California Reptiles & Amphibians

Phrynosoma blainvillii - Blainville's Horned Lizard (Coast Horned Lizard) (=Anota coronatum)



Click on a picture for a larger view





Range in California: Red



Adult, 3,000 ft., San Gabriel Mountains, Los Angeles County
 
Adult, 3,000 ft., San Diego County,
 
Juvenile, San Gabriel Mountains, Los Angeles County
Juvenile, San Diego County
Adult, Los Angeles County
© Todd Battey
Adult, Santa Ana Mountains, Riverside County © Ken Pitts
Adult, Butte County © Jackson Shedd
Adult, Butte County © Jackson Shedd
 
Adult, Alameda County
 
Adult, Alameda County
Adult Female, Contra Costa County
© Sam Murray
Adult Male, Contra Costa County
© Sam Murray
Juvenile, Contra Costa County
© Ricky Ortiz
Adult, Santa Cruz Mountains
© Jackson Shedd
This lizard squirted blood from its eyes just before the photographs were made, which explains the reddish coloring on its head.
Juvenile, San Benito County
© Andy Stocker
Adult, San Benito County
© Jackson Shedd
Adult, San Benito County
© Jackson Shedd
Adult, Kern Plateau, Kern County
© Brad Alexander
Adult, from coastal dunes, San Luis Obispo county
Adult, Kings County © Patrick Briggs
   
 
Adult, Kings County © Patrick Briggs
 
In early April of 2007, Becky Trask sent me these pictures of breeding adult horned lizards found at 5,200 ft. in Los Angeles County. In mid April of 2008 she discovered a juvenile at the same location (shown on the right) which is possibly the result of the previous year's breeding. © Becky Trask
Newly-hatched juvenile next to U.S. quarter to show how small it is, Contra Costa County. © Jerry L. Boyer

Coast Horned Lizards have two rows of fringe on the sides. Compare with the Desert Horned Lizard which has one.

This injured adult from a backyard in San Luis Obispo County shows blood above one eye. When threatened, horned lizards will often spurt blood from a pore near the eyelid to deter the attacker, in this case, a dog. © Martha Lindl
Horned lizards will sometimes shake their body from side to side and bury themselves in loose soil or sand in order to hide from a threat. Habitat, Riverside County. The bare spot in the foreground is a nest of harvester ants, a primary food source for Coast Horned Lizards.
Chaparral/sandy wash habitat
San Benito County
Habitat, San Gabriel Mountains, Los Angeles County
Habitat, Butte County.

Habitat, Los Angeles County
© Todd Battey
Habitat, Alameda County

Coastal Sage habitat,
San Diego County
Coastal sand dunes habitat,
San Luis Obispo county
Habitat, 3,000 ft., San Diego County
Habitat, Kings County
© Patrick Briggs

Horned Lizard Food

Short Video

   
Two separate Coast Horned Lizards are shown running quickly for a short distance then stopping
to hide by blending in with the background, typical behavior for this type of lizard.
Description
Size
Adults are 2.5 - 4.5 inches long from snout to vent (6.3 - 11.4 cm)
Appearance
A flat-bodied lizard with a wide oval-shaped body, scattered enlarged pointed scales on the upper body and tail, and a large crown of horns or spines on the head. The two center horns are the longest. The sides of the body have two rows of pointed fringe scales. (Compare with the Desert Horned Lizard which only has one row of fringed scales on the sides.)
Color is reddish, brown, yellow, or gray, with dark blotches on the back and large dark spots on the sides of the neck.
The belly is cream, beige, or yellow, usually with dark spots, and the belly scales are smooth.
Males have enlarged postanal scales and a swollen tail base during the breeding season.
Behavior & Natural History
Diurnal. Active during periods of warm weather, retreating underground and becoming inactive during extended periods of low temperatures or extreme heat.

When threatened, this lizard is capable of running away quickly for only a short distance, and usually runs under a low bush. Its main defense is remaining motionless using its cryptic coloring to blend into the background and make it difficult to see. It will crouch down low to prevent shadows that could make it easier to see, sit still to avoid detection, even changing its color slightly to better match the background, and will sometimes shake the body from side to side to partially bury itself in loose soil.

Inflates with air when threatened, making it larger and hard to swallow. Opens its mouth and make hissing noises as a threat display. When threatened and grabbed, it will bite and move the head from side to side to jab with its horns. As a last resort, it will spray the intruder with blood from the corners of its eyes. This blood has been found to repel coyotes and foxes and possibly other predators.

Known to live up to 10 years in captivity, although captive animals normally do not live very long at all due to the difficulties of feeding them a proper diet.
Diet
Eats mainly ants, especially harvester ants, but also consumes other small invertebrates such as spiders, beetles, termites, flies, bees, and grasshoppers.
Reproduction
6 - 21 eggs (averaging around 12) are laid May to June, hatching from August to September. Some females may lay two clutches in a year.
Range
Historically, found along the Pacific coast from the Baja California border west of the deserts and the Sierra Nevada, north to the Bay Area, and inland as far north as Shasta Reservoir, and south into Baja California. Ranges up onto the Kern Plateau east of the crest of the Sierra Nevada. Current range is more fragmented.
Habitat
Inhabits open areas of sandy soil and low vegetation in valleys, foothills and semiarid mountains from sea level to 8,000 ft. (2,438 m) in elevation. Found in grasslands, coniferous forests, woodlands, and chaparral, with open areas and patches of loose soil. Often found in lowlands along sandy washes with scattered shrubs and along dirt roads, and frequently found near ant hills.
Taxonomic Notes
2 subspecies were recognized in California before 1997:
P.c. blainvillei - San Diego Horned Lizard
P. c. frontale - California Horned Lizard

Montanucci, 2004, Geographic variation in Phrynosoma coronatum (Lacertilia, Phrynosomatidae): Further evidence for a Peninsular Archipelago. Herpetologica 60(1): 117-139, restricted P.coronatum to southern Baja populations, naming the population which occurs in California Phrynosoma blainvillii.

Leache and McGuire (2006, Molecular Phylog. Evolution 39:628-644) named four subclades of Phrynosoma - 3 in our area: Anota, Doliosaurus, and Tapaja.
Conservation Issues  (Conservation Status)
Threatened and eliminated from many areas due to habitat destruction from human development and agriculture, and the spread of nonnative ants, such as Argentine Ants (ridomyrmex humilis) which displace the native ant food source. Before commercial collecting was banned in 1981, this lizard was extensively exploited by the pet trade and the curio trade. (At the turn of the century, horned lizards were coated with varnish and sold to tourists.)

Taxonomy
Family Phrynosomatidae Zebra-tailed, Earless, Fringe-toed, Spiny, Tree, Side-blotched, and Horned Lizards
Genus Phrynosoma Horned Lizards
Species

blainvillii Blainville's Horned Lizard
Original Description
Phrynosoma coronatum - (Blainville, 1835) - Nouv. Ann. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, Vol. 4, p. 284, pl. 25, fig. 1

from Original Description Citations for the Reptiles and Amphibians of North America © Ellin Beltz

Meaning of the Scientific Name
Phrynosoma - Greek - phrynos - toad and soma - body - refers to the squat, toad-like appearance
coronatum
- Latin - crowned - ref. joining of two large occipital plates

from Scientific and Common Names of the Reptiles and Amphibians of North America - Explained © Ellin Beltz

Alternate Names
P. coronatum - Coast Horned Lizard
P. c. blainvillei
- San Diego Horned Lizard
P. c. frontale - California Horned Lizard
"Horny Toad," "Horned Toad"

Related or Similar California Lizards
Phrynosoma platyrhinos calidiarum - Southern Desert Horned Lizard
Phrynosoma platyrhinos platyrhinos - Northern Desert Horned Lizard
Phrynosoma mcallii - Flat-tail Horned Lizard
Phrynosoma douglasii - Pygmy Short-horned Lizard

More Information and References
Natureserve Explorer

California Dept. of Fish and Game

SDNHM

Horned Lizard Conservation Society

Stebbins, Robert C. A Field Guide to Western Reptiles and Amphibians. 3rd Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company, 2003.

Behler, John L., & F. Wayne King. The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Reptiles and Amphibians. Alfred A. Knopf, 1992.

Smith, Hobart M. Handbook of Lizards, Lizards of the United States and of Canada. Cornell University Press, 1946.

Sherbrooke, Wade C. Horned Lizards, Unique Reptiles of Western North America. Southwest Parks and Monuments Association, 1981.

Sherbrooke, Wade C. Introduction to Horned Lizards of North America. University of California Press, 2003.

Conservation Status

The following status listings come from the Special Animals List which is published several times each year by the California Department of Fish and Game.

This species is listed separately by two former subspecies on the Special Animals List - P. c. (blainvillii) - the Coast (San Diego) Horned Lizard, and P. c. frontale - the Coast (California) Horned Lizard. The only difference in the listings is in the USFS and BLM.


Organization
Status Listing
U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) None
California Endangered Species Act (CESA) None
California Department of Fish and Game DFG:SSC California Species of Special Concern
Bureau of Land Management BLM:S Sensitive - Only the northern "frontale" population.
USDA Forest Service USFS:S Sensitive - Only the southern "blainvillii" population
Natureserve Global Conservation Status Ranks G4 Apparently Secure
World Conservation Union - IUCN Red List




None


 

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