The pygmy mulga monitor is arboreal, with a prehensile tail. It grows to a total length (including tail) of around 40 cm (16 inches). The upper surface is brown, grading to grey at the sides. The nostrils are positioned on the sides of the muzzle, about halfway between the tip of the snout and the eye.[7]V. gilleni weighs, on average, 60–80 grams (2.1–2.8 oz).[9] Males and females can be distinguished by the presence of spines on the sides of the male's vent.[5]
It is sometimes mistaken for the stripe-tailed goanna, but the two species are allopatric and can be physically distinguished by the pygmy mulga monitor's slightly larger size.[8]
This species has very high endurance, owing to it having one of the highest factorial aerobic scopes of any vertebrate. A study where individuals were placed on treadmills running at a speed of 1 kilometre per hour (28 cm per second) found that they could maintain the speed for "many minutes" without tiring.[10]
It is particularly well adapted to arid conditions, losing water at half the rate of other Australian monitor species.[5]
Diet
Although an arboreal lizard, much of the prey of V. gilleni is found by foraging on the ground. Pygmy mulga monitors eat primarily spiders, orthopterans, beetles, and other lizards, especially geckos such as Gehyra variegata and Heteronotia binoei.[8] Geckos too large to be killed may be attacked anyway to consume their autotomized tails.[8] Bird eggs, small mammals, and even ant-sized prey are also taken.[5]
Reproduction
Ritualized fighting sometimes occurs between males of V. gilleni. Unlike larger monitors which grapple with each other while standing on their hindlegs, they grapple each other with all four limbs, belly to belly, and roll around on the ground trying to force the other onto its back.[5] Biting may also occur.
Breeding likely takes place between September and October.[8] A clutch of up to seven eggs may be laid in a burrow that is 30 cm (12 in) deep, which may then be sealed with sand. The eggs hatch after three months.[5]
Predators
The species V. gilleni is predated on by birds of prey, snakes, and larger monitors such as Gould's monitors.[8]
^Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN978-1-4214-0135-5. (Varanus gilleni, p. 101).