Chamaeleonidae

Chameleons are well known to most peo­ple, eas­ily rec­og­niz­able by their body shape, in­de­pen­dently mov­ing eyes, paw-like hands and feet, and abil­ity to change color rapidly. Most re­searchers iden­tify two sub­fam­i­lies of chameleons, con­tain­ing 4-6 gen­era, and more than 150 species. Chameleons have ex­pe­ri­enced two dis­tinct ra­di­a­tions in Mada­gas­car and Africa. A few species are also found in south­ern Spain, the Ara­bian penin­sula, India and Sri Lanka.

Chameleons can­not be mis­taken for any other lizards. Eas­ily rec­og­niz­able fea­tures in­clude their di­ag­nos­tic zy­go­dactyl feet, in which ad­ja­cent dig­its are fused on each hand and foot, form­ing op­pos­able grasp­ing pads, and the pres­ence of casques, horns, and crests on the heads of most species. They change color eas­ily and quickly, and their eyes, which are on pro­trud­ing cones, can move in­de­pen­dently of one an­other. Ar­bo­real species have pre­hen­sile tails, and most species have lat­er­ally flat­tened bod­ies. Among the many synapo­mor­phies of this group are ex­tremely ex­ten­sile tongues (due to mod­i­fi­ca­tions of the hyoid ap­pa­ra­tus), fail­ure of the ptery­goid to meet the quadrate, a re­duc­tion in the num­ber of ster­nal ribs, the loss of both the gular fold and femoral pores, and the V-con­di­tion of the ulnar nerve path­way. Like the agamids, but un­like other igua­ni­ans, chameleons have acrodont teeth. Chameleons range in size from tiny Brooke­sia (2.5 cm) to some very large Chamaeleo species (up to 68 cm total length).

Chameleons are di­ur­nal and pri­mar­ily in­sec­tiv­o­rous, al­though birds have been recorded in the diets of some larger species. They can ex­tend their tongues al­most the en­tire length of their body, mak­ing their hunt­ing be­hav­ior an im­pres­sive dis­play. Chameleons ex­hibit a dis­tinct lo­co­mo­tion in which they slowly rock back and forth be­tween each step taken. Most species are oviparous. In some species (e.g. Fur­cifer pardalis), fe­males dig holes in sandy soils into which they de­posit their fer­til­ized eggs, af­ter­wards cov­er­ing their tracks, pre­sum­ably to con­fuse would-be egg preda­tors. Sev­eral of the larger species show dis­tinct sex­ual di­mor­phism, with males hav­ing larger body size, and elab­o­rate horns and casques, with which they fight. Chameleons are not so­cial an­i­mals, and when two an­i­mals have vi­sual con­tact, they can change color within sec­onds. De­pend­ing on species, bright col­oration may be re­stricted to males, found in both sexes, dis­played only dur­ing the breed­ing sea­son, or ex­hib­ited dur­ing ag­gres­sive en­coun­ters. Male dis­plays may also in­clude head jerk­ing, the spread­ing of oc­cip­i­tal lobes (if pre­sent), and gular sac ex­ten­sion. Sex­ual di­mor­phism in the dwarf chameleons (Brooke­sia in Mada­gas­car, Rham­p­holeon in Africa) tends to run in the op­po­site di­rec­tion, with fe­males being the larger sex. Chameleons are ex­tremely pop­u­lar in the pet trade. In at least part of their range (e.g. Mada­gas­car), local peo­ple are quite scared of them.

Chamaeleonids are un­am­bigu­ously placed in the Igua­nia, a group that is sis­ter to all other squa­mates (lizards and snakes). Within Igua­nia, how­ever, re­la­tion­ships are in dis­pute. Frost and Etheridge (1989) re­cently split the large fam­ily Iguanidae into eight fam­i­lies (in­clud­ing Iguanidae sensu stricto). Most re­searchers agree that the only iguan­ian fam­i­lies that were not pre­vi­ously mem­bers of Iguanidae -- Chamaeleonidae and Agami­dae -- form the mono­phyletic group Acrodonta, which is sis­ter to the re­main­ing fam­i­lies (equiv­a­lent to Iguanidae sensu lato). The mono­phyly of Chamaeleonidae has never been called into ques­tion. Frost and Etheridge's (1989) analy­sis did find Agami­dae pa­ra­phyletic with re­spect to Chamaeleonidae, how­ever, and they argue that the two agamid sub­fam­i­lies should be sub­sumed within a larger Chamaeleonidae. De­spite this, the lit­er­a­ture per­sists in re­flect­ing the tra­di­tional group­ings. Within Chamaeleonidae, two hy­pothe­ses of re­la­tion­ship in­clude Brooke­sia sis­ter to the re­main­ing chameleons, and Brooke­sia + Rham­p­holeon sis­ter to the re­main­ing taxa.

Fos­sil Chamaeleo are known from the Miocene in Eu­rope.

Cooper, W. E. Jr. and N. Green­berg. 1992. Rep­til­ian col­oration and be­hav­ior. Pages 298-422 in C. Gans and D. Crews, ed­i­tors. Hor­mones, Brain, and Be­hav­ior: Bi­ol­ogy of the Rep­tilia, vol­ume 18, Phys­i­ol­ogy E. Uni­ver­sity of Chicago Press, Chicago.

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Pough, F. H., R. M. An­drews, J. E. Cadle, M. L. Crump, A. H. Sav­itzky, and K. D. Wells. 1998. Her­petol­ogy. Pren­tice-Hall, Inc., Upper Sad­dle River, NJ.

Schwenk, K. 1994. Sys­tem­at­ics and sub­jec­tiv­ity: the phy­logeny and clas­si­fi­ca­tion of iguan­ian lizards re­vis­ited. Her­peto­log­i­cal Re­view 25:53-57.

Uetz, P. 2000. EMBL Rep­tile Data­base: Chamaeleonidae. (Web­site.) http://​www.​embl-heidelberg.​de/​~uetz/fam­i­lies/Chamaeleonidae.​html

Zug, G. R. 1993. Her­petol­ogy: an in­tro­duc­tory bi­ol­ogy of am­phib­ians and rep­tiles. Aca­d­e­mic Press, San Di

Con­trib­u­tors

Heather Hey­ing (au­thor).