Close up of male Leopard Anole (Anolis marmoratus), Guadeloupe, in the Caribbean Sea
(photo: Marc Dezemery)
Close up of male Leopard Anole (Anolis marmoratus), Guadeloupe, in the Caribbean Sea
(photo: Marc Dezemery)
A male anole lizard (Anolis nitens) displays its red dewlap, Yasuni National Park in Amazonian Ecuador.
(photo: Santiago Ron)
Amazon Wood Lizard or Guichenot’s Dwarf Iguana (Enyalioides laticeps), family Hoplocercidae, from Amazonian Eastern Ecuador
(photo: Santiago Ron)
Western Basilisk (Basiliscus galeritus), western Ecuador, South America
(photos: Santiago Ron)
Horned Anoles (Anolis proboscis) from the cloud forests of the western Andes in Ecuador.
Top - The male (left) has a strangely large proboscis that probably is used to court females (right).
Bttm - Even the juvenile males have the unique proboscis that is characteristic of this species.
(photos: Santiago Ron)
Calico pennant dragonfly (Celithemis elisa ♂)
(Source: fatchance, via thewildlifekingdom)
Green Crested Lizard (by San Diego Shooter)
Tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus), Nga Manu Reserve, New Zealand
Tuatara are endemic to New Zealand. They grow very slowly, live to over 100 years old and are the only survivors of an ancient group of reptiles which roamed the earth 200 million years ago (The Sphenodontia).
Tuatara are classified as an endangered species and are now found in the wild mainly on over 30 predator-free off-shore NZ islands.
(photo/text: Sid Mosdell)
“Tenderness. Elephant Mother and Calf. Amboseli, Kenya. Africa.” by Barbara Jones
(via parakeet-love)
(Source: elvont, via parakeet-love)
(via skysignal)
Snow leopard (by labprim8)
A kitteh stopped by the deer enclosure at the Zoo for a nap-and-nuzzle!
Photo by Vitaly Tkach
Red-eyed Tree Frog (by Shikhei Goh)