enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gecko’s Hydrophobic Skin - AOL

    www.aol.com/gecko-hydrophobic-skin-083600436.html

    When you watch the video above, you can see exactly how a gecko’s skin repels water. The little gecko sits calmly while someone takes a water dropper and places droplets of water along its back.

  3. Flat-tailed house gecko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat-tailed_House_Gecko

    These geckos are frequently found in the pet trade, including corporate chain stores, usually identified only as "house gecko". While there are other species of gecko available under the same common name, the Hemidactylus platyurus is easily identified by the flaps of skin along its sides, making them resemble a miniature flying gecko (genus ...

  4. Gecko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gecko

    Like other reptiles, geckos are ectothermic, [15] producing very little metabolic heat. Essentially, a gecko's body temperature is dependent on its environment. Also, to accomplish their main functions; such as locomotion, feeding, reproduction, etc., geckos must have a relatively elevated temperature.

  5. Common house gecko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_house_gecko

    Two wall sculptures of geckos on the wall of the Mandapam of the Siva temple inside Vellore Fort, Tamil Nadu, India (2012) In the Philippines, geckos making a ticking sound are believed to indicate an imminent arrival of a visitor or a letter. [37] But in Thailand, if a common house gecko chirps when someone leaves the house, that's a bad omen.

  6. Arthropod adhesion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthropod_adhesion

    This has been observed in geckos and spiders but also in the smooth adhesive pads of ants, bush-crickets and cockroaches. [3] Adhesive hairs of geckos are non-symmetrical and feature distally pointing setae and spatulae that are able to generate increased friction and adhesion when aligned with a proximal pull. [ 3 ]

  7. File:Living gecko hunting the pointer of a mouse.webm

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Living_gecko_hunting...

    Some parts of this file (the display output of the monitor, which shows non-free software elements) are not fully free but believed to be de minimis for this work. Derivatives of this file which focus more on the non-free element(s) may not qualify as de minimis and may be copyright violations. As a direct consequence, cropped versions of this ...

  8. Eurydactylodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurydactylodes

    Eurydactylodes geckos are actively mobile yet slow moving [2] and able to live for over a decade. [5] These geckos are arboreal [3] and spend little time on the ground. [2] These geckos display diurnality, and choose to perch on the stalks and leaves of plants even in periods of inactivity as opposed to seeking cover. [9]

  9. Uroplatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uroplatus

    Habitat destruction and deforestation in Madagascar is the primary threat to the future of Uroplatus geckos as well as collection for the pet trade. [8] The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) lists all of the Uroplatus species on their "Top ten most wanted species list" of animals threatened by illegal wildlife trade, because of it "being captured and sold at alarming rates for the international ...