Moloch.–The mouth of this peculiar-looking creature is very small; the lateral teeth of the upper-jaw are implanted horizontally and directed inwards. The body is much depressed, and, like the short tail and head, is covered with small scales or tubercles intermixed with large spines. M. horridus, the only species, inhabits the sandy districts of Western and Southern Australia. Nothing is known about its habits except that it seems to live upon ants. Its extremely rough skin is, according to an accidental observation by Dr. Willey, highly hygroscopic. He happened to put a live specimen into a shallow dish with water, when, to his surprise, the water was sucked up as by blotting-paper.

Fig. 129.–Moloch horridus. × ⅔.

Liolepis.–The body is depressed, without a crest, and is covered with minute granular scales. The tail is long, and has small keeled scales. There is a strong transverse gular fold, and a fold along the side of the body. The tympanum is distinct. Femoral, but no pre-anal, pores are present.

L. belli, the only species, about 18 inches long when full grown, is a native of South-Eastern Asia. The general colour is brownish, with pale black-edged spots along the back; the sides are marked with black and orange vertical bars; the under parts are orange, variegated with blue. Annandale remarks that this is perhaps the commonest lizard on the barren stretches of sand in Lower Siam, especially near the coast. It is exceedingly active and timid. Though its colour is brilliant, the green and grey eye-like spots which ornament its back, and the orange and purple stripes on its sides, are not conspicuous amidst the natural surroundings, the former harmonising with the shadows cast upon the sand by the scanty vegetation which it supports, and the latter being more or less concealed by the folds into which the skin that covers the ribs naturally falls. When the male is roughly handled and is unable to use its powerful jaws, it flattens its body in such a way that the stripes become most conspicuous. The female is unable to do this with such effect, as her ribs do not seem to be so mobile and her colours are less bright. Liolepis lives in holes in the ground, which often go down vertically for more than 2 feet before there is a bend in their course. Each burrow generally contains a pair of these lizards, which, according to the natives, are strictly monogamous.

Fam. 2. Iguanidae.–Pleurodont lizards with a short and thick, non-protractile tongue; almost entirely American, with the remarkable exception of two genera, Hoplurus and Chalarodon in Madagascar, and one, Brachylophus, in the Fiji Islands. Most of the Iguanidae are insectivorous, but some of the most striking forms are herbivorous, e.g. Iguana, Amblyrhynchus, and Basiliscus. In their general structure the Iguanidae closely resemble the Agamidae, from which they differ chiefly by the pleurodont dentition. The orbit is surrounded by bone, and the temporal fossa is bridged over by an arch which is formed by the junction of the squamosal chiefly with the postorbital, the jugal taking as a rule less share in the arch. Dermal ossifications are absent on the body.

There are about three hundred different species, which have been grouped into about fifty genera, representing arboreal, terrestrial, burrowing, semi-aquatic forms, and even one semi-marine species. Their external appearance varies consequently within wide limits.

Anolis is distinguished by the partial dilatation on the middle phalanges, which carry a series of transverse adhesive lamellae. In its general shape Anolis resembles slenderly built and long-tailed Lacertidae, which it may be said to represent in tropical and sub-tropical America, inclusive of the West Indian Islands. The males have a large gular appendage, which can be distended by the hyoid bones. Anolis is an expert climber, living in trees, or rushing about on fences or walls of houses in search of insects; most species can change colour to a great extent. More than a hundred species are known, of which we mention only one, very common in the Southern United States.

A. carolinensis of the South-Eastern United States and of Cuba is beautiful golden green on the whole upper surface; the gular sac becomes vermilion when stretched; when flaccid, it is white with occasional red lines and spots. The under parts are white. In cold weather and in confinement this little lizard, which is scarcely 6 inches in length, appears dark brown, sometimes with a white line along the back. The changes of colour are very sudden. They are thoroughly arboreal, leaping from leaf to leaf like Tree-frogs.