Reptiles and Amphibians House Species List Updated(as of November 2021)
Fire salamander
One-toed amphiuma
Emperor spotted newt
Brown newt
Fire-bellied toad
Eastern copperhead
Northern water snake
Timber rattlesnake
Eastern massasauga
Flat-tailed spider tortoise
Standing’s day gecko
Madagascar tree boa
Madagascar ground boa
West African gaboon viper
Cottonmouth
Solomon Island tree boa
Green tree python
Magnificent tree frog(Splendid tree frog, ranoidea splendida they are the same species)
Golfodulcean poison frog
Green-and-black poison dart frog
Crested gecko(eyelash gecko, c.ciliatus)
King cobra
Mertens’ water monitor
Cuvier’s dwarf caiman
Florida common snapping turtle
Mata mata
Weber’s sailfin lizard
Chinese crocodile lizard
Black tree monitor
Western diamondback rattlesnake
Prehensile-tailed skink
Banded rock rattlesnake
Pancake tortoise
Mali uromastyx
Panamint rattlesnake
Sidewinder
Green anaconda
Reticulated python
West African dwarf crocodile
West African crocodile(also known as desert or sacred crocodile)
Aldabra giant tortoise
Santa Cruz Island tortoise
Desert tortoise
Mexican beaded lizard(1.0 on exhibit)
Rio Fuerte beaded lizard(1.0 on exhibit)
Hosmer’s skink
Eastern shingleback
This list is made because many species have come and gone since covid, and to specify the species/subspecies for some of them which the zoo sometimes dosen’t do(ex. Mexican beaded lizard and Rio Fuerte beaded lizard)
Forgot Gila monster on the list.
Beaded lizards: many people make this a confusion and people think the beaded lizards are all Mexican beaded lizards(
h.horridum.) The Mexican beaded lizard is the most commonly known beaded lizard and Mexican and Rio Fuerte beaded lizards and the Gila monster are the two venomous lizards primarily found in Mexico and Guatemala. There are 4 species of beaded lizard(not subspecies.)
-Mexican beaded lizard(
h.horridum), a bunch of large spots on the body, found through Mexico with the broadest range
-Rio Fuerte beaded lizard(
h.exasperatum), dark in color, with less, smaller spots spread throughout, Western Mexico
-Chiapan beaded lizard(
h.alvarezi), solid brown in color, little to no spots, Northern Mexico and Northwestern Guatamela. The ranges of these three species overlap.
-Guatamelan beaded lizard(
h.charlesbogerti), dark in color, less spots than the Mexican more spread throughout the body, only found in Northeast Guatamela, with fewer than 200 in the wild. Unlike the other three species, this species’ range does not overlap.
Both the beaded lizards on-exhibit are older and usually rest in their favorite spots, but occasionally you can see one, or both, the beaded lizards moving around. People often only see one, the Mexican beaded lizard who likes to hang out under the log close to the glass. Look in the back- the Rio Fuerte is usually camouflaged up on a small hill in the back with dirt in a inground hole, making him hard to see, unless with people who visit the zoo often! In his younger years, the Rio Fuerte beaded lizard was usually the most active who always seemed to be exploring. I remember in the early 2010’s he was always the one moving. Both lizards are in their mid-20s, they can live to around 30. There was another Mexican beaded lizard up until a few years ago who was in his early 40s. You were able to tell them apart, this one was stockier, slightly smaller with more larger spots. They were the same species, just like individuals who can look different. There are also two female beaded lizards off-exhibit, not sure which species but they must be either Mexican or Rio Fuerte because the zoo only keeps those two. Zoo Atlanta has Guatemalan beaded lizards which are the most endangered. Angus the male green anaconda is breaking up that record. He will be 43 in a few days on Thanksgiving, and anacondas have the same lifespan in captivity with much shorter in the wild-10 years. I’m visiting the zoo tomorrow just in time close enough to his milestone birthday. Any visit he can be noticeably gone just like what happened with the timber rattlesnake, and I was prepared for that a while ago because he’s also old but his age was not as extremely old as Angus. The anacondas are my favorite animals in the Reptile House, and the keepers often don’t know their age- I remember seeing their ages from the old zoo website so I am aware. Amanda, his female companion and the one who had two surgeries last year, has an estimated age of 30 since she was wild caught. However, we don’t know her age but she is pretty old. I like the elderly animals because it’s quite impressive living up to an age and still doing well. The Philly Zoo is very old itself so it has so many old animals. Many animals have been there for quite a long time.