View allAll Photos Tagged lizard

Florida scrub lizard (Sceloporus woodi) Sebastian, FL

This one let me get quite close

  

Lizard, reptile, lizard, head, scales, green, animals

 

Sand Lizard (Zauneidechse, Lacerta agilis)

2016-03-29

Austria

Male sand lizard (Lacerta agilis). Isle of Purbeck, Dorset, UK.

 

photo.domgreves.com

One of the best years for sand lizards, saw over 20 at this site.

The viviparous lizard

One of the many...many lizards of the Utah desert.

Yep, that could pass for a stone!

Golden Gate Highland Park,

South Africa

Like with birds the sexes and ages may have significantly different coloring... I couldn't match this model in my guidebook. Herp pros please comment.

 

100_0076e; Southwestern Fence Lizard

First Lizard seen in garden at Longyester, East Lothian in 12 years.

While at Titchfield Haven last week, my dad spotted this beautiful Common Lizard sitting next to one of the wildlife viewing points and we both spent several minutes taking shots of it, posing nicely in the morning sunlight. This one was very close to an ant nest at the time, but didn't seem bothered by them. This was about 6 inches long, about the same size as most of the Lizards we saw on the first visit :-)

Here lizard, lizard, lizard! This Common Side-Blotched Lizard was perched atop a rock at the East Wetlands in Yuma, Arizona.

This male Eastern Fence Lizard (Sceloporus undulatus) was out sunning and feeding on a warm late-Winter day.

San Diego County, California, US

Cleaning the loft of my studio, I discovered two clreamy white bird eggs smaller than a penny combined. When were they laid, and by what bird? So tiny to get through a crack somewhere? Or while the door was open? I grieve for the two babies never to fly.

 

I brought the eggs indoors, thinking they were no longer viable. About a week later, I was surprised to note each egg split into scale like prices, without being incubated. Therefore, I believe the eggs contained baby lizards who now roam my interior rooms. I hope they make it out alive.

I see this kind of lizard everywhere in New Mexico

Collared Lizard (Crotaphytus collaris), Rabbit Valley, Mesa County, Colorado. There are several subspecies, this one apparently the Yellow-Headed Collared Lizard.

 

We visited Rabbit Valley, located in far western Colorado less than two miles from Utah, to hike the Trail Through Time. The trail is located in a rocky, treeless desert, and is famous for its Jurassic dinosaur and plant fossils. But for us, it seemed more like a playground for lizards.

Western Fence Lizard?

Found near Fort Lauderdale Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Florida

 

Thanks to [https://www.flickr.com/photos/10770266@N04] I now believe this to be

Sceloporus woodi - Florida Scrub Lizard

Lizards in Belize.

One of the many lizards that reside in the guest house. He let me get very close to him, fortunately.

Lake Woodruff National Wildlife Refuge, July 23, 2012. Dew beads up on the back of this lizard as it rests on a Firebush. Photo by: E. Tramontana, USFWS. www.fws.gov/lakewoodruff/

I encountered this Western Fence Lizard (Sceloporus occidentalis) at a roadside stop in Nevada. Geiger Lookout Wayside Park, along route NV-341 between Virginia City and Reno.

 

Based on where I found this lizard, it is probably subspecies longipes, the Great Basin Fence Lizard.

Sand lizard (Lacerta agilis)

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