View allAll Photos Tagged Lizard
A Sicilian wall lizard (Podarcis waglerianus) on a chunk of rock near the Alcantara Gorge in Sicily. These lizards seem to be quite prolific across the island and easy enough to spot owing to their vibrant colours and markings.
A Texas Spiny Lizard (Sceloporus Olivaceus) basking in the sunlight while hiding in a cactus at the Captical of Texas Zoo, Bastrop, Texas, USA.
I only wanted to upload one photo of a lizard but I also like the sharpness, angle his expression too much.
Nikon D7100 with Nikon 105mm 2.8 macro.
Eastern collared Lizard we found at the side of a dirt road on the high plains.
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A common lizard seen basking on a stile along the Cotswold Way public footpath between Aggs Hill and Prestbury Hill nature reserve.
This looks more like spiderman than spiderman himself!
This is actually Agama lizard.
Swahili name: Mjusi (?)
Place:Seronara Lodge, Serengeti NP, Tanzania, Africa
Update: This picture has been selected for Suse 10.1 Beta bootscreen! Hurray!!
This is not a house lizard! It was about 1 meter in length. Seen behind a hotel in Panamá.
Esto no es un lagarto de la casa! Era aproximadamente 1 metro de largo. Visto detrás de un hotel en Panamá.
Este não isa casa lagarto! Ele foi de cerca de 1 metro de comprimento. Visto atrás de um hotel em Panamá.
Feliz sabado animal! Happy Saturday!
A common wall lizard enjoying the rare moments of sun during the German summer.
Taken with Sony A-6000 (Sony ILCE-6000) and SAL 70400G and LA-EA2 as RAW. Converted to JPEG with LR 5.7.
A lot of noise in this shot, but it can;t be helped I guess at ISO 5000.
Olympus E-M1
OLYMPUS M.14-150mm F4.0-5.6 II
Aperture ƒ/6.3
Focal length 150.0 mm
Shutter 1/320
ISO 5000
This is a photo that I took of what I believe to be a Skink lizard.
A trait apparent in nearly all species of skink is a love of digging and burrowing. Most spend their time under ground where they are mostly safe from predators, sometimes even digging out tunnels for easy navigation. They also use their tongues to sniff the air and track their prey. When they encounter their prey, they chase it down until they corner it or manage to land a bite and then swallow it whole.