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Tuatara

 
Tuatara

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Tuatara



 
 
The tuatara is a reptile endemic to New Zealand
New Zealand

New Zealand is an island country in the south-western Pacific Ocean comprising two main landmasses , and numerous Islands of New Zealand, most notably Stewart Island/Rakiura and the Chatham Islands....
 which, though it resembles most lizard
Lizard

Lizards are a large and widespread group of squamate reptiles, with nearly 5,000 species, ranging across all continents except Antarctica as well as most oceanic island chains....
s, is actually part of a distinct lineage, order Sphenodontia
Sphenodontia

Sphenodontia is an order of Lepidosauria reptiles that includes only one living genus, the tuatara . Despite its current lack of diversity, the Sphenodontia at one time included a wide array of genera in several families, and represents a lineage stretching back to the Mesozoic Era....
. The two species of tuatara are the only surviving members of its order, which flourished around 200 million years ago. Their most recent common ancestor with any other extant group is with the squamates
Squamata

Squamata, or the scaled reptiles, is the largest recent order of reptiles, including lizards and snakes. Members of the order are distinguished by their skins, which bear horny scale or shields....
 (lizards and snake
Snake

Snakes are elongate legless carnivore reptiles of the suborder Serpentes that can be distinguished from legless lizards by their lack of eyelids and external ears....
s). For this reason, tuatara are of great interest in the study of the evolution of lizards and snakes, and for the reconstruction of the appearance and habits of the earliest diapsid
Diapsid

Diapsids are a group of reptiles that developed two holes in each side of their skulls, about 300 million years ago during the late Carboniferous period....
s (the group that also includes bird
Bird

Birds are wing, Bipedalismal, endothermic , vertebrate animals that lay egg . There are around 10,000 living species, making them the most numerous tetrapod vertebrates....
s and crocodile
Crocodile

A crocodile is any species belonging to the family Crocodylidae . The term can also be used more loosely to include all members of the order Crocodilia: i.e....
s).

Tuatara are greenish brown, and measure up to 80 cm (32 in) from head to tail-tip with a spiny crest along the back, especially pronounced in males.






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Encyclopedia


The tuatara is a reptile endemic to New Zealand
New Zealand

New Zealand is an island country in the south-western Pacific Ocean comprising two main landmasses , and numerous Islands of New Zealand, most notably Stewart Island/Rakiura and the Chatham Islands....
 which, though it resembles most lizard
Lizard

Lizards are a large and widespread group of squamate reptiles, with nearly 5,000 species, ranging across all continents except Antarctica as well as most oceanic island chains....
s, is actually part of a distinct lineage, order Sphenodontia
Sphenodontia

Sphenodontia is an order of Lepidosauria reptiles that includes only one living genus, the tuatara . Despite its current lack of diversity, the Sphenodontia at one time included a wide array of genera in several families, and represents a lineage stretching back to the Mesozoic Era....
. The two species of tuatara are the only surviving members of its order, which flourished around 200 million years ago. Their most recent common ancestor with any other extant group is with the squamates
Squamata

Squamata, or the scaled reptiles, is the largest recent order of reptiles, including lizards and snakes. Members of the order are distinguished by their skins, which bear horny scale or shields....
 (lizards and snake
Snake

Snakes are elongate legless carnivore reptiles of the suborder Serpentes that can be distinguished from legless lizards by their lack of eyelids and external ears....
s). For this reason, tuatara are of great interest in the study of the evolution of lizards and snakes, and for the reconstruction of the appearance and habits of the earliest diapsid
Diapsid

Diapsids are a group of reptiles that developed two holes in each side of their skulls, about 300 million years ago during the late Carboniferous period....
s (the group that also includes bird
Bird

Birds are wing, Bipedalismal, endothermic , vertebrate animals that lay egg . There are around 10,000 living species, making them the most numerous tetrapod vertebrates....
s and crocodile
Crocodile

A crocodile is any species belonging to the family Crocodylidae . The term can also be used more loosely to include all members of the order Crocodilia: i.e....
s).

Tuatara are greenish brown, and measure up to 80 cm (32 in) from head to tail-tip with a spiny crest along the back, especially pronounced in males. Their dentition, in which two rows of teeth in the upper jaw overlap one row on the lower jaw, is unique among living species. They are further unusual in having a pronounced parietal eye
Parietal eye

A parietal eye, also known as a parietal organ or third-eye, is a part of the epithalamus present in some animal species. The eye may be photoreceptive and is usually associated with the pineal gland, regulating circadian rhythmicity and hormone production for thermoregulation....
, dubbed the "third eye", whose current function is a subject of ongoing research. They are able to hear although no external ear is present, and have a number of unique features in their skeleton, some of them apparently evolutionarily retained from fish. Although tuatara are sometimes called "living fossil
Living fossil

Living fossil is an informal term for any living species of organism which appears to be the same as a species otherwise only known from fossils and which has no close living relatives....
s", recent taxonomic and molecular work has shown that they have changed significantly since the Mesozoic
Mesozoic

The Mesozoic Era is one of three Geologic time scale of the Phanerozoic eon . The division of time into eras dates back to Giovanni Arduino, in the 18th century, although his original name for the era now called the 'Mesozoic' was 'Secondary' ....
 era.

The tuatara has been classified as an endangered species
Endangered species

An endangered species is a population of an organism which is at risk of becoming extinct because it is either few in numbers, or threatened by changing environmental or predation parameters....
 since 1895 (the second species, S. guntheri, was not recognised until 1989). Tuatara, like many of New Zealand's native animals, are threatened by habitat loss and the introduced Polynesian Rat
Polynesian Rat

The Polynesian Rat, or Pacific Rat , known to the Maori as kiore, is the third most widespread species of rat in the world behind the Brown Rat and Black Rat....
 (Rattus exulans). They were extinct on the mainland, with the remaining populations confined to 32 offshore islands, until the first mainland release into the heavily fenced and monitored Karori Wildlife Sanctuary
Karori Wildlife Sanctuary

Karori Wildlife Sanctuary is a protected natural area in Wellington, New Zealand, where the bio-diversity of 225 Hectare of forest is being restored....
 in 2005.

The name "tuatara" derives from the Maori language
Maori language

Maori or te reo Maori, also commonly shortened to te reo , functions as one of the official languages of New Zealand. Linguists classify it within the Eastern Polynesian languages as closely related to Cook Islands Maori, Tuamotuan language and Tahitian language; somewhat less closely to Hawaiian language and Marquesan language; a...
, and means "peaks on the back". As with many other Maori loanwords, the plural form is now generally the same as the singular in formal New Zealand English usage. "Tuataras" remains common in less formal speech, particularly among older speakers.

Taxonomy and evolution

Tuatara, and their sister group Squamata
Squamata

Squamata, or the scaled reptiles, is the largest recent order of reptiles, including lizards and snakes. Members of the order are distinguished by their skins, which bear horny scale or shields....
 (which includes lizards, snakes and amphisbaenia
Amphisbaenia

The Amphisbaenia are a suborder of usually legless squamates closely related to lizards and snakes. As many species possess a pink body coloration and scales arranged in rings, they have a superficial resemblance to earthworms....
ns), belong to the superorder Lepidosauria
Lepidosauria

The Lepidosauria are reptiles with overlapping scales. They include the tuataras, lizards, snakes and amphisbaenians. Lepidosaurians are the most successful of modern reptiles....
, the only surviving taxon within Lepidosauromorpha
Lepidosauromorpha

Lepidosauromorpha is a group of reptiles comprising all diapsids closer to lizards than to archosaurs . The only living sub-group is the Lepidosauria: extant lizards, snakes, and tuatara....
. Squamates and tuatara both show caudal autotomy (loss of the tail-tip when threatened), and have a transverse cloacal slit. The origin of the tuatara probably lies close to the split between the Lepidosauromorpha and the Archosauromorpha
Archosauromorpha

Archosauromorpha is an Infraclass of diapsid reptiles that first appeared during the late Permian and became more common during the Triassic. Included in this infraclass are the orders Rhynchosauria, Trilophosauridae, Prolacertiformes, Archosauriformes, and, tentatively, the Choristodera....
. Though tuatara resemble lizards, the similarity is superficial, since the family has several characteristics unique among reptile
Reptile

Reptiles, or members of the class Reptilia, are air-breathing, cold-blooded vertebrates that have skin covered in scale as opposed to hair or feathers....
s. The typical lizard shape is very common for the early amniotes; the oldest known fossil of a reptile, the Hylonomus
Hylonomus

Hylonomus was an early reptile. It lived 315 Annum during the Carboniferous period. As of 2006 it is the earliest confirmed reptile . It was 20 cm long and probably would have looked rather similar to modern lizards....
, resembles a modern lizard.

Tuatara were originally classified as lizards in 1831 when the British Museum
British Museum

The British Museum is a museum of human history and culture situated in London. Its collections, which number more than 7 million Object , are amongst the largest and most comprehensive in the world and originate from all continents, illustrating and documenting the story of human culture from its beginning to the present....
 received a skull. The genus remained misclassified until 1867, when Albert Günther
Albert C. L. G. Günther

Albrecht Karl Ludwig Gotthilf G?nther Fellow of the Royal Society October 3, 1830 ? February 1 1914, was a Germany-born British zoologist.G?nther was born in Esslingen in Swabia ....
 of the British Museum noted features similar to birds, turtles and crocodiles. He proposed the order Rhynchocephalia (meaning "beak head") for the tuatara and its fossil relatives. Now, most authors prefer to use the more exclusive order name of Sphenodontia for the tuatara and its closest living relatives.

Many disparately related species were subsequently added to the Rhynchocephalia, resulting in what taxonomists call a "wastebasket taxon". Williston
Samuel Wendell Williston

Samuel Wendell Williston was an American educator and paleontologist who was the first to propose that birds developed flight Origin of birds#Origin of bird flight , rather than arboreally ....
 proposed the Sphenodontia to include only tuatara and their closest fossil relatives in 1925. Sphenodon is derived from the Greek
List of Greek words with English derivatives

This is a list of Greek words with derivatives in English. The words are in Greek alphabetic order, with tables for the 24 Greek letters, listing thousands of related English words....
 for "wedge" (sf????/sphenos) and "tooth" (d??t?/odon(t)).

Tuatara have been referred to as living fossil
Living fossil

Living fossil is an informal term for any living species of organism which appears to be the same as a species otherwise only known from fossils and which has no close living relatives....
s. This means that they have remained mostly unchanged throughout their entire history, which is approximately 220 million years. However, taxonomic
Taxonomy

Taxonomy is the practice and science of classification. The word comes from the Greek language ', taxis and ', nomos .Taxonomies, or taxonomic schemes, are composed of taxonomic units known as taxa , or kinds of things that are arranged frequently in a hierarchical structure....
 work on Sphenodontia has shown that this group has undergone a variety of changes throughout the Mesozoic
Mesozoic

The Mesozoic Era is one of three Geologic time scale of the Phanerozoic eon . The division of time into eras dates back to Giovanni Arduino, in the 18th century, although his original name for the era now called the 'Mesozoic' was 'Secondary' ....
, and a recent molecular study showed that their rate of molecular evolution is faster than of any other animal so far examined. Many of the niches occupied by lizards today were then held by sphenodontians. There was even a successful group of aquatic sphenodontians known as pleurosaurs
Pleurosaurus

Pleurosaurus is an extinct genus of diapsid reptile belonging to the order Sphenodontia.Pleurosaurus fossils were discovered in the Solnhofen limestone formation of Bavaria, Germany....
, which differed markedly from living tuatara. Tuatara show cold weather adaptations that allow them to thrive on the islands of New Zealand; these adaptations may be unique to tuatara since their sphenodontian ancestors lived in the much warmer climates of the Mesozoic
Mesozoic

The Mesozoic Era is one of three Geologic time scale of the Phanerozoic eon . The division of time into eras dates back to Giovanni Arduino, in the 18th century, although his original name for the era now called the 'Mesozoic' was 'Secondary' ....
.

Description

The tuatara is considered the most unspecialised living amniote
Amniote

The amniotes are a group of tetrapod vertebrates that have a terrestrially adapted egg. They include the Synapsida and Sauropsida . Amniote embryos, whether laid as eggs or carried by the female, are protected and aided by several extensive membranes....
; the brain and mode of locomotion resemble that of amphibians and the heart is more primitive than that of any other reptile.

Both species are sexually dimorphic
Sexual dimorphism

Sexual dimorphism is the systematic difference in form between individuals of different sex in the same species. Examples include color , size, and the presence or absence of parts of the body used in courtship displays or fights, such as ornamental feathers, horns, antlers or tusks....
, males being larger. Adult S. punctatus males measure 61 cm (24 in) in length and females 45 cm (18 in). The San Diego Zoo even cites a length of up to 80 cm (31 in). Males weigh up to 1 kg (2.2 lb), and females up to 0.5 kg (1.1 lb). Brother's Island tuatara are slightly smaller, weighing up to 660 g (1.3 lb).

The tuatara's greenish brown colour matches its environment, and can change over its lifetime. Tuatara shed their skin at least once per year as adults, and three or four times a year as juveniles. Tuatara sexes differ in more than size. The spiny crest on a tuatara's back, made of triangular soft folds of skin, is larger in males, and can be stiffened for display. The male abdomen is narrower than the female's.

Skull

In the course of evolution, the skull has been modified in most diapsids from the original version evident in the fossil record. However, all the original features are preserved in that of the tuatara; it has two openings (temporal fenestra) on each side of the skull, with complete arches. In addition, the upper jaw is firmly attached to the skull. This makes for a very rigid, inflexible construction. Testudines (turtle
Turtle

Turtles are reptiles of the Order Testudines , most of whose body is shielded by a special bone or cartilage animal shell developed from their ribs....
 and tortoise
Tortoise

Tortoises or land turtles are land-dwelling reptiles of the family of Testudinidae, order Turtle. Like their marine cousins, the sea turtles, tortoises are shielded from predators by a shell....
) skulls with their single temporal fenestra are widely considered to be the most primitive among amniotes, though there is evidence they may have lost the temporal holes rather than never having had them.

The tip of the upper jaw is beak-like and separated from the remainder of the jaw by a notch. There is a single row of teeth in the lower jaw and a double row in the upper, with the bottom row fitting perfectly between the two upper rows when the mouth is closed. This specific tooth arrangement is not seen in any other reptile; although most snake
Snake

Snakes are elongate legless carnivore reptiles of the suborder Serpentes that can be distinguished from legless lizards by their lack of eyelids and external ears....
s have a double row of teeth in their upper jaw, their arrangement and function is different from the tuatara's. The jaws, joined by ligament
Ligament

Ligaments connect bone to bone. In anatomy, the term ligament is used to denote three different types of structures:# Fibrous Tissue that connects bones to other bones....
, chew with backwards and forwards movements combined with a shearing up and down action. The force of the bite is suitable for shearing chitin
Chitin

Chitin n is a long-chain polymer of a N-acetylglucosamine, a derivative of glucose, and is found in many places throughout the natural world....
 and bone. The tuatara's teeth are not replaced, since they are not separate structures like real teeth, but sharp projections of the jaw bone. As their teeth wear down, older tuatara have to switch to softer prey such as earthworm
Earthworm

Earthworm is the common name for the largest members of Oligochaeta in the phylum Annelida. The earthworm is the most known worm in America, and other countries....
s, larva
Larva

A larva is a young form of animal with indirect developmental biology, going through or undergoing metamorphosis .The larva can look completely different from the adult form, for example, a caterpillar differs from a butterfly....
e, and slug
Slug

Slug is a common non-scientific word, which is often applied to any gastropod Mollusca whatsoever that has a very reduced shell, a small internal shell, or no shell at all....
s, and eventually have to chew their food between smooth jaw bones.

Sensory organs

The eyes can focus
Accommodation (eye)

Accommodation is the process by which the :eye increases optical power to maintain a clear image on an object as it draws near the eye. The young human eye can change focus from distance to 7 cm from the eye in 350 milliseconds....
 independently, and are specialized with a "duplex retina" that contains two types of visual cells for both day and night vision, and a tapetum lucidum
Tapetum lucidum

The tapetum lucidum is a layer of tissue in the eye of many vertebrate animals, that lies immediately behind or sometimes within the retina. It Reflection visible light back through the retina, increasing the light available to the Photoreceptor cell....
 which reflects on to the retina to enhance vision in the dark. There is also a third eyelid on each eye, the nictitating membrane
Nictitating membrane

The nictitating membrane is a transparent or translucent third eyelid present in some animals that can be drawn across the eye for protection and to moisten the eye while also keeping visibility....
.

The tuatara has a third eye on the top of its head called the parietal eye
Parietal eye

A parietal eye, also known as a parietal organ or third-eye, is a part of the epithalamus present in some animal species. The eye may be photoreceptive and is usually associated with the pineal gland, regulating circadian rhythmicity and hormone production for thermoregulation....
. It has its own lens, cornea, retina
Retina

The vertebrate retina is a light sensitive tissue lining the inner surface of the eye. The optics of the eye create an image of the visual world on the retina, which serves much the same function as the film in a camera....
 with rod-like structures and degenerated nerve connection to the brain, suggesting it evolved from a real eye. The parietal eye is only visible in hatchlings, which have a translucent patch at the top centre of the skull. After four to six months it becomes covered with opaque scales and pigment. Its purpose is unknown, but it may be useful in absorbing ultraviolet
Ultraviolet

Ultraviolet light is electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength shorter than that of visible light, but longer than x-rays, in the range 400 nanometer to 10 nm, and energies from 3 Electron volt to 124 eV....
 rays to manufacture vitamin D
Vitamin D

Vitamin D is a group of fat-soluble prohormones, the two major forms of which are vitamin D2 and vitamin D3 . The term vitamin D also refers to metabolites and other analogues of these substances....
, as well as to determine light/dark cycles, and help with thermoregulation
Thermoregulation

Thermoregulation is the ability of an organism to keep its core temperature within certain boundaries, even when the surrounding temperature is very different....
. Of all extant tetrapods, the parietal eye is most pronounced in the tuatara. The parietal eye is part of the pineal complex, another part of which is the pineal gland
Pineal gland

The pineal gland is a small endocrine system gland in the vertebrate brain. It produces melatonin, a hormone that affects the modulation of wake/sleep patterns and photoperiodic functions....
, which in tuatara secretes melatonin at night. It has been shown that some salamanders use their pineal body to perceive polarised light, and thus determine the position of the sun, even under cloud cover, aiding navigation.

Together with turtle
Turtle

Turtles are reptiles of the Order Testudines , most of whose body is shielded by a special bone or cartilage animal shell developed from their ribs....
s, the tuatara has the most primitive hearing organs among the amniotes. There is no eardrum
Eardrum

The tympanic membrane , is a thin biological membrane that separates the external ear from the middle ear. Its function is to transmit sound from the air to the ossicles inside the middle ear....
 and no earhole, and the middle ear
Middle ear

The middle ear is the portion of the ear internal to the eardrum, and external to the oval window of the cochlea. The mammalian middle ear contains three ossicles, which couple vibration of the eardrum into waves in the fluid and membranes of the inner ear....
 cavity is filled with loose tissue, mostly adipose tissue
Adipose tissue

In histology, adipose tissue or fat is loose connective tissue composed of adipocytes. Adipose tissue is derived from lipoblasts. Its main role is to store energy in the form of fat, although it also cushions and Thermal insulation the body....
. The stapes
Stapes

The stapes or stirrup is the stirrup-shaped small bone or ossicles in themiddle ear which is attached to the incus laterally and to the fenestra ovalis, the "oval window" medially....
 comes into contact with the quadrate
Quadrate bone

The quadrate bone is part of a skull in most tetrapods, including amphibians, sauropsids and early synapsids. In these animals it connects to the quadratojugal and squamosal in the skull, and forms part of the jaw joint ....
 (which is immovable) as well as the hyoid
Hyoid bone

The hyoid bone is a horseshoe shaped bone situated in the anterior midline of the neck between the chin and the thyroid cartilage. At rest, it lies at the level of the base of the mandible in the front and the third cervical vertebra behind....
 and squamosal
Squamosal

The squamosal is a bone of the head of higher vertebrates. It is the principal component of the cheek region in the skull, lying below the temporal series and otic notch and bounded anteriorly by postorbital....
. The hair cell
Hair cell

Hair cells are the sensory receptors of both the auditory system and the vestibular system in all vertebrates. In mammals, the auditory hair cells are located within the organ of Corti on a thin basilar membrane in the cochlea of the inner ear....
s are unspecialized, innervated by both afferent
Afferent nerve

In the nervous system, afferent neurons , carry action potential from receptor s or sense organs toward the central nervous system. This term can also be used to describe relative connections between structures....
 and efferent nerve
Efferent nerve

In the nervous system, efferent nerves ? otherwise known as motoneuron or effector neurons ? carry action potential away from the central nervous system to effectors such as muscles or glands ....
 fibres, and respond only to low frequencies. Even though the hearing organs are poorly developed and primitive with no visible external ears, they can still show a frequency response from 100-800 Hz
Hertz

The hertz is a measure of frequency per unit of time, or the number of list of cycles per second. It is the SI base unit of frequency in the International System of Units , and is used worldwide in both general-purpose and scientific contexts....
, with peak sensitivity of 40 dB
Decibel

The decibel is a logarithmic units of measurement that expresses the magnitude of a physical quantity relative to a specified or implied reference level....
 at 200 Hz.

Spine and ribs

The tuatara spine
Vertebral column

In human anatomy, the vertebral column is a column of 24 vertebrae, the sacrum, intervertebral discs, and the coccyx situated in the dorsum aspect of the torso, separated by spinal discs....
 is made up of hour-glass shaped amphicoelous vertebra
Vertebra

A vertebra is an individual bone in the flexible column that defines vertebrate animals. The vertebral column encases and protects the spinal cord, which runs from the base of the cranium down the dorsal side of the animal until reaching the pelvis....
e, concave both before and behind. This is the usual condition of fish vertebrae and some amphibians, but is unique to tuatara within the amniotes.

The tuatara has gastralia
Gastralium

Gastralia are dermal bones found in the anatomical terms of location body wall of crocodilian and tuatara species. They are found between the sternum and pelvis, and do not articulate with the vertebrae....
, rib-like bones also called gastric or abdominal ribs, the presumed ancestral trait of diapsids. They are found in some lizard
Lizard

Lizards are a large and widespread group of squamate reptiles, with nearly 5,000 species, ranging across all continents except Antarctica as well as most oceanic island chains....
s, where they are mostly made of cartilage, as well as crocodiles and the tuatara, and are not attached to the spine or thoracic ribs. The true ribs are small projections, with small, hooked bones, called uncinate processes, found on the rear of each rib. This feature is also present in birds. The tuatara is the only living tetrapod
Tetrapod

Tetrapods are vertebrate animals having four feet, legs or leglike appendages. Amphibians, reptiles, dinosaurs/birds, and mammals are all tetrapods, and even the limbless snakes are tetrapods by descent....
 with well developed gastralia and uncinate processes.

In the early tetrapods, the gastralia and ribs with uncinate processes, together with bony elements such as bony plates in the skin (osteoderms) and clavicle
Clavicle

In human anatomy, the clavicle or collar bone is classified as a flat bone that makes up part of the shoulder girdle . It receives its name from the Latin clavicula because the bone rotates along its axis like a key when the shoulder is Abduction ....
s (collar bone), would have formed a sort of exo-skeleton around the body, protecting the belly and helped to hold in the guts and inner organs. These anatomical details most likely evolved from structures involved in locomotion even before the vertebrates ventured onto land. The gastralia may have been involved in the breathing process in early amphibians and reptiles. The pelvis and shoulder girdles are arranged differently to those of lizards, as is the case with other parts of the internal anatomy and its scales.

Behaviour

Adult tuatara are terrestrial
Landform

In the earth sciences and geology sub-fields a landform or physical feature comprises a geomorphology unit, and is largely defined by its surface form and location in the landscape, as part of the terrain, and as such, is typically an element of topography....
 and nocturnal reptiles, though they will often bask in the sun to warm their bodies. Hatchlings hide under logs and stones, and are diurnal
Diurnal animal

Scientific term refered to as an animal behavior, diurnality indicates an animal that is active during the daytime and rests during the night. Animals that are not diurnal might be Nocturnality or crepuscular .  Many animal species are diurnal, including many mammals, insects and birds....
, likely because adults are cannibalistic. Tuatara thrive in temperatures much lower than those tolerated by most reptiles, and hibernate
Hibernation

Hibernation is a state of inactivity and Metabolism depression in animals, characterized by lower body temperature, slower breathing, and lower metabolic rate....
 during winter. They can maintain normal activities at temperatures as low as , while temperatures over are generally fatal. The optimal body temperature for the tuatara is from 16 to 21 °C (60-70 °F), the lowest of any reptile. The body temperature of tuatara is lower than that of other reptiles ranging from 5.2–11.2 °C (41-52 °F) over a day, whereas most reptiles have body temperatures around . The low body temperature results in a slower metabolism
Metabolism

Metabolism is the set of chemical reactions that occur in living organisms in order to maintain life. These processes allow organisms to grow and reproduce, maintain their structures, and respond to their environments....
.

Burrowing seabirds such as petrel
Petrel

This article is about the petrel seabirds. For other uses, see petrel . The flammable liquid is correctly spelt petrol.'Petrels' are tube-nosed seabirds in the bird order Procellariiformes....
s, prion
Prion (bird)

The Prions are small petrels in the genera Pachyptila and Halobaena. They form one of the four groups within the Procellariidae , along with the gadfly petrels, shearwaters and fulmarine petrels....
s and shearwater
Shearwater

Shearwaters are medium-sized long-winged seabirds. There are more than 30 species of shearwaters, a few larger ones in the genus Calonectris and many smaller species in the genus Puffinus....
s share the tuatara's island habitat during the bird's nesting season. The tuatara use the bird
Bird

Birds are wing, Bipedalismal, endothermic , vertebrate animals that lay egg . There are around 10,000 living species, making them the most numerous tetrapod vertebrates....
's burrows for shelter when available, or dig their own. The seabirds' guano
Guano

Guano is the excrement of seabirds, bats, and Harbor Seal.Guano manure is an effective fertilizer and gunpowder ingredient due to its high levels of phosphorus and nitrogen and also its lack of odor....
 helps to maintain invertebrate populations that tuatara predominantly prey on; including beetle
Beetle

Beetles are the group of insects with the largest number of known species. They are placed in the order Coleoptera , which contains more described species than in any other order in the animal, constituting about 25% of all known life-forms....
s, cricket
Cricket

Cricket is a Bat-and-ball games team sport that originated in southern England. The earliest definite reference is dated 1598, and it is now played in more than 100 countries....
s and spider
Spider

Spiders are air-breathing chelicerate arthropods that have eight legs, and chelicerae modified into fangs that inject venom. In their bodies the usual arthropod segments are fused into two Tagma , the cephalothorax and abdomen, joined by a small, cylindrical pedicel....
s. Their diet also consists of frog
Frog

Frogs are amphibians in the order Anura , formerly referred to as Salientia . The name frog derives from Old English language frogga, , cognate with Sanskrit plava , probably deriving from Proto-Indo-European language praw = "to jump"....
s, lizard
Lizard

Lizards are a large and widespread group of squamate reptiles, with nearly 5,000 species, ranging across all continents except Antarctica as well as most oceanic island chains....
s and bird's eggs and chicks. The eggs and young of seabirds that are seasonally available as food for tuatara may provide beneficial fatty acids
Essential fatty acid

Essential fatty acids, or EFAs, are fatty acids that cannot be constructed within an organism from other components by any known chemical pathways, and therefore must be obtained from the diet....
. Tuatara of both sexes defend territories, and will threaten and eventually bite intruders. The bite can cause serious injury. Tuatara will bite when approached, and will not let go easily.

Reproduction

Tuatara reproduce very slowly, taking ten years to reach sexual maturity. Mating occurs in midsummer; females mate and lay egg
Egg (biology)

In most birds and reptiles, an egg is the zygote, resulting from fertilization of the ovum. To enable incubation the egg is usually kept within a favourable temperature range as it nourishes and protects the growing embryo....
s once every four years. During courtship, a male makes his skin darker, raises his crests and parades toward the female. He slowly walks in circles around the female with stiffened legs. The female will either submit, and allow the male to mount her, or retreat to her burrow. Males do not have a penis
Penis

The penis is an external sex organ of certain biologically male organisms, in both vertebrates and invertebrates.The penis is a reproductive organ, technically an intromittent organ, and for Eutheria, additionally serves as the external organ of urination....
; they reproduce by the male lifting the tail of the female and placing his vent
Cloaca

In zoological anatomy, a cloaca is the posterior opening that serves as the only such opening for the alimentary tract and urinary tract of certain animal species....
 over hers. The sperm
Sperm

The term sperm is derived from the Greek word sperma and refers to the male reproductive Cell . In the types of sexual reproduction known as anisogamy and oogamy, there is a marked difference in the size of the gametes with the smaller one being termed the "male" or sperm cell....
 is then transferred into the female, much like the mating process in birds.

Brueckenechse
Tuatara eggs have a soft, parchment-like shell. It takes the females between one and three years to provide eggs with yolk, and up to seven months to form the shell. It then takes between 12 and 15 months from copulation to hatching. This means reproduction occurs at 2 to 5 year intervals, the slowest in any reptile. Wild tuatara are known to be still reproducing at about 60 years of age-- "Henry", a famous 111-year-old tuatara at Southland Museum in Invercargill
Invercargill

Invercargill is the southernmost and westernmost city in New Zealand, and one of the southernmost cities in the world. It is the commercial centre of the Southland, New Zealand List of regions in New Zealand....
, New Zealand, became a father (possibly for the first time) on 23 January 2009..

The sex of a hatchling depends on the temperature of the egg, with warmer eggs tending to produce male tuatara, and cooler eggs producing females. Eggs incubated at have an equal chance of being male or female. However, at , 80% are likely to be males, and at , 80% are likely to be females; at all hatchlings will be females. There is some evidence that sex determination in tuatara is determined by both genetic and environmental factors.

Tuatara probably have the slowest growth rates of any reptile, continuing to grow larger for the first 35 years of their lives. The average lifespan is about 60 years, but they can live to be well over 100 years old. Some experts believe that captive tuatara could live as long as 200 years.

Conservation


Distribution and threats

Tuatara were long confined to 32 offshore islands free of mammals. The islands are difficult to get to, and are colonised by few animal species, indicating that some animals absent from these islands may have caused tuatara to disappear from the mainland. However, kiore (Polynesian rat
Polynesian Rat

The Polynesian Rat, or Pacific Rat , known to the Maori as kiore, is the third most widespread species of rat in the world behind the Brown Rat and Black Rat....
s) had recently established on several of the islands, and tuatara were persisting, but not breeding, on these islands. Additionally, tuatara were much rarer on the rat-inhabited islands.

The total population of tuatara of all species and subspecies is estimated to be greater than 60,000, but less than 100,000.

Eradication of rats

Tuatara were removed from Stanley, Red Mercury and Cuvier Islands in 1990 and 1991, and maintained in captivity to allow Polynesian rats to be eradicated on those islands. All three populations bred in captivity, and after successful eradication of the rats, all individuals including the new juveniles were returned to their islands of origin. In the 1991/92 season, Little Barrier Island was found to hold only eight tuatara, which were taken into in situ captivity, where females produced 42 eggs, which were incubated at Victoria University. The resulting offspring were subsequently held in an enclosure on the island, then released into the wild in 2006 after rats were eradicated from the island.

Pacific rats were eradicated on Middle Chain Island in 1992, Whatupuke in 1993, Lady Alice Island in 1994, and Coppermine Island in 1997. Following this program, juveniles have once again been seen on the latter three islands. In contrast, rats persist on Hen Island of the same group, and no juvenile tuatara had been seen there as of 2001. Middle Chain Island holds no tuatara, but it is considered possible for rats to swim between Middle Chain and other islands that do hold tuatara, and the rats were eradicated to prevent this. Another rodent eradication was carried out on the Rangitoto Islands east of D’Urville Island, to prepare for the release of 432 Cook Strait tuatara juveniles in 2004, which were being raised at Victoria University as of 2001.


Introductions


Brothers Island tuatara
Sphenodon guntheri is present naturally on one small island with a population of approximately 400. In 1995, 50 juvenile and 18 adult Brothers Island tuatara were moved to Titi Island in Cook Strait, and their establishment monitored. Two years later, more than half of the animals had been re-sighted and all but one had gained weight. In 1998, 34 juveniles from captive breeding and 20 wild caught adults were similarly transferred to Matiu Island, a more publicly accessible location. The captive juveniles were from induced layings from wild females.

In late October 2007, it was announced that 50 tuatara collected as eggs from North Brother Island and hatched at Victoria University were being released onto Long Island in Cook Strait. The animals had been cared for at Wellington Zoo for the last five years and have been kept in secret in a specially built enclosure at the zoo, off display.

Northern tuatara
Sphenodon punctatus naturally occurs on 29 islands and its population is estimated to be over 60,000 individuals.

In 1996, 32 adult northern tuatara were moved from Moutoki Island to Moutohora. The carrying capacity of Moutohora is estimated at 8500 individuals, and the island could allow public viewing of wild tuatara.

In 2003, sixty northern tuatara were introduced to Tiritiri Matangi Island
Tiritiri Matangi Island

Tiritiri Matangi Island lies in the Hauraki Gulf of New Zealand, 4 km east of the Whangaparaoa Peninsula in the North Island and 30 km north east of Auckland....
 from Middle Island in the Mercury group. They are occasionally seen sunbathing by visitors to the island.

A mainland release of S. punctatus occurred in 2005 in the heavily fenced and monitored Karori Wildlife Sanctuary
Karori Wildlife Sanctuary

Karori Wildlife Sanctuary is a protected natural area in Wellington, New Zealand, where the bio-diversity of 225 Hectare of forest is being restored....
. The second mainland release took place in October 2007, when a further 130 were transferred from Stephens Island to the Karori Sanctuary.

Captive breeding

There are several tuatara breeding programmes within New Zealand. Southland Museum and Art Gallery
Southland museum and art gallery

The Southland Museum and Art Gallery is located in Gala Street, Invercargill. It is Southland's largest cultural and heritage institution, and contains a wide variety of the region's art, history and natural history collections....
 in Invercargill
Invercargill

Invercargill is the southernmost and westernmost city in New Zealand, and one of the southernmost cities in the world. It is the commercial centre of the Southland, New Zealand List of regions in New Zealand....
, was the first to have a tuatara breeding programme; they breed Sphenodon punctatus. Hamilton Zoo
Hamilton Zoo

Hamilton Zoo is the main zoo of Hamilton, New Zealand. It is situated on Brymer Road in the Hamilton, New Zealand suburb of Rotokauri, on the outskirts of the metropolitan area....
 and Wellington Zoo
Wellington Zoo

Wellington Zoo is the only Zoo in Wellington, New Zealand and is the country's oldest zoo, being first founded in 1906. The Wellington Zoo is notable within the New Zealand conservation community for being one of the leading zoos in regards to breeding of endangered animals; indeed several Sun Bear and Sumatran tiger cubs, in addition to othe...
 also breed tuatara for release into the wild. The Victoria University of Wellington
Victoria University of Wellington

Victoria University of Wellington, also known in Maori language as Te Whare Wananga o te Upoko o te Ika a Maui, was established in 1897 by Act of New Zealand Parliament, and was a former constituent college of the University of New Zealand....
 maintains a research programme into the captive breeding of tuatara, and the Pukaha Mount Bruce Wildlife Centre
Mt Bruce Wildlife Centre

Pukaha Mt Bruce Wildlife Centre is a wildlife restoration organisation based around a protected forest area in New Zealand's Wairarapa district....
 keeps a pair and a juvenile. The WildNZ Trust has a tuatara breeding enclosure at Ruawai
Ruawai

Ruawai is a small township located 30km south of Dargaville in Northland, New Zealand. The population was 426 in the 2006 Census, a decrease of 30 from 2001....
. On January 28, 2009, the 11th of 11 eggs belonging to tuataras Henry and Mildred hatched. This rare occurrence came after Henry had surgery to remove a cancerous tumor that was inhibiting both his ability and desire to breed.

Cultural significance

Tuatara feature in a number of indigenous legends, and are held as ariki (God forms). Tuatara are regarded as the messengers of Whiro
Whiro

In Maori mythology, Whiro is the lord of darkness, or the embodiment of all evil. He inhabits the underworld and is responsible for the ills of all persons....
, the god
Deity

A deity is a postulated preternatural or supernatural immortal being, who may be thought of as holy, divinity, or sacred, held in high regard, and respected by human beings....
 of death and disaster, and Maori women are forbidden to eat them. Tuatara also indicate tapu (the borders of what is sacred and restricted), beyond which there is mana, meaning there could be serious consequences if that boundary is crossed. Maori women would sometimes tattoo images of lizards, some of which may represent tuatara, near their genitals. Today, tuatara are regarded as a taonga
Taonga

A taonga in Maori culture is a treasured thing, whether tangible or intangible. Tangible examples are all sorts of Antiques and Artefact s, real property and fisheries....
 (special treasure).

The tuatara was featured on one side of the New Zealand 5 cent coin
Coins of the New Zealand dollar

This article concerns the coins of the New Zealand dollar....
, which was phased out in October 2006. Tuatara was also the name of the Journal of the Biological Society of Victoria University College and subsequently Victoria University of Wellington
Victoria University of Wellington

Victoria University of Wellington, also known in Maori language as Te Whare Wananga o te Upoko o te Ika a Maui, was established in 1897 by Act of New Zealand Parliament, and was a former constituent college of the University of New Zealand....
, published from 1947 until 1993.

Further reading


External links

      • in Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand


Institutions that keep tuatara

New Zealand
Australia
Europe
United States
  • (S. guntheri)