They have quite a varied diet. They feed on fish, snails, frogs, crocodile eggs & their young, snakes, birds, small mammals & large insects
no, not like someother species of lizards the nile monitor lizards tail doesn't grow back.
Yes. Dingoes kill and eat deer, boar, monitor lizards, and carrion.
no
Monitor lizards eat snakes, eggs, deer, boars, antelopes, carrion, fish, and young crocodiles.
Some lizards do yes. But not all of them. Most lizards are too small to eat birds.Crocodiles, monitor lizards and komodo dragons are three examples of reptiles who will occasionally eat birds.
Yes. Dingoes kill and eat deer, boar, monitor lizards, and carrion.
Yes, monitor lizards are vertebrates
depends on what kind of monitor you have but usually if its small, pinkie mice or pinkie rats and that is usually once a week or so and between that, mill worms or dubia roaches, I have one 6ft Nile monitor that eats rabbits. There are around 70 different species of monitors, if you give the kind of monitor you have i can give you more specific info for your reptile.
Water Monitor's siliva are posionous and people who eat it (ewww!) cut off the head so they won't eat the siliva.
Yes. Monitor lizards, like all other lizards, have scales.
4.5ft, in captivity 3-3.5ft Some are small, for example the Yellow Acanthrus Monitor only grows 2-3 ft. while the Komodo Dragon and the more common nile monitor exceed 8 ft.
Monitor lizards are a type of lizards characterised by certain morphological features, the most prominent one being its forked tongue. Not all types are endangered, and to say: "Monitor lizards are an endangered species" would be incorrect. While many species of lizards are a part of this monitor category, not all are endangered.