View allAll Photos Tagged Lizard
This guy was perfectly posed for a picture but I didn't have the camera. I went in and got it only to get one chance at a photo.
There were lots of lizards sunning themselves at the edges of the boardwalk - really tiny ones, medium ones and the largest I saw was about the length of my index finger. Quite sensitive to noise - several got this alert look when I released the shutter.
I found this beautiful lizard in Botanic Garden in Canberra and I had a chance to capture this shot.
The lizards up at the Hollywood Hills, yes these are real lizards, enjoying the sunshine, raised and photographed by Henry Lizardlover. There's no trick photography or photoshop here, everything is real.
One of many reasonably sized lizards in Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument in Southern Utah.
Tiny Silver Lizard - finished 18 September, 2009
I started this little guy last year, and he has been sitting unfinished until now. He has about 16 feet of hair-thin, fine silver wire coiled onto his less than 3 inch length (his body from head to where the tail begins is only 1.5 inches). Another unfinished project finished & off my workbench! :D
On my way home from class one day, I heard this russle, and this lizard was sitting on a ledge outside the neighbour's house.
In Bournemouth yesterday, managed multi task and cover two loves, took my mum for lunch for mothers day...............but took her for lunch near where I could find some lizards!
Mum happy.......me happy........the lizards had nothing to say!
I was lucky to find three types, Common, Wall, and Green.
You can see in a couple of the captures the common and green have lost part of their tales at the tips and have grown replacements, you can see the new sections from the lack of colour.
The commons were harder to spot, these were very small not much bigger than your middle finger without the tail.
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Annoyingly this female Common Lizard wouldn't come out from under the grass at the side of the path. So I took this shot as a record as a reminder that they are out and about in the Yorkshire Peak District. This one seems pretty fat and maybe due to give birth. Interestingly they usually give birth to live young (they are viviparous having 3 to 10 baby lizards in July) although some southern populations are oviparous (egg-laying).
Monitor lizard at Bronx Zoo, New York
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Short trip out this morning to Sherwood,as its only a couple of miles from me. Plenty seen including a pair of Blackcaps, Spotted Flycatchers and a male Redstart. However was really out for lizards and was not disappointed with up to 11 in one area alone. As always with reptiles you find them hidden and hard to photograph, but they are natural.
A friendly lizard in Chinese Garden in Sydney. It was pretty patient and stayed still for the shoot.
"The sagebrush lizard (Sceloporus graciosus) is a common species of phrynosomatid lizard found at mid to high altitudes in the western United States of America. It belongs to the genus Sceloporus (spiny lizards) in the Phrynosomatidae family of reptiles. Named after the sagebrush plants near which it is commonly found, the sagebrush lizard has keeled and spiny scales running along its dorsal surface.
The sagebrush lizard is similar to the western fence lizard, another Sceloporus species found in the western US. The sagebrush lizard can be distinguished from the western fence lizard in that the former is on average smaller and has finer scales. The keeled dorsal scales are typically gray or tan, but can be a variety of colors. The main (ground) color is broken by a lighter gray or tan stripe running down the center of the back (vertebral stripe) and two light stripes, one on either side of the lizard (dorsolateral stripes). S. graciosus will sometimes have orange markings on its sides.
Three regional races of the sagebrush lizard are recognized: the southern sagebrush lizard lives in Southern California, and the western and northern races are found in many western states, including Oregon, Idaho, Colorado, Montana, Washington, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, and Arizona"
from Wikipedia
Umitilla WLR OR. Eastern Washington Road Trip 04-20-22