Slender glass lizards have yellow to brown bodies with six stripes and lateral grooves.
Slender glass lizards are diurnal, so they are quite often seen, but they can move fast (with a serpentine movement like that of a snake).
In addition, the slender glass lizard inhabits the Inland Marsh area in the neighborhood's southeast.
Among its most conspicuous species are the hardim or starred agama, the European glass lizard, the common chameleon, and the black whip snake.
Not to be confused with glass lizards.
There were tiny glass lizards with from two to several hundred legs.
Some glass lizards give birth to live young but most lay eggs.
This adaptation can be likened to certain terrestrial reptiles, such as the glass lizard, which sacrifices its tail to evade predators.
Unlike snakes, glass lizards do not have flexible jaws, and this limits the size of prey items they can consume.
The group includes the slowworms, glass lizards, and alligator lizards, among others.