Veiled chameleon
The veiled chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus) is a species of chameleon (family Chamaeleonidae) native to the Arabian Peninsula in Yemen and Saudi Arabia. Other common names include cone-head chameleon and Yemen chameleon.[1] Males grow to around 17-24 inches in length and females around 14 inches, they grow casques on their head and are born as pastel green before growing stripes and more colorful as they grow. They are known for their variable color changes due to a variety of factors, including to show aggression, social status, reproduction, and stress. Females live around 5 years and males live for around 8 and they breed a few times a year.
Veiled chameleon | |
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Scientific classification ![]() | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Order: | Squamata |
Suborder: | Iguania |
Family: | Chamaeleonidae |
Genus: | Chamaeleo |
Species: | C. calyptratus |
Binomial name | |
Chamaeleo calyptratus | |
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Description
The male is 43 to 61 cm (17 to 24 in) long from the snout to the tip of the tail. The female is shorter, no more than about 35 cm (14 in), but it has a thicker body. Both sexes have a casque on the head which grows larger as the chameleon matures, reaching about 5 cm (2.0 in) in the largest adults. Newly hatched offspring are born pastel green in color and develop stripes and different colors as they mature. Adult females are green with white, orange, yellow, or tan mottling. Adult males are brighter with more defined bands of yellow or blue and some mottling.[2]
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Coloration can be affected by several factors, including social status. In experimental conditions, young veiled chameleons reared in isolation developed to be darker and duller in color compared to those raised with other individuals.[3] Females change color over the course of their reproductive cycles.[4] Chameleons also tend to change to a much darker color when stressed.[2]
Subspecies
- Chamaeleo calyptratus calyptratus A.M.C. Duméril & A.H.A. Duméril, 1851 – veiled chameleon
- Chamaeleo calyptratus calcarifer W. Peters, 1871 – short-casqued chameleon
Habitat and Distribution
The veiled chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus) is an arboreal species. It is native to the south-western Arabian Peninsula where the climate is semi-arid and tropical. It is highly susceptible to stress which makes it a species difficult to treat in captivity.[5]
This chameleon lives in a number of habitat types in its native range, including plateaus, mountains, and valleys. Like most other chameleons, it is arboreal, living in trees and other large plants. It prefers warmer temperature, generally between 24 to 35 °C (75 to 95 °F).[2]
Diet
The veiled chameleon is primarily insectivorous. Like other chameleons, the veiled chameleon has the ability to capture large prey but their diets mainly consist of small prey[6] However, it is one of several chameleon species also known to consume plant matter. This is believed to perhaps be used as a source of water during the dry season.[2]
Behavior
Reproduction and Life Cycle
Veiled chameleons reach sexual maturity at four to five months and breed multiple times in a year. The female lays large clutches of up to 85 white, tough eggs and buries them in sand.[2] The embryos experience a diapause, a length of time when they are dormant in the egg before they begin developing, increasing temperatures in the substrate initiate development.[7]
A 2004 study found that the embryonic development of chameleons (specifically the veiled chameleon) usually initiates at fertilization and continues until hatching, but sometimes development stunts at the gastrula stage for months after the eggs have been laid. The researchers involved discovered that moisture levels have little to do with this delay, but that temperature plays a determinant role in development time; an increase in ambient temperature initiates development of diapausing embryos.[7]
Juvenile chameleons can grow up to two orders of magnitude in body mass within a year of hatching. The feeding mechanisms (mouth, snout, tongue, jaw) all grow rapidly while still needing to be functional. Thus, the musculoskeletal system of the feeding mechanisms grow with negative allometry relative to snout-vent length (SVL). Studies on captured veiled chameleons showed that velocity of jaw movement tends to be greater in adults than juveniles. Thus in the development phase between adult and juvenile, there is a change in energy storage and tongue projection release mechanisms.[8]
It was found that unlike many other reptiles, the sex ratios of the veiled chameleon are not affected by incubation temperature. Even with differential mortality as a factor, the sex ratio bias is negligible. Anecdotal suggestions of temperature-dependent sex ratios in the veiled chameleon were accrued from reporting and statistical errors.[9]
Veiled chameleons have a naturally short lifespan, so even with good care, they may only live 6-8 years. Males typically live longer than females.[10]
Protective Coloration
For color changing species such as the veiled chameleon, signaling is important between animals to prevent needless energy expended on attacking competition. Stable and nonaggressive states come with a static coloration and will have a dynamic change when that state is altered. Veiled chameleons will typically brighten their coloring before approaching a rival as a signal of aggression. They will also maximize their stripe brightness for as long as possible to signal the strength of their bite. The longer and brighter the stripe lasts correlates to a stronger bite. This may aid in deterring disproportionately weaker or stronger chameleons from challenging. In this way, both contestants will save time, risk, and energy by not challenging an asymmetrical rival. It is likely that such color changing behavior serves as an evolutionary stable strategy to mutually benefit individuals by preventing unnecessary escalation. Brighter and more yellow stripes are also a signal of increased aggression.[11]
While brighter strip coloring typically correlates to more willingness to approach an opponent, brighter head coloring signifies a higher tendency to win fights. Rapidity of color change is also telling of the success of a confrontational outcome. Veiled chameleons are one of the first species to undergo color changing studies focused on speed rather than just intensity of the color. Male veiled chameleons tend to engage in vehement intra-sexual aggressive behavior. Before engaging, males will typically engage the color change laterally from a distance to maximize the opportunity to assess the coloration. When males engage with one another, they tend to begin the confrontation head to head which offers a clear view of the vivid head color change.[12]
All chameleons can engage in color change through a lattice of guanine nanocrystals embedded in a superficially thick layer of dermal iridophores. Veiled chameleons specifically exhibit two superposed layers of iridophores. The two layer structure may allow veiled chameleons to camouflage as well as relay behavioral signaling and may also provide thermal protection.[13]
Mating
Males display for females during courtship, performing behaviors such as "head rolls" and "chin rubs". Females change color when they are receptive to breeding, and males are more likely to court them during this time.[4]
Females are receptive to mating when pale-blue (robin’s egg shade) spots appear on their dorsums. They undergo constant clutch cycles that correlate with their hormonal reproductive status.
Male courtship involves exhibiting bright colors, lateral body flattening, body swaying, and tail curling. Males will approach the females and nudge them with their chin while vibrating from an internal origin during contact. The female will then mount the male and the male uses tarsal spurs to caress the female’s flank. Copulation can last anywhere between a few minutes to an hour and can occur several times per day. When copulation is successful, females will darken their green coloration and the intensity of their yellow patterns will increase. If a female is not receptive to the male, her body will turn dark brown to black with white or yellow mottled markings. She may also become aggressive or violent and bite the male if he continues to advance unwanted.[14]
Parental Care
After mating in captivity, a female chameleon will decrease feeding three to four weeks and will spend more time at the bottom of the cage searching for an appropriate egg-laying site. Tunnels will typically reach to the bottom of the container and will be covered with substrate debris after oviposition is completed (which tends to make them difficult to find). Females may dig another tunnel and lay more eggs after about a week. Females should be given easy access between higher sites in the cage and their tunnels via a branch or something similar.[14]
In captivity, eggs should be retrieved then placed into tupperware with a 1:1 ratio mix of vermiculite and water to a depth of about 1-1.5 inches with the eggs buried lengthwise and half covered. Eggs may absorb moisture and expand so they should be placed 0.5 to 1 inches apart from each other. Embryos have been shown to start development sooner when subjected to higher temperatures while degree of moisture showed no significant impact.[15] Eggs should be incubated at 26 to 30 degrees Celsius at a humidity of 95%. Neonates should be allowed at least one day to roam their container before moving. Neonate nurseries should consist of a ten gallon screen top aquarium with a base one third to one half filled with decorative artificial plants. Two to six hatchlings should be raised together for the first few months then moved to adult enclosures with increased amounts of vegetation once they reach four to six inches. They can be placed individually from each other once they reach four to six months old.[14]
Disease
The veiled chameleon, like many reptiles, is susceptible to ocular infections. Similar subcutaneous swellings can be associated with bacterial or fungal abscesses, parasitic infestation, and (rarely) neoplasia.[5]
Juvenile veiled chameleons in captivity often develop nutritional metabolic bone disease but will not develop it if fed dietary supplements of Ca, vitamin A, vitamin D, and cholecalciferol as well as exposure to UVB radiation.[16]
Veiled chameleons in captivity tend to develop maladies such as hypovitaminosis A, hypervitaminosis A, renal failure, dystocia (a failure to lay eggs), respiratory problems (usually due to improper humidity), parasitic infections, and oral cavity problems. Corneal damage can also be caused from an overabundance of UVB radiation.[14]
Captivity
The veiled chameleon is the most common Chamaeleo species in the pet trade, and have been bred in captivity for almost thirty years. It is easy to breed and prolific in its egg production. It tolerates a range of conditions and survives well in captivity.[2]
Research
Because chameleons possess anatomy that is functionalized for an arboreal habitat (such as split hands and feet for grasping, a prehensile tail, a projectile tongue, independently moving turreted eyes, and laterally compressed bodies), the veiled chameleon is becoming an up-and-coming model for the study of functional morphology and evolutionary developmental biology (ev-devo). A 2019 study assembled an annotated, multi-tissue transcriptome for the veiled chameleon to use as a resource in evolutionary and developmental research.
The veiled chameleon is currently used as an experimental model to study the evolutionary transition from reptilian amniotes to mammalian and avian species.[17]
Squamate reptiles comprise about a third of all living amniotes (animals who lay terrestrial eggs). Most of these species are in late development stages at the time of oviposition. However, veiled chameleons are the exception. They breed readily, do not require a cooling period to induce a reproductive cycle, and females produce about 45-90 eggs multiple times a year. Thus, few animals are required to form a productive breeding colony. This makes them an excellent model organism to study developmental and evolutionary phenomena.
Young chameleons have a heterodont dentition with multi-cuspid teeth in the caudal jaw area and simple mono-cuspid teeth rostrally. Chameleon teeth are also acrodont ankylosed to the bones of the jaw. Odontoblasts produce a layer of predentin that connects the dentine to the supporting bone with both tooth and bone protruding out of the oral cavity and acting as a functional unit. This makes chameleons useful in providing information to study the molecular interaction at the tooth-bone interface in physiological and pathological conditions.[18]
Invasive species
This chameleon is an introduced species in Hawaii, where it is invasive in the local ecosystem. There is a breeding population established on Maui.[19] It can also be found in the wild in Florida, where escaped pets have established populations.[1]
Culture
The veiled chameleon is the logo of the SUSE Linux operating system.[20][21]
The earliest known description of a chameleon was written by Aristotle.[13]
Gallery
References
- Wilms, T.; Sindaco, R.; Shobrak, M. (2012). "Chamaeleo calyptratus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2012: e.T176306A1437838. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2012.RLTS.T176306A1437838.en. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
- Veiled Chameleon. Archived 2011-12-17 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian National Zoological Park.
- Ballen, Cissy; Shine, Richard; Olsson, Mats (1 February 2014). "Effects of early social isolation on the behaviour and performance of juvenile lizards, Chamaeleo calyptratus". Animal Behaviour. 88: 1–6. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2013.11.010. S2CID 53181453.
- Kelso, Erin C.; Verrell, Paul A. (June 2002). "Do Male Veiled Chameleons, Chamaeleo calyptratus, Adjust their Courtship Displays in Response to Female Reproductive Status?". Ethology. 108 (6): 495–512. doi:10.1046/j.1439-0310.2002.00789.x.
- Abou-Madi, Noha; Kern, Thomas J. (September 2002). "Squamous cell carcinoma associated with a periorbital mass in a veiled chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus)". Veterinary Ophthalmology. 5 (3): 217–220. doi:10.1046/j.1463-5224.2002.00244.x. PMID 12236875.
- Anderson, Christopher. "Ballistic tongue projection in chameleons maintains high performance at low temperature" (PDF). PNAS. Department of Integrative Biology, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL.
- Andrews, Robin M.; Donoghue, Susan (2004). "Effects of temperature and moisture on embryonic diapause of the veiled chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus)". Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Comparative Experimental Biology. 301A (8): 629–635. doi:10.1002/jez.a.56. PMID 15286942.
- Herrel, Anthony; Redding, Chrystal L.; Meyers, J. Jay; Nishikawa, Kiisa C. (1 August 2014). "The scaling of tongue projection in the veiled chameleon, Chamaeleo calyptratus". Zoology. 117 (4): 227–236. doi:10.1016/j.zool.2014.01.001. PMID 24703241.
- Andrews, Robin M. (September 2005). "Incubation Temperature and Sex Ratio of the Veiled Chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus)". Journal of Herpetology. 39 (3): 515–518. doi:10.1670/33-05N.1. S2CID 41016808.
- Healey, Mariah. "Veiled Chameleon Care Sheet". ReptiFiles. Retrieved 2022-01-18.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - Ligon, Russell A; McGraw, Kevin J (10 September 2018). "A chorus of color: hierarchical and graded information content of rapid color change signals in chameleons". Behavioral Ecology. 29 (5): 1075–1087. doi:10.1093/beheco/ary076.
- Ligon, Russell A.; McGraw, Kevin J. (23 December 2013). "Chameleons communicate with complex colour changes during contests: different body regions convey different information". Biology Letters. 9 (6): 20130892. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2013.0892. PMC 3871380. PMID 24335271.
- Teyssier, Jérémie; Saenko, Suzanne V.; van der Marel, Dirk; Milinkovitch, Michel C. (10 March 2015). "Photonic crystals cause active colour change in chameleons". Nature Communications. 6: 6368. Bibcode:2015NatCo...6.6368T. doi:10.1038/ncomms7368. PMC 4366488. PMID 25757068.
- Diaz, Raul E.; Anderson, Christopher V.; Baumann, Diana P.; Kupronis, Richard; Jewell, David; Piraquive, Christina; Kupronis, Jill; Winter, Kristy; Greek, Thomas J.; Trainor, Paul A. (October 2015). "Captive Care, Raising, and Breeding of the Veiled Chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus)". Cold Spring Harbor Protocols. 2015 (10): 943–949. doi:10.1101/pdb.prot087718. PMID 26310902.
- Andrews, Robin (2004). "Effects of temperature and moisture on embryonic diapause of the veiled chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus)". Journal of Experimental Zoology.
- Hoby, Stefan; Wenker, Christian; Robert, Nadia; Jermann, Thomas; Hartnack, Sonja; Segner, Helmut; Aebischer, Claude-P; Liesegang, Annette (1 November 2010). "Nutritional Metabolic Bone Disease in Juvenile Veiled Chameleons (Chamaeleo calyptratus) and Its Prevention". The Journal of Nutrition. 140 (11): 1923–1931. doi:10.3945/jn.110.120998. PMID 20881081.
- Diaz, Raul E.; Bertocchini, Federica; Trainor, Paul A. (2017). "Lifting the Veil on Reptile Embryology: The Veiled Chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus) as a Model System to Study Reptilian Development". Avian and Reptilian Developmental Biology. New York, NY: Springer New York. pp. 269–284. doi:10.1007/978-1-4939-7216-6_18. ISSN 1064-3745.
- Buchtová, Marcela; Zahradníček, Oldřich; Balková, Simona; Tucker, Abigail S. (1 February 2013). "Odontogenesis in the Veiled Chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus)". Archives of Oral Biology. 58 (2): 118–133. doi:10.1016/j.archoralbio.2012.10.019. PMID 23200300.
- "Detecting the Veiled Chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus) on Maui: Enhancing Control of an Injurious Species. First Progress Report" (PDF). Maui Invasive Species Committee. 2013.
- Linux Questions: What kind of lizard is the SUSE mascot
- "Veiled Chameleon Care". Thursday, 14 November 2019
Further reading
- McCartney, Kristen L.; Ligon, Russell A.; Butler, Michael W.; DeNardo, Dale F.; McGraw, Kevin J. (22 March 2014). "The effect of carotenoid supplementation on immune system development in juvenile male veiled chameleons (Chamaeleo calyptratus)". Frontiers in Zoology. 11 (1): 26. doi:10.1186/1742-9994-11-26. PMC 4022081. PMID 24655326.
External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Veiled chameleon. |
- Veiled Chameleon Care Sheet. The Lizard Lounge.
- Veiled Chameleon. Biotropics.com