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Lizard adds to Formula One's track menagerie

Formula One - Singapore Grand Prix - Marina Bay, Singapore - 17/9/16 Mercedes' Nico Rosberg of Germany in action during third practice. REUTERS/Edgar Su (Reuters)

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Formula One acquired an exotic addition to its list of wildlife hazards on Saturday after a large monitor lizard wandered onto the Singapore Grand Prix circuit during final practice. "There's a giant lizard on the track," exclaimed Red Bull driver Max Verstappen. "You came face to face with Godzilla," the 18-year-old's engineer told him over the pit-to-car radio after the startled Dutchman alerted the team to the reptile's presence. The incident triggered a Twitter flurry and plenty of amusement. "New friend in FP3," commented McLaren driver Fernando Alonso on Instagram to accompany a picture of the animal on the asphalt. Drivers are used to groundhogs and foxes making track incursions at Canada's Gilles Villeneuve circuit in Montreal while stray dogs proved a danger when the sport raced at India's Buddh circuit near New Delhi. Deer have appeared on track in Austria in the past, snakes in Malaysia and a cat ran out in front of cars in Azerbaijan's debut race this year in Baku. There have also been a number of human incursions, including one at last year's Singapore race when a lone intruder ambled across the floodlit track midway through the race and then strolled by the metal fences as cars came past. "I had to look again as I wasn't sure if I had a problem with my eyesight and that I actually saw somebody crossing the track," Ferrari's race winner Sebastian Vettel told reporters at the time. A 27-year-old British national was later sentenced to six weeks in jail for breaching the security fences. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin in London; Editing by Ian Chadband)