Scientific Classification
KINGDOM: Animalia
PHYLUM: Chordata
CLASS: Reptilia
ORDER: Rhynchocephalia
FAMILY: Sphenodontidae
GENUS: Sphenodon
SPECIES: S. punctatus
Conservation Status
Tuataras can grow to a little under three feet long and weigh up to almost three pounds, with males being slightly larger than females. Their skin is a greenish brown and grey to match their surroundings, with a crest of folded skin down their back. They can use this crest to attract females or stiffen to intimidate predators.
Tuataras have great eyesight. Each eye can focus independently and has three types of photoreceptive cells, which are used for seeing well in light and dark. Present in the various animals including the tuatara is its third eye or “parietal eye”, which is only visible when tuataras are hatchlings. As they mature, the third eye becomes covered in scales but is supposedly used to detect light and changes in the seasons.
The tail of the tuatara can be broken off to distract predators and will later regrow.
Tuataras have no visible earholes or eardrums. Even though their auditory structures are so poorly developed, they can still hear low frequencies.
Once they mate, the female can take up to a year to lay a clutch of 1-19 soft eggs in a secluded burrow. The babies will hatch after 12-15 months, which is the longest period of incubation for any reptile, and immediately become independent!
Genetics plays a part in the sex of the babies as well as temperature. Warmer eggs tend to produce males, while colder eggs produces females.
The tuatara may resemble most lizards, but it is part of its own order known as Rhynchocephalia, or “beak-headed reptiles.” All other members of this group went extinct 60 million years ago leaving only the tuatara.
Tuataras got their name from the Maori phrase “tihi I runga I te hoki”, which translates to “peaks on the back.”
Tuataras can live over 100 years in the wild! Scientists believe this is due to their slow metabolism and the fact that they can stand cold temperatures by hibernating.