enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sunning (behaviour) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunning_(behaviour)

    Basking is common to most active diurnal reptiles. Lizards, crocodiles, terrapins, and snakes routinely make use of the morning sun to raise their body temperature. Freshwater turtles and terrapins have been found to bask and raise their body temperature close to the highest temperatures that they can tolerate. [10]

  3. Earless lizard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earless_lizard

    Earless lizards are capable of homeostasis to a certain extent. As a feedback to temperature change, they acquire heat by conduction, convection, and radiation. In cooler temperatures, they raise their body temperature by turning their bodies broadside to the sun to absorb heat (infrared radiation). [4]

  4. Ectotherm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ectotherm

    An ectotherm (from the Greek ἐκτός (ektós) "outside" and θερμός (thermós) "heat"), more commonly referred to as a "cold-blooded animal", [1] is an animal in which internal physiological sources of heat, such as blood, are of relatively small or of quite negligible importance in controlling body temperature. [2]

  5. Lizard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lizard

    Lizard is the common name used for all squamate reptiles other than snakes (and to a lesser extent amphisbaenians), encompassing over 7,000 species, [1] ranging across all continents except Antarctica, as well as most oceanic island chains. The grouping is paraphyletic as some lizards are more closely related to snakes than they are to other ...

  6. Eastern three-lined skink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_three-lined_skink

    A 2009 study found a 1.5 °C average temperature increase within A. duperreyi nests over a decade. While females did dig deeper nests and laid eggs much earlier in the reproductive season, potentially accounting for these temperature increases, these changes in behaviour were insufficient to reduce warming experienced by eggs late in the ...

  7. Seeing lizards in Levittown? Here's how they got to Bucks ...

    www.aol.com/seeing-lizards-levittown-heres-got...

    Italian wall lizards were introduced to Levittown in the late 1970s. Now they're invasive. Here's how to deal with them.

  8. Eastern fence lizard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_fence_lizard

    The eastern fence lizard (Sceloporus undulatus) is a medium-sized species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. [3] The species is found along forest edges, rock piles, and rotting logs or stumps in the eastern United States .

  9. Thermoregulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermoregulation

    The average difference between oral and axillary temperatures of Indian children aged 6–12 was found to be only 0.1 °C (standard deviation 0.2 °C), [51] and the mean difference in Maltese children aged 4–14 between oral and axillary temperature was 0.56 °C, while the mean difference between rectal and axillary temperature for children ...