In a sense, yellow spotted lizards do not exist. Similar types of lizards exist but not this specific one. It is a character from the book Holes by Louis Sachar. In the book, there is a boy called Stanley Yelnats. The boy is sent to Camp Green Lake in Texas. Camp Green Lake is a dried up lake in the baking heat. The boy has to dig holes and some of these holes have yellow spotted lizards in them. According to the author, if you get bitten by the lizards then you will painfully die. It is reported to have exactly eleven spots, it has red rings around its eyes, its bite is venomous and can even be fatal and in the real world it doesn't exist.
In the book "holes" the yellow-spotted lizard is from six to ten inches long.
a yellow spotted lizard grows up to 13cm
1 inch
I do not think that there is just a yellow spotted lizard, but there is a yellow spotted tropical night lizard. The scientific name for that is Lepidophyma flavimaculatum.
The Latin translation is : Flavo Maculosos lacerta
WellWell
a Yellow Spotted lizard mainly lives in a hot, warm environment and where there are plants for there favourote food, sunflower seeds
If your taking about the ones in Holes, i dont know
Well the yellow spotted lizard isnt real. They were Gilla Monsters with yellow paint. The yellow spotted lizard only existed in the movie holes.
Yellow spotted lizard
A yellow spotted lizard eats mainly crickets and other insects.
black and yellow
I do not think that there is just a yellow spotted lizard, but there is a yellow spotted tropical night lizard. The scientific name for that is Lepidophyma flavimaculatum.
Lizard like and and kind of yellow spotted ........... Obviously!
Newt is an animal of the lizard family and this lizard with yellow green spots on its body is known as a yellow spotted newt.
yes
200kg
run
No it is not
The highly venomous yellow spotted lizard featured in the novel "Holes" does not exist. It is purely fictitious. However, there is such a lizard known as a Yellow-spotted tropical night lizard (lepidophyma flavimaculatum). it lives in tropical forests in Central America and Mexico, and it is not venomous, though it can be aggressive when handled.