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Statia bank tree anole (Anolis bimaculatus) ... Green-bellied tree skink ... Pelagic sea snake (Pelamis platura) Black tree cobra ...
Iguania is a suborder that includes species of chameleons, iguanas, and New World lizards such as the water anole. Most species in the Iguania suborder are arboreal, meaning they travel by tree, but many other notable species are described as being terrestrial. They typically have tongues that are non-prehensile and fleshy, with the exception ...
Barbour's ground skink; Bark anole; Barking spider; Barn owl; Bayon's skink; Bearded bulbul; Beautiful frog; Bibron's skink; Big ground snake; Big-scaled dwarf gecko; Big-scaled least gecko; Bighead goby; Bird dropping spider; Birdsnest coral; Black bream; Black cockatoo; Black jay; Black korhaan; Black mussel; Black swift; Black tree snake ...
The emerald tree skink (Lamprolepis smaragdina) is sometimes (ambiguously) known as green tree skink or emerald green skink. It is a non-threatened species which is not commonly seen, but it is becoming more popular in the exotic pet trade. In the Philippines, it is called Tabili in the Cebuano language and in Waray.
Phylogenetic evidence indicates that the Carolina anole belongs to the Anolis carolinensis anole series, a wider clade of Caribbean Anolis which are all also known as "green anoles". This group is composed of mid-sized trunk-crown anoles with large, conspicuously elongated heads and extreme levels of sexual dimorphism .
Natural horror is a subgenre of horror films that features natural forces, [1] typically in the form of animals or plants, that pose a threat to human characters.. Though killer animals in film have existed since the release of The Lost World in 1925, [2] two of the first motion pictures to garner mainstream success with a "nature run amok" premise were The Birds, directed by Alfred Hitchcock ...
The tree-crevice skink is a moderate-to-large, deep-headed species of the genus Egernia. Its coloration ranges from dark black to gray-brown and has a pale dorso-lateral stripe that runs from the head to the base of the tail. Sometimes they present scattered with white spots and flecks on the torso. [4]
Anolis distichus, the bark anole, North Caribbean bark anole, or Hispaniolan gracile anole, is a species of anole lizard (US: / ə ˈ n oʊ. l i / ⓘ) native to Hispaniola (both the Dominican Republic and Haiti) and the Bahamas, and introduced to Florida, where it was first recorded in 1946. [2] [3] [4] It spends most its