:55:05
- Is that what you think created this?
- Yeah. I found a blood sample earlier.
:55:10
- How close did you get to the thing?
- I got pretty close.
:55:16
What else did you find out?
:55:19
We know he eats tons of fish.
:55:21
He's amphibious.
He's a burrower.
:55:24
And...
:55:31
he's pregnant.
:55:35
He is?
:55:37
He! A very unusual he.
:55:40
Obviously these tests
weren't designed for this..-
:55:44
but fundamentally they look for the same
hormonal patterns to indicate pregnancy.
:55:48
I don't get it. It he's the first
of his kind, how can he be pregnant?
:55:52
Doesn't he need a mate?
:55:54
Not if he reproduces asexually.
:55:57
Where's the fun in that?
:56:01
I kept thinking,
why would he travel so tar?
:56:05
But it makes perfect sense.
:56:07
Lots of animals travel
great distances for reproduction.
:56:12
That's what he's doing in New York.
He's nesting.
:56:15
- Nesting?
- Yes.
:56:18
Do you realize
that a lizard can lay...
:56:20
up to 12 eggs at a time?
:56:23
- Think of it.
- I didn't know that.
:56:25
Forgive me.
I have to get this to the lab...
:56:28
see it I can confirm all this.
:56:32
I'll be right back.