The New Childrens Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Reptiles


Reptiles are cold-blooded vertebrates


that have tough skin covered in scales.


The scales are made of keratin—the same


material as mammal hair and bird feathers.


There are nearly 8,000 species of reptile,


grouped in four orders. The biggest order


is snakes and lizards.


Although some snakes and lizards give
birth to live young, most reptiles reproduce
by laying eggs. Some look like birds’
eggs—they have hard, rounded shells—but
most eggs have softer, leathery shells. The
hatchlings break through their shells using
a sharp “egg tooth,” which then falls out.

REPTILE EGGS


 LIZARD Leopard geckos lay a
clutch of two long, sticky eggs in their
underground burrows.

Panther chameleon
Furcifer paradalis

TAKE A PICTURE

A dione ratsnake (Elaphe dione) begins
“sloughing” its skin. Snakes shed their
skin up to eight times a year.

 SNAKE Young
snakes coil up tightly
inside a shell. Some
can be up to seven
times longer than
their egg.

TAKING A STAND
A reptile’s legs stick out at right
angles to its body (unlike
mammals’ and birds’, which
do not). This gives them a
very sturdy frame for walking
on uneven land.

 TORTOISE
Large tortoises and
turtles, such as leopard
tortoises, lay almost
perfectly round eggs.

FEARSOME FANGS
Some snakes have venom glands
just behind their fangs. Venom is
used to kill prey, and sometimes in
defense. Baring fangs is a warning
to attackers to back off.

Emerald tree boa (juvenile)
Corallus caninus

BENDING BACKBONE
A snake’s backbone is incredibly
flexible. Tree boas coil around
branches to rest and to spot
prey. Desert vipers squeeze
under rocks for shade.
Sidewinding snakes zip across
the ground in S-shaped waves.

102

Western diamondbacked
rattlesnake Crotalus atrox

LIVING WORLD


Thorny devil
Moloch horridus
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