The Australian deserts.
Yes, small legless lizards can eat worms as part of their diet. Worms provide essential nutrients and protein that help the lizards thrive. It is important to offer a variety of food items to ensure a balanced diet for the legless lizards.
You are describing a species of amphibians called caecilians. They are legless and worm-like, with a cylindrical body and often have a similar appearance to snakes. They primarily live underground and have adapted to a burrowing lifestyle.
Yes, small legless lizards may eat ants as part of their diet. Ants can provide a good source of protein for these reptiles. However, legless lizards typically consume a variety of invertebrates, so ants would only be one component of their diet.
Yes, both slow worms and legless lizards are protected species in Great Britain under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. It is illegal to intentionally kill, injure, or sell them or to damage or destroy their habitat.
Lizards have ear slits and eyelids. Snakes do not. Glass lizards, while having no feet, do have ear slits and eyelids. That makes them a lizard rather than a snake.Not all lizards have ear slits (genus cophosaurus). Not all lizards have eyelids (infraorder gekkota excluding the genus eublepharinae). Glass lizards, however, have both these parts.
The caecilians are legless lizards.
no
Yes, small legless lizards can eat worms as part of their diet. Worms provide essential nutrients and protein that help the lizards thrive. It is important to offer a variety of food items to ensure a balanced diet for the legless lizards.
snakes
yes. Jacky eats legless dragons and dragon lizardesses.
Snakes are the most well-known among of legless reptiles, but there are also legless lizards, which are not closely related to snakes despite the similar appearance.
Yes, they are called dinosaurs
Legless or Glass Lizard.
You are describing a species of amphibians called caecilians. They are legless and worm-like, with a cylindrical body and often have a similar appearance to snakes. They primarily live underground and have adapted to a burrowing lifestyle.
The obvious answer is that lizards have legs and snakes don't! But then there are legless lizards.... Even these 'legless' lizards however, have the remains of leg stumps visible in their anatomy. Also legless lizards are reasonably small and non-venomous, although some legged lizards are venomous and some small snakes non-venomous, so things get a bit confusing. Probably best to stick with the legs, or traces of them!
Through its lungs, as all lizards do.
it makes a clicking noise