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Read about the lost black Jewelled lacertas in article #2!
Scroll down for thumbnail pictures of these lizards

"Jewelled lacertas (Lacerta lepida) are protected over most of their range and virtually unavailable except for small numbers produced in the U.S. Their survival in herpetoculture holds by thin threads thanks to the persistent efforts of the few breeders who produce them, including herpetoculturist pioneer and lacerta groundbreaker, Bert Langerwerf." The Vivarium (USA), Vol.9 Num.2, p.37.
Keeping the Jewelled Lacertas
By Bert Langerwerf

Jewelled Lacertas are very beautiful, colorful lizards that reach a maximum total length of 2 feet. These lizards live in S.W. Europe (Lacerta lepida) and N.W. Africa (Lacerta pater). They live there in a climate with dry and warm summers, and cool and rainy winters. During winter they go in hibernation and mating takes place in the springtime. They live in various habitats, but prefer habitats with open space mixed with bushes and trees. They hide under big rocks, in hollow trees, rabbit burrows, or self dug burrows.

These lizards can be kept outdoors in a large part of the USA, roughly south of a line through Washington DC, Oklahoma City, and Southern Oregon. The outdoor terrarium can contain some rocks, a small brush, and rock-garden-flowers, so it looks natural.

They can be kept indoors in terraria of about 3 x 2 feet or larger. The terrarium should have a warm basking area at one end. The rest of the terrarium may be slightly moist with hiding places under hollow/flat rocks or under pieces of bark. Just like other sunloving lizards, UVB light is mandatory. Please follow the instructions on the UVB lamp of your choice. It is important to adjust the height above the basking spot as exactly as possible, as can be read from the lamps instructions.

They do not need hibernation to stay healthy. Hibernation, like in other lizards, is optional and convenient if you want to keep them outside.

These lizards eat superworms, crickets, pinkie mice, pinkie rats, snails, grasshoppers, hairless caterpillars, grubs, and sweet fruits like peeled bananas and peaches.

 

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JEWELLED LACERTAS
By Bert Langerwerf, with Dr. Mark Paris

I began breeding Lacertas in small numbers during the early 1970's in enclosures behind my house in the small town of Waspik, the Netherlands, a country better known to Americans as Holland. As a result of the cool, wet climate there for most of the year, I maintained these and my other lizards in outdoor greenhouses of varied sizes made of wood, brick, and glass. Many of these materials I salvaged from houses severely damaged during the last weeks of World War II, which had been torn down and replaced.

During that early 1970's period nothing was really known as to lizards' needs for UVB light or vitamin D3. However, that soon was to change. Once I realized that window glass filters out UV light, I started supplementing vitamin D3. Right away my Jewelled lacerta breeding program took off. As a result of this new success with UVB and vitamin D3, I was invited to give presentations to herp societies and conferences in both western and eastern Europe.

In August of 1982 I was asked to give a slideshow at the 25th Annual Meeting of SSAR in Raleigh, NC. I brought my wife Hester and we had a wonderful time visiting with many herpetoculturists and exchanging ideas. One of the highlights was meeting Joe Laszlo in person, as I had corresponded with Joe many years on the subject of vitamin D3. He also was advocating UV lights to help solve diurnal reptile management and breeding problems. Hester and I also enjoyed going into the field to observe American reptiles first hand with Sean McKeown (now a well known author, publishing articles monthly in many reptile magazines and also writing many books on geckos and such) and Julie Hishioka of the Honolulu Zoo and their spouses. We also discussed ways of designing enclosures to allow for natural sunlight. It became clear while attending the 1982 captive breeding conference that most of the top Zoo and private herpetoculturists were recognizing the need to either provide some natural unfiltered sunlight, use UVB lighting or supplement vitamin D3 as part of their lizard management programs.

Presently, two subspecies of Lacerta lepida are recognized, the nominate form and L. lepida nevadensis, a form which is largely unknown to American lizard breeders. This subspecies lives in the Sierra Nevada mountains of southern Spain and is much larger than Lacerta l. lepida. It is also more gray in coloration. Lacerta pater, wrongly considered a subspecies of Lacerta lepida up to 1982, lives in the mountain regions of Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia.

My colony of this species increased rapidly and in 1979 I hatched already 215 babies, but one of all those babies was black! In nature melanistic Lacerta pater have never been found, so I realized I had something very rare and started to breed lots of melanistic Lacerta pater. It was so exiting and by 1983-1984 I was breeding hundreds of melanistic Lacerta pater. There were so many black Lacerta pater around that people started to believe that L. pater was black and L. lepida was green. After several years of breeding black lacertas, people believed that melanistic Lacerta pater were very common and I could not sell them anymore for a reasonable price. In 1985 I left the Netherlands, leaving hundreds of melanistic L. pater with terrarium keepers in Western Europe. Today, 1998, it is impossible to find one live melanistic L. pater back. Apparently people neglected this "common" form to such an extend that now this form has vanished totally.
Please read the article in Vivarium Magazine for much more info and unique photos (one of the Fall 1998 issues).

MANAGEMENT IN CAPTIVITY

Please read either the article in Reptiles Magazine (USA) December 2001 or the article in Vivarium Magazine (USA) for much more info and unique photos (one of the Fall 1998 issues).

FOOD

Please read either the article in Reptiles Magazine (USA) December 2001 or the article in Vivarium Magazine (USA) for much more info and unique photos (one of the Fall 1998 issues).

HABITAT

Please read either the article in Reptiles Magazine (USA) December 2001 or the article in Vivarium Magazine (USA) for much more info and unique photos (one of the Fall 1998 issues).

REPRODUCTION

Please read either the article in Reptiles Magazine (USA) December 2001 or the article in Vivarium Magazine (USA) for much more info and unique photos (one of the Fall 1998 issues).

REFERENCES

Bischoff, W.(1982): Zur Frage der taxonomischen Stellung europaeischer und nordwestafrikanischer Perleidechsen (Sauria, Lacertidae, Lacerta lepida -Gruppe).

Amphibia-Reptilia, Wiesbaden, 2,357-367

Langerwerf, B. (1981): Nigrinos bei der Nachzucht von Lacerta lepida pater, Herpetofauna : Ludwigsburg, 3, 12: 21-22

Langerwerf, B. (1997) Outdoorvivaria, The Vivarium 8(4)

Mellado, J. Amores, F., Parreno, F.F. & F. Hiraldo (1975): The structure of a Mediterranean lizard-community. Donana. Acta Vert., Sevilla, 2,2: 145-160

Valverde, J. (1976): Estructura de una communidad mediterranea de vertebrados terrestres. Madrid (CSIC), 218 pp.

Male jeweled lacerta.

and Jeweled lacertas, melanistic variety.

 


Click here to buy a tegu!
(Click above to buy our lizards now using your credit card. Free and secure!)


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Argentine B/W tegus (Housing) (FAQ) (Pics)| Argentine red tegus | Australian water dragons (Pics)| Bearded dragons | Chinese crocodile lizards | Uromastyx | Jeweled lacertas| Grozny lacertas | Pseudocordylus | Argentine side neck turtles | Russian Tortoises | Monkey tailed skinks | Presentations | Terraria | A guide to lizard buying | Show dates | How to order and prices | FAQ | Email | Guestbook | links