| 
	 Tuatara
|  | Query: john white | Result: 1437th of 1650 |  | 
 
| Subject: | Tuatara 
 |  | Poster: | "Alan Hill" (1@alan-hill.freeserve.co.uk) 
 |  |  |    | File size    : 128152 bytes
File date    : 1999:12:22 21:07:23
Resolution: 1024x768
Jpeg process : Baseline
Posted Newsgroups: alt.binaries.pictures.animals
Posted Date: Thu, 16 Dec 1999 21:24:59 -0000 | 
| Tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) photographed at Chester Zoo
 some years ago; they now have a larger group in new accomodation.
 Tuataras are the strangest of all living reptiles. They look like lizards,
 but they are unique because they are the only surviving Rhynchocephalians.
 They are mainly nocturnal and live only on a few islands in the Cook Strait,
 New Zealand. For personal/educational use only.
 
 Alan Hill
 
 
 tuatara2.JPG
 
 
 Comments
 ========
 From: John White
 Subject: Re: Tuatara
 Date: Thu, 16 Dec 1999 18:50:02 -0500
 
 Alan,
 
 Great photo! Here's a few more facts that make the Tuatara a very unusual
 reptile:
 1) Tuataras have the lowest preferred body temperature of any reptile at
 12? C or (54? F)
 2) Sexual maturity is reached at 20 years of age!
 3) Egg incubation takes 13-15 months!
 
 --
 Best Regards,
 
 John White
 Reptiles & Amphibians of Virginia - http://www.erols.com/reptiles/
 Wildlife Photos - http://www.herp-edia.com/photography/ (*New Site*)
 Wildlife & Nature Photographs - http://members.xoom.com/crocodilians/
 
 ^o^
 
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 |  |  | Guest |  |  | Scientific Name:	Sphenodon punctatus (Gray, 1842) Common Names:
 English	–	Beak-head, Cook Strait Tuatara, Sphenodon, Northern Tuatara
 French	–	Hatteria Ponctué, Sphénodon Ponctué
 Spanish	–	Tuátara
 Synonyms:
 Hatteria punctata Gray, 1842
 Sphenodon guntheri Buller, 1877
 Sphenodon punctatus reischeki Wettstein, 1943
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