Visaya: Halo
The
water monitor (
Varanus salvator) is a large lizard native to Southern
Asia. Water monitors are one of the most common monitor lizards found throughout Asia, and range from
Sri Lanka,
India, Indochina, the
Malay Peninsula and various islands of
Indonesia, living in areas close to water.
Description
The Water monitor is a large species of
monitor lizard.
Breeding maturity is attained for males when they are a relatively
modest 40 cm (16 in) and weigh 1 kg (2.2 lb) and for females at 50 cm
(20 in). However, they grow much larger throughout life, with males
being larger than females.
Most adult specimens will not exceed 1.5–2 m (4.9–6.6 ft) in length.
However, the species can attain a maximum size of 3 m (9.8 ft).
A common mature weight of
Varanus salvator can be 19.5 kg (43 lb).
The maximum weight of the species is over 50 kg (110 lb).
In exceptional cases, the species has been reported to attain 75 to 90
kg (170 to 200 lb), though few such giants are verified and may be
unreliable. They are the world's second heaviest lizard, after the
Komodo dragon.
Their body is muscular with a long, powerful, laterally compressed tail.
Behavior and diet
Water monitors can be defensive, using their tail, claws, and jaws
when fighting. They are excellent swimmers, using the raised fin located
on their tails to steer through water. Water monitors are carnivores,
and have a wide range of foods. They are known to eat
fish,
frogs,
rodents,
birds,
crabs, and
snakes.
They have also been known to eat
turtles, as well as young
crocodiles and crocodile eggs.
Like the
Komodo Dragon, they will often eat
carrion.
Water monitors have been observed eating
catfish
in a fashion similar to a mammalian carnivore, tearing off chunks of
meat with its sharp teeth while holding it with its forelegs and then
separating different parts of the fish for sequential consumption.
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