Showing posts with label tegu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tegu. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 March 2019

Large lizard from South America has Georgia on its mind (So far four adult Argentine black and white tegus seen) – via Herp Digest



March 16, 2019 SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) 

A South American lizard could be establishing a breeding population in south Georgia, state wildlife officials say.

The lizards — known as tegus — can grow up to 4 feet (1.2 meters) long.

Talk of large, odd-looking lizards has been circulating in eastern Toombs and western Tattnall counties, The Savannah Morning News reported.

People have reported seeing the reptiles crossing dirt roads, and they've shown up on trail cameras.

The Georgia Department of Natural Resources has documented at least four adult Argentine black and white tegus in the state. Also, there have been 20 sightings in the stretch of forest, farmland and streams from the south Georgia town of Lyons to Reidsville.

The agency is encouraging residents to report sightings as biologists investigate their possible expansion into Georgia.

"We think there's something going on. But we need to know more," said John Jensen, a senior wildlife biologist with the Department of Natural Resources.

Argentine black and white tegus are an invasive species that grows large, reproduces fast and eats lots of things, from fruit to eggs, birds and small mammals, the Savannah newspaper reported.

Tegus would pose a threat to native wildlife, including gopher tortoises, a candidate for Endangered Species Act listing. Tegus have been documented using gopher tortoise burrows and eating tortoise eggs and the young. Tegus will also eat vegetables, pet food and chicken eggs.

If tegus are reproducing in the wild in south Georgia, catching them early is crucial.

Once the lizards are established — as they are in Florida's two known populations — the only effective response is to try and stem their numbers and spread, officials said.

Thursday, 13 July 2017

Large invasive lizard spotted near Palm Bay school,(Florida) – via Herp Digest


Tegus native to South America, can grow up to 4 feet
By Rick Neale , Florida Today, 7/6/17 

Palm Bay, FL - A large invasive lizard has been spotted sunbathing on the asphalt of Topeka Road, a short street near Jupiter Elementary in southwest Palm Bay, wildlife trapper James Dean said. 

According to News 6 partner Florida Today, Dean said he started receiving phone calls reporting a tegu during the past week or so, and he toured the residential neighborhood Sunday.

If he can zero in on the reptile's whereabouts, Dean plans to bait a trap using roadkill -- perhaps a possum, raccoon or armadillo -- in hopes of capturing the creature.

"It's a 50-50 chance I'm going to get this thing, due to the fact of the terrain that's out there. There's a lot of woods. There's a lot of power lines," Dean said.

"Parents are concerned because school will be starting. And they want this thing caught, like, yesterday," he added. "They're concerned that it's going to attack children, which it will not."
Native to South America, tegus can grow up to 4 feet in length. The invasive species has established breeding populations in Miami-Dade and Hillsborough counties, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission reported.

Tegus live in underground burrows and typically eat fruit, vegetables, eggs, insects, cat or dog food and small critters like lizards and rodents, according to an FWC tegu brochure.
"While a tegu is not likely to be innately aggressive, it will defend itself if aggravated or threatened. Tegus have sharp teeth, strong jaws and sharp claws, which they will use to defend themselves," the brochure states.

Dean speculated the Palm Bay tegu is an exotic pet that may have escaped from a screened porch. Or, he said the lizard could have been intentionally released into the wild.

To report a tegu sighting, call the FWC exotic species hotline at 888-IVE-GOT1 (888-483-4681) or visit IveGot1.org. Agency officials ask witnesses to photograph the tegu, if possible.


Sunday, 5 February 2017

Florida Lawmakers Want Money To Target Lionfish, Tegu Lizards – via Herp Digest




CBS Miami, 2/2/17


TALLAHASSEE (CBSMiami/NSF) — A pair of state legislators has asked lawmakers to approve $600,000 over the next two years to fund a pilot program to hunt non-native tegu lizards, lionfish and a number of types of snakes.

The House proposal, filed this week by Rep. Halsey Beshears, adds lionfish to a separate Senate measure filed in early January by Sen. Frank Artiles from Miami.

In Beshears’ proposal, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission would be directed to work with the Department of Environmental Protection on the program, which would involve contracting with hunting and fishing teams to capture or destroy tegu lizards, which are native to Central and South America, lionfish, green anaconda, and several python species.

The hunts and fishing would occur in the Everglades and the Francis S. Taylor Wildlife Management Area, along with other commission-managed areas where the species have been reported. The commission would have to get permission from the National Park Service for hunting and fishing teams in the Everglades National Park.

A report on the progress of the program would be due by January 1st, 2020.

Saturday, 12 November 2011

Fighting against Florida's alien invaders (Via Herp Digest)

Fighting against Florida's alien invaders (Now the Tegu Lizard)
By Craig Pittman, Times Staff Writer, In Print: Sunday, October 30, 2011

One day this summer, Susan Arehart noticed her cat, Luna-tick, acting strangely. Arehart, a transplanted New Yorker who now lives in Riverview, thought maybe the cat was stalking a snake in the yard. But when she got closer, she saw what was it was: a big, black and white lizard with sharp claws, known as a giant Argentine tegu. She figured it was 4 feet long from the tip of its tail to the end of its forked tongue.

She thought it might run when it saw her. It didn't. "That thing stared me right down," she said. "It's not afraid of anything."

Everyone has heard about the pythons in the Everglades. State officials have told hunters to shoot them on sight. Congress is debating whether to ban their importation. Writer Carl Hiaasen jokes about how he'd like to see politicians out seeking a River of Grass photo op attacked by one.

But Frank Mazzotti, one of Florida's top reptile experts, thinks that what everyone ought to be talking about is the tegu - and also the Nile monitor, the Oustalet's chameleon and several other slithery species that have invaded Florida in recent years.

Unlike the pythons, which are pretty well dug in, Mazzotti said, "we've got 140 species that aren't established yet."

That includes species beyond South Florida - for instance, the tegu, a recent fad in the exotic pet trade. Some tegu owners have reported being surprised at how fast their little lizards grew, and how much they ate.

Five years ago tegus - either escaped captives or those turned loose by irresponsible owners - began popping up in rural and suburban Hillsborough County. On top of frightening homeowners and their pets, tegus eat the eggs and the young of ground-nesting birds and gopher tortoises.
State and federal officials should target those reptiles for removal now, before they get as entrenched as the pythons, said Mazzotti, a University of Florida wildlife ecology professor who has spent more than 25 years studying South Florida reptiles.

"The pythons are just the tip of the iceberg," agreed Steve Johnson, another University of Florida wildlife ecology professor who puts together the online newsletter Invader Updater about non-native invasive fauna. "An early detection network would allow for a more rapid response."
But at this point, Mazzotti said, "there's no money to do risk assessment and early detection." That's too bad, Johnson said, because "by the time we know they're here and established, it's difficult if not impossible to get rid of them."

Instead, most government funding is going toward trying to catch those elusive pythons. Mazzotti said the most effective python-catcher is what he called "the Judas snake," which is a male python outfitted with a radio transmitter and released during mating season to lead scientists to the females. The best catch ever made using a Judas snake, he said, was five females in one day - not a huge haul.
Mazzotti said the only thing that's really made a dent in the python population was last winter's long cold snap.

Mazzotti spent a fairly productive evening in South Florida last week collecting Oustalet's chameleons, voracious eaters which can grow to 2 feet long in their native Madagascar.

"There were more than 100 in a single avocado grove," he said.

Exotic invaders such as the Argentine tegu and the Oustalet's chameleons aren't just a nuisance. Harvard biologist Edward O. Wilson says introduction of alien species is second only to habitat destruction by development and agriculture as the leading cause of extinctions worldwide.
Invaders can wreak such havoc that the National Aeronautic and Space Administration, which has begun mapping the rapid spread of invasive species, has estimated they cost the United States $120 billion each year.

Although tegus have been spotted near Miami and in the Ocala National Forest, eastern Hillsborough County has had the thickest infestation, with 69 reports listed on Johnson's website. They may be attracted by the 500-acre Bell Creek Nature Preserve and the 4,900-acre Balm-Boyette Scrub Preserve, both of which are home to scores of gopher tortoises - and their eggs.

Bobby Hill is convinced all of those reports are "nothing but a crock." Hill runs Varnyard Herps Inc., a Panama City company. "I'm the largest breeder of these animals in the world," he said.
Hill says the tegus can be aggressive if provoked, but usually seek out human affection. He's convinced that while there may be multiple reports of tegus found in the wild, "it's the same animal" being sighted over and over, and not hundreds of them.

"How many Bigfoot reports have there been?" he asked.

Florida's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission spends $600,000 a year trying to track and eradicate invasive species like tegus. About $80,000 of that is aimed solely at reptiles. But more invaders show up every day. A study released this month by the University of Florida found more invasive species are making their home in Florida than anywhere else in the world.
That's not news to homeowners in Riverview such as Arehart.

"When I moved to Florida," Arehart said, "I expected seagulls."

Instead, the retired social worker has seen wild boar, coyotes and tegus. She suggested the state needs a new tourism slogan: "Come down to Florida and you can see everything!"

Arehart said she first heard about tegus four years ago when a tree service employee working for a neighbor reported finding "a dinosaur" in some branches. Soon, she said, "little kids walking home from school started taking pictures of them with their cell phones." Now, she said, "they're everywhere."
She's not the only Riverview resident who's freaked out about the big lizards that don't seem afraid of people. One of her neighbors shot one, she said. Another ran one over with a car. She tried doing that too, "but they're just too quick."

For the first time in her life, she's thinking about buying a gun - not for herself, but to protect her cat. Luna-tick keeps crying to go out, but Arehart won't open the door.

"I don't let her out now," she said. "I don't know what's out there."

Times researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

For a list of invasive reptiles in Florida, and a link to maps showing where they have been found, click on http://www.eddmaps.org/florida/species/type.cfm?id=6



To find out what you can do about non-native wildlife, go to: http://myfwc.com/wildlifehabitats/nonnatives/what-can-i-do-to-help/



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Thursday, 24 February 2011

OUT OF PLACE LIZARD IN HAWAII (Via Herp Digest)

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) 2/23/11 - A Waianae resident reported a dead lizard to the Hawaii Department of Agriculture after the family dogs apparently killed it on Friday night.

The foot-and-a-half long lizard has been identified as a tegu lizard (Tupinambis teguixin), which are illegal in Hawaii. The resident, who reported the lizard to officials on Saturday, said she heard her dogs barking Friday night and discovered the dead lizard. She was asked to hold it for agriculture inspectors, who picked it up on Monday morning.

It is not known how the lizard arrived in Hawaii. The lizard was identified by a herpetologist at the Bishop Museum and will remain in the museum's collection.

Tegu lizards are native to South America, but are found in the pet trade worldwide. They may grow up to four- to five-feet long and are a threat to ground-nesting birds and agricultural crops, as they may be a source of bacterial contamination of food crops. They are known to use their tails and claws as weapons and can deliver a nasty bite that may cause serious bacterial infections.

Individuals who see or have knowledge of illegal animals should call the State's toll-free PEST HOTLINE at 643-PEST (7378).

Those harboring illegal animals are encouraged to turn in the animals under the state's amnesty program, which provides immunity from prosecution.

Illegal animals may be turned in to any HDOA Office, Honolulu Zoo or any Humane Society - no questions asked and no fines assessed.
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