One of the coolest lizards in my opinion) I almost got european one this year, will try next year again :) Best food for european though considered to be worms, slugs and other very soft (and slow) bodied small living things.
I couldn’t find any record of it. Being a US local that isn’t threatened in much of its rain it probably isn’t attempted as much. We can’t get the more popular European Legless to breed with success either
@@JzsReptiles There is somebody on morphmarket that has a breeding pair, I also have a breeding pair tho im still setting them up to get started. Note that the ones more popular in the pet trade are off a diff locality so they tend to be more brown and copper / orange with tiger stripes. The green ones tend to look similar at a young age but darken and turn green as they grow old. "You can tell the locality based on the tint of their stripes as a baby" Florida ones will be more cream stripes and will keep the patterning as they age, ones from Alabama has mint colored stripes and loose the patterning as they age.
Thank you for the video. I've been keeping two for a few years now. They make great pets.
Where did you get them from??
@@samanthawinstead4578 I saved them from being paved over. Florida.
Wooo muy bien
Gracias
Very common in my area
I just found one outside and didn’t think it looked like a snake so I had to look it up.
Well there are species of snakes that look like it.
One of the coolest lizards in my opinion) I almost got european one this year, will try next year again :) Best food for european though considered to be worms, slugs and other very soft (and slow) bodied small living things.
Cool
I will like to have one as a pet
They are gorgeous. Has anyone been breeding them yet in captivity?
I couldn’t find any record of it. Being a US local that isn’t threatened in much of its rain it probably isn’t attempted as much. We can’t get the more popular European Legless to breed with success either
@@JzsReptiles There is somebody on morphmarket that has a breeding pair, I also have a breeding pair tho im still setting them up to get started. Note that the ones more popular in the pet trade are off a diff locality so they tend to be more brown and copper / orange with tiger stripes. The green ones tend to look similar at a young age but darken and turn green as they grow old. "You can tell the locality based on the tint of their stripes as a baby" Florida ones will be more cream stripes and will keep the patterning as they age, ones from Alabama has mint colored stripes and loose the patterning as they age.