{{Short description|Species of lizard}} {{Use dmy dates|date=December 2020}} {{Use Australian English|date=October 2011}} {{speciesbox | image = Tree Dragon444.jpg | status = LC | status_system = IUCN3.1 | status_ref = <ref name="iucn status 20 November 2021">{{cite iucn |author=Melville, J. |author2=Hutchinson, M. |author3=Clemann, N. |date=2018 |title=''Amphibolurus muricatus'' |volume=2018 |article-number=e.T83410038A83453648 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-1.RLTS.T83410038A83453648.en |access-date=20 November 2021}}</ref> | genus = Amphibolurus | species = muricatus | authority = (White, 1790)&nbsp;<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/abrs/online-resources/fauna/afd/taxa/Amphibolurus_muricatus |title=Species ''Amphibolurus muricatus'' (White, 1790) |work=Australian Faunal Directory |publisher=Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts |date=9 October 2008}}</ref> }}

The '''jacky dragon''' ('''''Amphibolurus muricatus''''') is a type of lizard native to south-eastern Australia. Other common names include blood-sucker, stonewalker, and tree dragon.<ref name=mcphee>{{cite book |first=David R. |last=McPhee |title=Some Common Snakes and Lizards of Australia |location=Sydney |publisher=Jacaranda Pocket Guides |year=1959}}</ref><ref name=cogger96>{{cite book |first=Harold G. |last=Cogger |title=Reptiles and Amphibians of Australia |location=Port Melbourne |publisher=Reed |year=1996 |edition=5th |isbn=0-7301-0088-X}}</ref> It was one of the first Australian reptiles to be named by Europeans, originally described by English zoologist George Shaw in Surgeon-General John White's ''Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales'',<ref name=white> {{Citation | author=White, John |author-link= John White (surgeon) | title=Journal of a voyage to New South Wales with sixty-five plates of non-descript animals, birds, lizards, serpents, curious cones of trees and other natural productions | date=1790 | place=London | publisher=J. Debrett | url=http://purl.library.usyd.edu.au/setis/id/p00092 }}, also at [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks03/0301531h.html Project Gutenberg Australia] </ref> published in London in 1790.<ref name=bustard>{{cite book |first=H. Robert |last=Bustard |title=Australian Lizards |location=Sydney |publisher=Collins |year=1970 |isbn=0-00-211420-8}}</ref> The lizard is well-known for its bright yellow mouth and well-developed vertebral crest, as well as the temperature-dependent sex determination of its offspring.

The Wergaia people of the Wimmera region of north-western Victoria call it ''nganurganity''<!--spelled 'r' in the compound though still pronounced 'nganurr' 'black goanna'-->. In 2017, the star Sigma Canis Majoris was officially named "Unurgunite" (a 19th-century transcription of ''nganurganity''), due to its identification with the jacky dragon in Wergaia traditions.

==Taxonomy== The jacky dragon<!-- repeat of taxobox is a part of the Reptilia class, the Squamata order, the Sauria suborder, and the family Agamidae.--><ref name=cogger96/> is one of the 70 species of dragons (Agamidae) found in Australia. It is generally diurnal and tends to run in an upright posture when pursued. Common morphological characteristics include rough, nonglossy scales, broad, thick, and fleshy tongues, and well-developed limbs, especially hind limbs, which are generally longer and have five-clawed digits. Most dragons are also characterised by a lack of tail autotomy and the presence of femoral and/or preanal pores. Agamidae dragons are oviparous and tend to deposit their eggs in burrows.<ref name=wilson>{{cite book |first1=Steve |last1=Wilson |first2=Gerry |last2=Swan |title=Reptiles of Australia |location=Princeton, NJ |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=2003 |isbn=978-0-691-11728-7}}</ref>

==Morphology== thumb|left|A picture of the jacky dragon taken in south-eastern Australia

The jacky dragon is pale grey to dark brown in colour, with dark patches along the middle of the back. The dark patches are interrupted by pale blotches that often blend together to form a continuous stripe from above the arm to the groin.<ref name=cogger96/> A dark brown bar is present between the eye and the ear, but no dark stripe is present between the nostril and the eye, as in many other dragons. The lips and lower jaw tend to be of a lighter colour than the rest of the head. Jacky dragons are also characterised by a bright yellow lining in their mouths.<ref name=wilson/> Specimens have been seen with orange-red corners on the inside of their mouths, which may have given rise to the common name of blood-sucker.

The jacky dragon is more readily distinguishable by its five crests: a nuchal crest continuous with a vertebral series of enlarged scales, paravertebral series from the nape to the base of the tail, which is separated from the vertebral series by two or three scales, and a dorsolateral series on each side.<ref name=cogger96/> The hind legs are covered in large, spinose scales and small, keeled scales.<ref name=wilson/> Jacky dragons also have spinose scales on the sides of their necks. The tympanum is medium-sized and fairly conspicuous.<ref name=cogger96/> The average length of a jacky dragon is {{convert|9|in|order=flip|round=5|abbr=on}}, including the tail, though they have been recorded at a length of up to {{convert|17.5|in|order=flip|round=5|abbr=on}}. The tail is generally twice as long as the body.<ref name=mcphee/> The average mass of the jacky dragon is 30&nbsp;g, although the largest dragons have been recorded at around 67&nbsp;g. The size of the dragons' heads can be used to differentiate between sexes, with males usually having conspicuously larger heads.<ref name=cogger96/>

==Reproduction and life cycle== Gravid females are found from October until February,<ref name=bustard/> and they lay up to eight eggs.<ref name=wilson88>{{cite book |first1=Stephen K. |last1=Wilson |first2=David G. |last2=Knowles |title=Australia's Reptiles: A Photographic Reference to the Terrestrial Reptiles of Australia |location=Sydney |publisher=Collins |year=1988 |isbn=0-7322-0011-3}}</ref> Clutch size tends to be positively correlated with female body size. Most adult females lay at least one clutch every summer.<ref name=cogger96/> They tend to lay their clutches under sheets of bark or decaying vegetation over sandy deposits.<ref name=mcphee/> The first young begin to appear at the end of December and are abundant by February. Jacky dragons are usually about {{convert|3|in|order=flip|round=5|abbr=on}} in length immediately following hatching.<ref name=bustard/>

The sex of the hatchlings is determined by the temperature of the nest, a process known as temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD). The hatchlings are females in low- and high-temperature environments and males in medium-temperature environments. This causes young dragons from clutches laid earlier in the season to be predominately male.<ref name=cogger96/> Shine suggests, however, that the sex of the hatchling is determined soon after oviposition when the mother still has considerable control over the temperature of the nest. This may falsify the hypothesis that TSD evolved in lizards so as to match the sex of the offspring with environmental conditions that may be unpredictable when the clutch is laid, as is most likely the case for turtles, tuataras, and crocodiles.<ref>{{cite journal |first1=Richard |last1=Shine |first2=Daniel A. |last2=Warner |first3=Rajkumar |last3=Radder |title=Windows of embryonic sexual lability in two lizard species with environmental sex determination |journal=Ecology |volume=88 |issue=7 |year=2007 |pages=1781–1788 |doi=10.1890/06-2024.1 | pmid = 17645024}}</ref> In fact, recent research suggests TSD has evolved in lizards so as to ensure reproductive success in the offspring.<ref name=shine>{{cite journal |first1=Richard |last1=Shine |first2=Daniel A. |last2=Warner |title=The adaptive significance of temperature-dependent sex determination in a reptile |journal=Nature |volume=451 |year=2008 |pages=566–568 |doi=10.1038/nature06519 |pmid=18204437 |issue=7178|s2cid=967516 }}</ref>

The jacky dragon reaches sexual maturity rapidly. Females can lay clutches within one year of hatching. The average lifespan of the jacky dragon is four years, which is significantly shorter than most lizards.<ref name=shine/>

==Ecology== ===Distribution=== Jacky dragons are found along the southeastern coast of Australia. They have been found as far north as central Queensland, in New South Wales, Victoria, and in the southeastern portion of South Australia.<ref name=mcphee/>

==Habitat== The jacky dragon is usually found in dry sclerophyll forests and woodlands. They are present in the eastern highlands, but not in alpine areas. They are semiarboreal, and individuals are often seen perching on fallen or standing timber.<ref name=wilson/>

==Predators and prey== Insects compose most of the diet of the jacky dragon, and include flies, moths, caterpillars, grasshoppers, and small beetles.<ref name=mcphee />

Predators of young jacky dragons are numerous, and include small mammals, such as feral cats or rats, and other reptiles. Adults face aerial predation from birds such as kookaburras, ravens, black-shouldered kites, and Nankeen kestrels.<ref name=cogger96/> The dragons use visual cues such as the changing area over time, edge length, shape, and orientation in the recognition of aerial predators.<ref>{{cite journal |first1=Paul A. |last1=Carlile |first2=Richard A. |last2=Peters |first3=Christopher S. |last3=Evans |title=Detection of a looming stimulus by the Jacky Dragon: selective sensitivity to characteristics of an aerial predator |journal=Animal Behaviour |volume=72 |issue=3 |year=2006 |pages=553–562 |doi=10.1016/j.anbehav.2005.10.027 |s2cid=53162134}}</ref>

==Behaviour== Jacky dragons are very swift runners and, like many other dragons (Agamidae), will sometimes run in an almost upright position on their hind legs when pursued. In cool, wet weather, they bury themselves in the sand or shelter under a bush. They rarely enter the water, but do have the ability to swim.<ref name=mcphee/> In a fight, opponents circle each other in an upright position with their bodies laterally compressed so as to enlarge their appearance. They tend to direct their attacks towards the tails of their opponents. Various territorial displays include tail-waving, raising or lowering their bodies, head-bobbing, arm-waving, and darkening their colour.<ref name=wilson88 />

Jacky dragons have many different displays, or series of movements, that are used as communication between conspecifics. The push-up display, for example, begins with a series of tail flicks, backward and forward arm-waves, a push-up, and a characteristic rocking of the entire body.<ref name=cogger96/> Those unique movements have velocity and directional characteristics that distinguish them from other environmental occurrences such as the blowing of vegetation. That is necessary because the visual system of the jacky dragon relies mostly on movement for information.<ref>{{cite journal |first1=R. A. |last1=Peters |first2=C. S. |last2=Evans |title=Design of the jacky dragon visual display: signal and noise characteristics in a complex moving environment |journal=Journal of Comparative Physiology A |volume=189 |issue=6 |year=2003 |pages=447–459 |doi=10.1007/s00359-003-0423-1|pmid=12756486 |s2cid=16142779 }}</ref>

==Conservation status== The jacky dragon is not in danger of extinction. Its abundance, along with other common reptiles, is a result of the heterogeneity and structural complexity of the ground and groundcover of undisturbed areas, which is important in the conservation of reptiles in Australia.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Geoff W. |last=Brown |title=The influence of habitat disturbance on reptiles in a Box-Ironbark eucalypt forest of south-eastern Australia |journal=Biodiversity and Conservation |volume=10 |issue=2 |year=2001 |pages=161–176 |doi=10.1023/A:1008919521638|s2cid=24090113 }}</ref>

==References== {{reflist}} *[https://web.archive.org/web/20110707201635/http://petlizards.awareness-guide.com/pet-lizards/pet-lizards-all-you-need-to-know/ Pet Lizards: All You Need To Know]

{{Taxonbar|from=Q281038}}

Category:Amphibolurus Category:Reptiles of Victoria (state) Category:Reptiles of Queensland Category:Reptiles of New South Wales Category:Reptiles of South Australia Category:Reptiles described in 1790 Category:Taxa named by John White (surgeon) Category:Agamid lizards of Australia