Photo reblogged from Missing Roommate with 48 notes
Agamide by antonello.fardella on Flickr.
Source: our-lips-locked
Photo reblogged from fauna with 172 notes
this is a Crocodile Skink (Tribolonotus gracilis) from northern new guinea. if you pick him up he will srsly squeak at you. if that doesn’t work, he will play dead. so quit taking yourself so srsly, and quit using “mad” like that, its annoying. you really are nothing compared to this fucking skink.
Photo reblogged from Fuck Yeah Herpetology with 591 notes
A close view of a the ‘eyelash viper’ (Bothriechis schlegelii) in San Jose, Costa Rica. Scientists at the Instituto Clodomiro Picado have been studying snake’s poison in order to create better antidotes for it. Photograph: Jeffrey Arguedas/EPA
Source: Guardian
Photo reblogged from fauna with 528 notes
theanimalblog: Baby Leopard Geckos | By: c-a-s-s-i-d-y-y
yes to this!
Source: theanimalblog
Photo reblogged from fauna with 995 notes
iamthelittlefish: Blue-Tongued Lizard, Austrailia
Photograph by Kathy Parker
Australian blue-tongued lizards are widespread over our great country. This particular species is a “common” or “Eastern” blue-tongued lizard, found in the eastern parts of Australia. Living on a farm in the South East of South Australia, we find many of these lizards lazily crawling around our yard, especially during the warmer months. This lizard was courtesy of our hunter-gatherer cat, which is brave enough to bring all sorts of amazing creatures to our back door for inspection and approval!
Source: nationalgeographicdaily
Photo reblogged from fauna with 252 notes
creepicrawlies: Jackson’s Chameleon (Chameleo jacksoni), Mount Kenya National Park, Kenya.
Source: creepicrawlies
Photo reblogged from the sharpest teeth await our skin with 5 notes
Marine Iguana (Amblyrhynchus cristatus) - breeding colors
An iguana found only on the Galápagos Islands that has the ability, unique among modern lizards, to live and forage in the sea, making it a marine reptile. The Iguana can dive over 30 ft (10 m) into the water. It has spread to all the islands in the archipelago, and is sometimes called the Galapagos Marine Iguana. It mainly lives on the rocky Galapagos shore, but can also be spotted in marshes and mangrove beaches.
Fact Sources: Wikipedia.org