Northern fence lizards eat a variety of small insects.
In captivity, 1/4 inch sized crickets are a good staple. These should be supplemented with a calcium powder containing vitamin D3, and once per week, a vitamin supplement.
Remember to research any reptile (or other) pet's needs carefully, and set up an enclosure with stable controlled heat at the correct temperatures, before you bring a reptile home. Captive care of reptiles is simple, but special equipment is required to enable them to survive.
Wild-caught animals should be left to experienced keepers who intend to breed them in order to bring in new blood to captive breeding programs. They can be difficult to establish, have internal parasites that require vet treatment, and are harder to tame.
small insects, ants, small Spiders, small crickets, etc.. If its a baby then it will only eat the tiniest insects like ants, fruit flys, and pinhead crickets. They need a shallow water bowl, branches to climb, a rock to bask on, full spectrum UV lighting, and an additional heat lamp for if the temp drops below 70. They like to be lightly misted with water once or twice a day as well.
i would say that if you ground up pellets and feed it to tyhe when they are little.
what is the northern fence lizard's niche
Yes.
no there not
crickets
Every 2 to 3 days.
Probably not
Western fence lizards usually do have blue bellies, and are sometimes called 'blue-bellied lizards'
No, blue bellied lizards (aka Western fence lizards) are not venomous.
yes, and due to the fact that lizards reproduce within 4 days period of time, the adult will usually have intercourse with the baby and eat the newly born along with its mother
they eat spiders, crickets, and mill worms!
15
No
No