A blue-tongued skink is any of several species of Australian skinks in the genus Tiliqua.
it lives in australia and asia
A blue-tongued lizard is another term for a blue-tongue lizard, any of several species of Australian skinks in the genus Tiliqua.
not much at all, they sleep alot and sunbake and eat
A blue-tongue is another term for the blue-tongued lizard, any of several species of Australian skinks in the genus Tiliqua.
Not really because blue tongued skinks can get a little territorial and do not like to share there tank. also they can get really big.
This question cannot be answered, because no species of skink was identified. Skinks are a large family of lizards, and range from tiny forest-floor dwelling insectivores to large tree-dwelling herbivores, and everything in between. Popular pet skinks include fire skinks (insectivores), blue-tongued skinks (omnivores), and monkey-tailed skinks (herbivores).
Through their nose because I have a blue tongue and when his nose gets wet, he sneeze/snorts to get rid of the water.
skinks have blue tails
No, blue-tailed skinks are not endangered, but blue-tailed mole skinks are. These are a limited area variety, and are not the common blue-tailed skink that seem to be everywhere here around my house in Missouri.
There are several Australian blue-tongued lizards, and they are all members of the skink family. They are commonly just called Blue tongue lizards. Species include:Eastern Blue tongue lizard or Common Blue tongue lizardNorthern Blue tongued skinkWestern Blue tongued skinkCentral Blue tongued skinkBlotched blue tongueShinglebackPygmy Blue tongued skink
Yes. The main predators of blue-tongued lizards are predatory birds. In suburbia, cats pose a considerable threat. Dogs, too, are a threat, but are often scared off by the blue-tongue lizard's display of hissing, bright blue tongue in wide open jaws, and aggressive flattening of its body, which makes it resemble a snake.