No, blue bellied lizards (aka Western fence lizards) are not venomous.
Western fence lizards usually do have blue bellies, and are sometimes called 'blue-bellied lizards'
20 years probally
2 times a day
The "blue bellied lizard" is not a species of lizard. In fact, there are so many species of lizards with this trait that it is too vague for me to confidently answer. I will assume you mean a western United States species of tree lizard of some sort or a lizard of the genus sceloporus. Both are insectivores.
they eat frequently mostly vegetables and fruits sometimes even crickets but they should not be kept as pets
The "blue bellied lizard" is not a species of lizard. In fact, there are so many species of lizards with this trait that it is too vague for me to confidently answer. I will assume you mean a western United States species of tree lizard of some sort or a lizard of the genus sceloporus. Both are insectivores.
The Blue-bellied parrot lives in forests in South America.
it takes a blue taliled lizard egg 3 weekes to 4 weekes for it to hatch
well i cought one and he seems to be the perfect pet type just feed him crikets they love those......so i guess it could
According to information found, the blue-bellied parrot isn't prey to anything. A blue-bellied parrot feeds on seeds, fruit, flower buds, nectar, and some insects. The blue-bellied parrot is critically endangered due to habitat destruction by the cultivation of crops, such as tobacco and bananas.
Foxes, cats, snakes, lizards and birds are the most common predators.