In the Sept. 1 On Gardening column, a reader expressed concern about seeing more brown anoles and fewer green anoles. Many now want to know how to get rid of the brown lizards. The shift in population ...
Sarah Baade practically considers anole lizards her personal gardeners. The green little reptiles have a knack for keeping her company at her San Antonio home while she tends to her front yard ...
We tend to think the contours of biodiversity are well known, especially in extensively studied areas. However, this is not necessarily the case and sometimes strikingly new species are discovered ...
Residents who have lived in this area for more than 20 years can well remember when green anole (Anolis carolinensis) were numerous. They would run across porches and display their jewel colored fans ...
Caribbean Anolis lizards exhibit a complex suite of ecological, morphological, and behavioral traits that allow their specialization to particular microhabitats. These microhabitat specialists, called ...
Last week, watching activities at the St. Augustine Shores Wildflower Meadow, I caught sight of a quick movement on the corner fence where a very healthy clump of Fakahatchee grass cascades over the ...
Researchers are asking Montgomery County residents to be on the lookout for an invasive species of brown lizard driving out its green, less aggressive cousin. Chris McMartin, executive director at the ...
From April to September of 2017, Jesse Borden was climbing trees and counting lizards around Alachua County. Sometimes, he could be found in branches on the University of Florida campus or in people’s ...
In January of 2006 a biological expedition uncovered four anole species in a single day. Dr. Gunther Koehler, a member of the expedition, described the discoveries as “a once in a life time experience ...
This is a preview. Log in through your library . Abstract Habitat selection with respect to ground cover and relative light intensity was studied in two sympatric tropical anoline lizards. Apparently ...
GAINESVILLE (AP) — From April to September of 2017, Jesse Borden was climbing trees and counting lizards around Alachua County. Sometimes, he could be found in branches on the University of Florida ...