Varanus glauerti
🔤 Taxonomy
Varanus glauerti is the currently accepted scientific name. Monitor taxonomy and common names can be confusing in trade, so use the Latin name when comparing animals or paperwork.
English common names used in the hobby:
- Kimberley rock monitor
- Glauert’s monitor
German common names used in the hobby:
- Kimberley-Felsenwaran
- Glauerts Waran
📌 Description
Varanus glauerti is a monitor lizard that reaches about 60-80 cm. It is intelligent, powerful for its size, and far more demanding than a typical pet lizard. This is a display and advanced husbandry species, not a casual handling animal.
☠️ Venom
Varanus glauerti is a monitor lizard and should be treated as mildly venomous. Monitor venom is not comparable to dangerous front-fanged snake venom, but bites can be deep, painful and contaminated with oral bacteria, and swelling or prolonged soreness can occur.
The practical safety rule is prevention: do not hand-feed, do not restrain the animal casually, and use calm tools and enclosure design to avoid bites. Any serious monitor bite should be cleaned thoroughly and assessed by a medical professional, especially if it is deep, bleeding heavily, swelling, or showing signs of infection.
🌍 Distribution
Varanus glauerti is endemic to the Kimberley region of northwestern Australia and nearby parts of the Northern Territory, including rocky escarpments, gorges and sandstone outcrops. It is a saxicolous monitor: the animal is built around rock faces, ledges, cracks and vertical escape routes more than open ground.
The surrounding climate is tropical and seasonal, with a wet monsoon period and a long dry season. Even where the air is hot and dry for part of the year, rock fissures provide cooler, more stable and slightly more humid retreats.
In captivity, this usually means:
- a tall or strongly structured enclosure with usable vertical rockwork, shelves and cork/stone retreats
- intense basking sites placed so the animal can warm up on elevated surfaces
- many tight hides, not one exposed cave
- dry, well-ventilated air with access to slightly more humid crevices or hides
- enough climbing and patrol space for an active rock monitor

🌡 Climate across the native range
Monthly climate normals from reviewed GBIF occurrence locations:
Western Australia — Australia
| Month | Min °C | Mean °C | Max °C | RH % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 25.6 | 29.9 | 35.3 | 66 |
| February | 24.9 | 29 | 34 | 71 |
| March | 24.3 | 29.6 | 35.1 | 60 |
| April | 23 | 29.6 | 35.4 | 40 |
| May | 19.2 | 25.9 | 32 | 34 |
| June | 16.3 | 23.1 | 29.5 | 34 |
| July | 15.4 | 22.8 | 29.6 | 30 |
| August | 17 | 24.9 | 31.7 | 25 |
| September | 21.3 | 29.2 | 35.7 | 26 |
| October | 24.5 | 31.9 | 38.1 | 32 |
| November | 26.2 | 32.7 | 38.7 | 40 |
| December | 26 | 31.1 | 36.7 | 57 |
Weather data by Open-Meteo.com · CC BY 4.0 · Monthly normals calculated by Herpeton Academy from daily archive values.
Location references use GBIF.org occurrence data where available; original occurrence records retain their source dataset licenses.
⚖️ Legal status
As checked against current official sources in April 2026, Varanus glauerti falls under the CITES Appendix II listing for Varanus species. Under EU wildlife-trade rules, that generally means Annex B unless a stricter listing applies. The species is not native to Europe, so the Bern Convention is not normally relevant. National rules on import, sale, transport, breeding, and proof of legal origin may still apply. Captive-bred animals with reliable origin records are preferable.
🤌 Husbandry
This species is best kept in a tall rocky enclosure with secure ledges, cracks, climbing branches and intense light. Monitor lizards are active predators and should normally be kept alone except for carefully supervised breeding introductions. A practical adult enclosure is at least around 120 x 60 x 90 cm; taller is better for this rock-climbing species. Juveniles can be started in around 60 x 40 x 60 cm and upgraded as they grow.
The juvenile enclosure is a management stage, not a long-term home. Young monitors should be easy to observe, feed, hydrate, and remove safely, but they still need a real heat and UV gradient, secure hides, and enough depth or structure to behave normally. Increase enclosure size before the animal becomes cramped; do not wait until nose-rubbing, frantic pacing, or food aggression appear.
- Secure locks and escape-proof construction
- Strong overhead heat and bright light
- Multiple hides and visual barriers
- Enough usable space for daily movement
- Routine cleaning and safe keeper access
💡 Lighting
Monitor lizards are diurnal and depend on intense visible light. Use a 10-12 hour photoperiod, strong full-enclosure illumination, and suitable linear UVB with shaded retreats. Weak lighting often leads to poor activity, poor appetite, and long-term health problems.
For UV planning, treat this species as Ferguson Zone 4. Aim for about UVI 4-6 at the animal’s back or shell height in the basking zone, with a gradient down to shaded areas near zero UVI. This usually points to a strong 10-14% T5 UVB tube or a measured mercury vapor/metal halide system in a large enclosure; measure with a Solarmeter 6.5 when possible, because reflector, mesh, distance, and lamp age change the real exposure.
🌡 Heating and temperature
Useful approximate targets are basking 50-60°C, daytime ambient 28-33°C, cool retreats 24-27°C, night 20-24°C. The goal is a very hot basking surface with cooler retreat options, not an enclosure that is uniformly hot. Measure surface and air temperatures with reliable equipment.
💧 Humidity and water
Humidity and water should match the habitat: dry surface with a slightly humid hide or lower retreat. Even dry-country monitors need access to clean water and a microclimate that prevents chronic dehydration. Stagnant wetness and dirty water are major risks.
🌿 Enclosure and decoration
The enclosure should support thermoregulation, digging or climbing, and secure retreat behavior. Use stable rocks, cork, branches, packed substrate, ledges and hides suited to the species. Heavy decor must be fixed securely because monitors dig, push and climb with force.
🪳 Feeding
Feed a varied carnivorous diet based on roaches, crickets, locusts, silkworms and occasional small whole prey. Juveniles are fed daily or every other day; adults do well every 3–5 days. Avoid routine fatty rodents and oversized meals; captive monitors become obese quickly when diet and exercise are poorly managed.
Stage matters with feeding. Juveniles need smaller prey more often because they are growing, but they should still look athletic rather than round. Adults need fewer, leaner meals and more reliance on invertebrates or lean whole prey; frequent large meals, fatty rodents, and poor exercise quickly create obesity, fatty liver disease, and weak long-term condition.
🩺 Common problems
For this rock-climbing monitor, the main captive problems are falls, toe injuries, burns on raised basking ledges, dehydration when every retreat is dry, poor UVB exposure, and stress from a flat enclosure without secure height.
Warning signs include weak grip, missing claws, swollen digits, repeated slipping, dark stress coloration, hiding constantly in the coolest area, and poor appetite despite warm conditions.
When something changes, check ledge stability, climbing route security, basking height, UVB gradient, humid cracks or hides, and whether the enclosure gives usable vertical space. Serious wounds, swelling, breathing signs, repeated refusal to feed, weakness, or suspected burns need a reptile veterinarian. Monitors hide illness well, so a visible decline is already urgent.
📌 Conclusion
Varanus glauerti is rewarding only when its heat, space, diet and security needs are taken seriously. A keeper should plan the adult enclosure before acquiring the animal, because monitors quickly outgrow temporary setups.
📚 Sources and further reading
- CITES Appendices and Species+ trade database, checked April 2026
- EU wildlife trade regulations and annex references, checked April 2026
- GBIF species backbone and occurrence data for taxonomy and distribution context
- IUCN Red List and specialist husbandry references where applicable