.; Sadek, R.; Crochet, P.-A.; Kaska, Y.; Avci, A.; Yeniyurt, C. (2012). "Stellagama stellio". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2012: e.T157247A743714. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2012.RLTS.T157247A743714.en. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  2. Species Stellagama stellio at The Reptile Database www.reptile-database.org.
  3. Baig KJ et al. (2012). "A morphology-based taxonomic revision of Laudakia Gray, 1845 (Squamata: Agamidae)". Vertebrate Zoology 62 (2): 213–260. (Stellagama, new genus, p. 222).
  4. Cuvier, Georges (1836–1849). Le Règne Animal (in French). Vol. 3 (3rd ed.). Paris: Fortin, Masson et cie. p. 49. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.39612.

Further reading



Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Stellagama, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.