Blotched Blue-tongue
The Blotched Blue-tongue (Tiliqua nigrolutea) — Sydney's Highland Blue-Tongue
If you have walked through bushland in the Blue Mountains, the Southern Highlands or the higher reaches of the Greater Sydney region and encountered a large, dark, blotchy lizard sunning itself on a track or in a rock crevice, you have probably met a Blotched Blue-tongued Lizard (Tiliqua nigrolutea). They are one of the lesser-known blue-tongue species in the Sydney region, found mainly in cooler, more elevated habitats — and one of the more striking lizards you can encounter in Australia.
At Urban Reptile Removal we get fewer Blotched Blue-tongue calls than we do for their better-known cousin the Eastern Blue-tongued Lizard, simply because they occupy a more restricted range within the Greater Sydney region. But for residents of the Blue Mountains and the higher country to the south and west of the city, the Blotched Blue-tongue is a familiar and very welcome part of the local wildlife.
What is the Blotched Blue-tongued Lizard?
The Blotched Blue-tongued Lizard (Tiliqua nigrolutea) is one of six species of blue-tongued lizard found in Australia. Unlike the Eastern Blue-tongue, which is widespread across lowland eastern Australia, the Blotched Blue-tongue is a specialist of cooler, higher-altitude habitats — found across Tasmania, Victoria, and the higher country of New South Wales.
Snout-vent length: Up to 300mm
Total length: Up to 580mm
Conservation status: IUCN Least Concern
Urban Adaptation Rating: ★★★★★
Activity: Diurnal, most active in spring and autumn
Distribution in Sydney: Zone 4 (highland and cool-climate areas)
How to identify a Blotched Blue-tongued Lizard
The Blotched Blue-tongue is one of the more visually distinctive lizards in the Sydney region:
Large, heavily built lizard with a robust, sausage-shaped body
Long, thick tail
Smooth, glossy scales
Base colour ranges from dark brown to nearly black
Large blotches across the back ranging from whitish-yellow through cream to pink or red
Blotches may be scattered irregularly or arranged in rough rows
Tail often shows banded pattern formed by blotch arrangement
Northern populations tend to be darker overall with more reddish tones in the blotches
Bright blue tongue, used in defensive displays
Short, robust limbs
The combination of dark base colour and large pale blotches is unmistakable. Unlike the banded pattern of the Eastern Blue-tongued Lizard, the Blotched Blue-tongue's markings are exactly what the name suggests — distinct blotches rather than crossbands.
How to tell a Blotched Blue-tongue from other blue-tongues
The Blotched Blue-tongue can be confused with the Eastern Blue-tongued Lizard, but the differences are clear:
Pattern: Blotched Blue-tongue has irregular blotches. Eastern Blue-tongue has distinct dark crossbands.
Habitat: Blotched Blue-tongues prefer cooler, higher elevation habitats (above 600m). Eastern Blue-tongues are common at lower elevations and in suburban Sydney.
Build: Blotched Blue-tongues tend to be slightly heavier-built and more robust.
Colour: Blotched Blue-tongues are generally darker overall, with more dramatic contrast between base colour and markings.
If you are in the Blue Mountains, the Southern Highlands or other elevated parts of the Greater Sydney region and you have a blue-tongue with blotchy rather than banded markings, you almost certainly have a Blotched Blue-tongue.
Where do Blotched Blue-tongued Lizards live?
The Blotched Blue-tongue's range within the Greater Sydney region is limited to higher-elevation and cooler environments:
Natural habitats:
Cool-climate woodlands
Highland grasslands
Rocky outcrops and granite country
Open eucalypt forest at elevation
Subalpine and montane environments
Areas above 600m altitude generally
Urban and semi-urban habitats:
Highland gardens, particularly in the Blue Mountains
Rural and semi-rural properties at elevation
Properties with good ground cover and shelter
Stone walls and rockeries
Mulched garden beds in cooler areas
Areas around log piles, leaf litter and rock features
For Sydney residents, the species is essentially restricted to Zone 4 — the higher country to the west and southwest of the city, including the Blue Mountains, the Upper Blue Mountains, and the country leading down toward the Southern Highlands.
Behaviour and the blue tongue display
Blotched Blue-tongues, like all members of the genus Tiliqua, are best known for their dramatic defensive display. When threatened, they:
Open the mouth wide in a sudden gape
Extend the bright blue tongue
Hiss loudly
Flatten the body to look larger
Sometimes lunge forward as a bluff
Hold the position until the threat moves away
The blue tongue itself is the key. Most predators have never seen a colour like that on a small animal, and the sudden flash of blue is enough to make many predators pause — particularly dogs, foxes and birds of prey. The display is almost always bluff. Blotched Blue-tongues rarely bite unless physically handled.
In Sydney's highland gardens, the display is most often seen when:
A homeowner accidentally disturbs one while gardening
A pet dog finds one curled up under a shrub
One is uncovered while moving a log or rock
A juvenile is encountered crossing a path
Diet and lifestyle
Blotched Blue-tongues are omnivores with a slow, methodical foraging style. Their diet includes:
Snails and slugs (a particular favourite)
Insects of all kinds
Spiders and other invertebrates
Soft plant material, flowers and fruits
Berries and fallen soft fruit
Carrion when encountered
Occasionally small lizards or other vertebrates
The taste for snails and slugs makes them genuinely beneficial in cool-climate gardens, where these pests can be a significant problem. A resident Blotched Blue-tongue is a quiet, ongoing solution to slug damage in lettuce beds and other soft-leaved plants.
Are Blotched Blue-tongued Lizards dangerous?
No. Blotched Blue-tongues are completely harmless to humans and pets. They have no venom and pose no significant threat through their bite — though if cornered and handled they can deliver a surprisingly strong pinch with their powerful jaws. Even then, the bite is not dangerous.
The genuine risks run the other way. Blotched Blue-tongues face significant threats from:
Dogs, which kill them in significant numbers
Cats, especially with juveniles
Cars, particularly when crossing roads to find mates or new territories
Garden tools and lawn mowers
Habitat loss as cool-climate gardens are cleared or simplified
Snail bait poisoning — they eat poisoned slugs and snails and accumulate the toxin
The snail bait issue is worth flagging specifically. Metaldehyde-based snail baits are highly toxic to blue-tongues, and lizards that eat poisoned snails are often killed themselves. If you have blue-tongues on your property, switching to iron-phosphate based snail baits (or simply tolerating some slug damage) protects them.
Breeding and reproduction
Blotched Blue-tongues have a reproductive strategy suited to cooler climates:
Live-bearing: Females give birth to live young rather than laying eggs
Litter size: Up to 15 live young
Timing: Late summer or early autumn
Independence: Young are fully independent at birth
Maturity: Several years to reach breeding age
Lifespan: Can live for 20 years or more in the wild, longer in captivity
The live-bearing strategy is shared with all Australian Tiliqua species and is thought to be an adaptation to cooler climates. By carrying developing young internally, the female can use her own basking behaviour to thermoregulate them — a significant advantage in the cool conditions of the highlands.
The long lifespan means that a Blotched Blue-tongue you encounter in your garden may have been there for years and may continue to be there for years more. They are not transient visitors — they are residents.
What to do if you find a Blotched Blue-tongue at your home
Leave it alone. Blotched Blue-tongues are protected native wildlife, completely harmless and genuinely beneficial — particularly in cool-climate gardens where slug and snail control matters.
Practical steps:
Identify it carefully. Check for the blotched pattern and confirm it is not a juvenile Eastern Blue-tongue or another species.
Keep dogs and cats away. Pet attacks are the main cause of mortality in suburban Blotched Blue-tongues.
Switch to iron-phosphate snail baits if you currently use metaldehyde products.
If your blue-tongue takes up residence under a shed, in a wood pile or in a garden corner, simply work around it.
If one is in immediate danger (in a road, in a pool, threatened by a dog), you can gently encourage it toward cover with a broom or piece of cardboard, but do not attempt to pick it up.
What you should not do:
Do not kill it. Blotched Blue-tongues are protected native wildlife.
Do not relocate it. They are territorial and have established home ranges. A relocated blue-tongue usually does not survive long in unfamiliar territory.
Do not feed it. Wild lizards do not need supplementary food and feeding alters their natural behaviour.
Do not use metaldehyde snail baits if you have blue-tongues on your property.
Do not pick it up unless absolutely necessary. The bite can be painful, and handling causes the animal significant stress.
How to encourage Blotched Blue-tongued Lizards
If you live in a cool-climate part of the Greater Sydney region and you want to encourage Blotched Blue-tongues on your property:
Maintain good ground cover — leaf litter, low shrubs, mulch
Provide shelter such as flat rocks, log piles and untidy garden corners
Avoid pesticide use, particularly snail baits
Keep some part of the garden "untidy" — a perfectly manicured garden offers little to a blue-tongue
Protect any blue-tongues you find from pets
Plant species that produce soft fruit and flowers — they will eat them
A resident Blotched Blue-tongue is one of the better neighbours a highland gardener can have. They are quiet, beneficial, charismatic and a living link to the cool-climate ecology that defines the Blue Mountains and the Southern Highlands.
Summary
The Blotched Blue-tongued Lizard (Tiliqua nigrolutea) is Sydney's highland blue-tongue — a large, dramatic, slow-moving native lizard found in the cooler and higher parts of the Greater Sydney region, particularly the Blue Mountains. They are distinguished from the more common Eastern Blue-tongue by their blotchy rather than banded pattern, and by their preference for elevated, cool-climate habitat. Completely harmless to humans, genuinely beneficial in the garden, and long-lived enough to become a familiar resident over many years, they are one of the species that makes Sydney's highland gardens worth living in. If you have one, treat it as a privilege rather than a problem.
Found a blue-tongue or another reptile at your home? Urban Reptile Removal operates 24/7 across the Greater Sydney region. We are fully licensed and insured, and we can identify and safely manage any reptile you encounter. Call 0418 633 474.

