View allAll Photos Tagged CHAMELEON
technically chameleons refer to lizards and humans, who take on the appearance of their surroundings. today, i am adding swizzle sticks. they live up to the definition and are wonderful tools in painting with glass.
One of my neighbor's exotics. This chameleon is native to the Saudi Peninsula - Yemen and Saudi Arabia.
Panther chameleons are diurnal, which means that they are most active during the day. They spend their days foraging in the trees, searching for insects. They are arboreal, which means that they live in the trees, rather than on the ground. Males are particularly territorial, and will patrol and protect their territories from other males. The largest males have the most productive territories, with a wide variety of food sources.
Houttuynia cordata, also known as fish mint, fish leaf, rainbow plant, chameleon plant, heart leaf, fish wort, or Chinese lizard tail, is one of two species in the genus Houttuynia. It is a flowering plant native to Southeast Asia. It grows in moist, shady locations.
This is Chameleon 2 from the colouring book:
Intricate Ink ANIMALS IN DETAIL by Tim Jeffs.
(Number 7 of 50.)
This one coloured with Koh-I-Noor Aquarell woodless coloured sticks which blend with water.
Before starting I did wonder whether it was wearing a rugby shirt and a Scottish kilt!
This is a Gray Tree Frog - one of three common to Iowa. It has chosen the dead bloom of an old lily to rest from the hot sun of the day!
- Adult body lengths range from 1.5 to 2 inches.
- Mottled gray, green, and brown coloring. Look for a whitish spot beneath each eye.
- Bumpy skin, short snouts, and bright orange on the undersides of their legs.
This incredible tree frog can slowly change colors to match what it’s sitting on to camouflage itself. And you thought chameleons were the only animal that can change colors! They vary from gray to green or brown. It’s common for their back to display a mottled coloring, much like lichen.
Tommy, from Tommy's Living Desert Tours found this beautiful chameleon in the west coast of Namibia, near Swakopmund. The desert was full of life if you were as skilled as Tommy in finding it.
This is a macro image I captured some years ago, but for various reasons, mainly technical, I've only just edited. The image shows the Chameleon using it's prehensile tail to cling onto the branch.
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18mm 1/350 s à f/3,5 ISO100
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Mediterranean chameleon (Chamaeleo chamaeleon) in Cabo de Gata–Nijar Natural Park, Andalusia, Southern Spain.
Aquarium of Genoa - Tropical garden
Acquario di Genova - Giardino tropicale
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Chameleons are a distinctive and highly specialized clade of Old World lizards. The members of this family are best known for their distinct range of colors, being capable of shifting to different hues and degrees of brightness.
Some chameleon species are able to change their skin coloration. Different chameleon species are able to vary their coloration and pattern through combinations of pink, blue, red, orange, green, black, brown, light blue, yellow, turquoise, and purple.
Color change in chameleons has functions in camouflage, but most commonly in social signaling and in reactions to temperature and other conditions.
Chameleons tend to show brighter colors when displaying aggression to other chameleons,and darker colors when they submit or "give up". Some species, particularly those of Madagascar and some African genera in rainforest habitats, have blue fluorescence in their skull tubercles, deriving from bones and possibly serving a signaling role.
Do chameleons—like the handsome Panther Chameleon (Furcifer pardalis) photographed here—dream? Some recent studies seem to suggest that they do, and REM has been seen in slumbering chams! Sleeping habits vary across species, but most will find an area near their favorite feeding/hunting spot and nestle down amidst the foliage so as to avoid being spotted by nocturnal predators. Many will even drop from their branches at the slightest provocation, tumbling to the ground in hopes that the reason for their fall is a hasty escape from what could have been a predator.
This is a captive panther chameleon and, interestingly, this is the only time I've ever seen him purse his lips, as if caught in a soft snore!
I took this portrait of the chameleon a while ago in the Zoo Zürich at the Masoala Halle. In editing I reduced noise quit aggressively in the out of focus areas.
Cologne, Germany, 2014.
Another one from the archives that I finished editing just today.
There's more on www.chm-photography.com.
Enjoy!
This Panther Chameleon was enjoying the sunshine and not in a hurry to move, however it has its eyes trained on us.
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