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Brown Basilisk

Basiliscus vittatus

Photo by pamsai
Published on Project Noah
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10.46, -84.07

Field Notes

Description:

The Brown Basilisk or Striped Basilisk (Basiliscus vittatus; in some areas referred to as "common basilisk") is one species of basilisk lizard.

Along with the Common Basilisk they have the nickname "Jesus Lizard" because when fleeing from a predator, they are very fast and can even run on top of the water. Basilisks actually have large hind feet with flaps of skin between each toe. The fact that they move quickly across the water, aided by their web-like feet, gives them the appearance of "walking on water".

Habitat:

Seen in Selva Verde Lodge, Costa Rica.
They are native to Panama, Belize, northwestern Colombia and Costa Rica, but have been introduced into the U.S. state of Florida as a feral species.

Notes:

Smaller basilisks can run about 10-20 metres on the water without sinking. Young basilisks can usually run farther than older ones. If the animal faces danger, it starts to run very fast on the surface of a river or a lake. Then the flaps on its hind feet are opened and thus more surface area is provided for it to run on water.

Species ID Suggestions

Brown Basilisk

Basiliscus vittatus

Comments (1)

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