Monday, June 30, 2008

Record-Breaking Chameleons Live Only a Few Months

Members of a rare chameleon species all hatch in the same month, then die only four to five months later—making them the shortest-lived four-limbed vertebrates, a new study says.



Labord's chameleon had been identified in 1872 in the arid southwest of the island of Madagascar off the east coast of Africa. But it wasn't until 2003 that a zoologist noticed there was something strange about this particular species.

"It was just bizarre, because I could find only adults and no juveniles whatsoever," said study co-author Kristopher Karsten of Oklahoma State University.

"So I thought, Well, either my eye isn't trained very well to find these juveniles, or they're not there. And if they're not there, maybe that means that every one is the same age and they're an annual species."

After studying the chameleons for three more seasons, Karsten and his colleagues were certain that the entire population of Labord's chameleon (Furcifer labordi) turns over every year.

(Related: "405-Year-Old Clam Called Longest-Lived Animal" [October 29, 2007].)

Coming Out of Its Shell

Labord's chameleons spend eight to nine months inside the egg. After hatching, the reptiles spend four to five months eating, mating, and reproducing.

Adding to their oddity, the lizards all hatch in the same month, November.

"Whether or not they die in the same month, that gets a little gray," said Karsten, whose team's study will be published in tomorrow's issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"Some individuals die earlier than others, because predators get to them first," he said. And others just naturally live a bit shorter or longer than their peers.

[More Here]

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Never heard of that kind of chameleons. Very interesting. There all born in the same month that's unbelievable. That's one weird Chameleon.