Colored pencil drawing, just playing around with faces, wanted to make her lizard like.There’s is no other meaning behind this drawing and I wont be doing this again ….. ouch….my wrist…. / .
“The rocks we were climbing today were going to be quite a feat! We had started out before sunrise on our adventure this morning while the air was still cool. Once the sun is up we’ll have to find some shade to escape the inevitable heat. Then….I nearly stepped on him. A gorgeous lizard, cleverly camouflaged on the rocks in front of me” Macro photograph taken from an Australian Paperbark tree. This was taken late in the afternoon, there had been some rain so the bark was quite wet. With the bark being so damp it seemed to enrich the colours somewhat. I adjusted the contrast a little as well which gives a painterly feel to the abstract. FOCAL LENGTH 6.0mm
Copyright © Bullock Photos – www.bullockphotos.com Eastern Water Dragons
Rough Knob Tailed Gecko cleaning his eye. Copyright © Bullock Photos – www.bullockphotos.com
Green Tree Frog
Copyright 2008 © Bullock Photos – www.bullockphotos.com Close up of my Male Water Dragon. He doesn’t mind me getting up close! 543 views
Chameleon showing mating colours. Mother natures beauty at its best!
Shot under infrared lights! Laminated Print Card Other Categories / Animals / Apes / Architecture / Baby Animals / Bears / Birds / Big Cats / Elephants / Fish / Insects / Macro / Nature / Reptiles
done in inkscape. / /
isolated green photo lizard
Acrylic, spray paint and stencils. / 1500X550cm The frog was quite happy waiting and dreaming about how true loves first kiss would feel.
Perhaps the only one in the world (in captivity anyway), this amazing lizard seems to do quite well outside in his enclosure, hopes are to breed him with several girls this season and I wish the owner luck! Incredible specimen.
... is a good offense. The frilled lizard is native to Australia. When threatened, they open their frill and hiss. If the threat is not scared away, they run at it on their hind legs, taking the first opportunity to run up a tree and hide. With the frill flattened, they blend right in to the bark. Drawn in charcoal on 70lb drawing paper, 2008. Original available.
I just can’t get enough of these guys, check out the eye pattern, its just stunning! Found near Katherine Gorge
Panther chameleon amidst psychedelic rainbow spirals. Prismacolor markers on Strathmore drawing paper. Featured in Spectacular Spirals
Taken at Werribee Zoo, near Melbourne. Had to take heaps of shots until I got him with both eyes pointing in the same direction!!!
/ Kids TShirts available at my Zazzle Store / / Adult TShirts available here at Red Bubble / / / Here is Nature Girl a la naturale!! / another brown paper mixed media creation from the studio of Karin Taylor :)
2 sales / Here is Nature Girl a la naturale!! / another brown paper mixed media creation from the studio of Karin Taylor :)
Silhouette of a Central Netted Dragon (Ctenophorus nuchalis) using the following quote - / / “Our land abounds in nature’s gifts; of beauty rich and rare. Many of Australia’s reptiles may now be threatened with extinction. We can choose to act and make a difference, or allow these amazing creatures to perish. Without your help, these unique animals will survive only in our minds and our children’s imaginations. So Australia’s reptile conservation is in your hands. Education is the key.” Profits from the sale of these t-shirts are donated to AFTCRA – Australian Freshwater Turtle Conservation & Research Association. / ©2008 Shannon Plummer. All Rights Reserved. / www.shannonplummerphotography.com / www.centralnetteddragon.com
Dreher Park Zoo, Palm Beach, FL / Nikon D70s / 70-300mm / F5.6, 1/40 / 10/25/08 – 269/97 Featured in Freedom to Shine / Featured in Dimensions / Featured in All That is Nature / Finished in the Top Ten in the Calendar – Lizard challenge in the All Pets Great and Small group / Finished in the Top Ten in the Reptiles challenge in the Mood & Ambiance group – 6/20/09 The green iguana or common iguana Iguana igauna is a large, arboreal herbivorous species of lizard of the genus Iguana native to Central and South America. The green iguana ranges over a large geographic area, from southern Brazil and Paraguay to as far north as Mexico, the Caribbean Islands; and in the United States as feral populations in South Florida (including the Florida Keys), Hawaii and the Rio Grande Valley of Texas. A herbivore, it has adapted significantly with regard to locomotion and osmoregulation as a result of its diet. It grows to 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) in length from head to tail, although a few specimens have grown more than 2 metres (6.6 ft) with bodyweights upward of 20 pounds (9.1 kg). Commonly found in captivity as a pet due to its calm disposition and bright colors, it can be demanding to care for properly. Space requirements and the need for special lighting and heat can prove challenging to an amateur hobbyist. The native range of the green iguana extends from southern Mexico to central Brazil, Paraguay, and Bolivia and the Caribbean; specifically Grenada, Curaçao, Trinidad and Tobago, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, and Utila. They have been introduced to Grand Cayman, Puerto Rico, Texas, Florida, Hawaii, and the US Virgin Islands. Green iguanas are diurnal,arboreal and are often found near water. Agile climbers, Iguana iguana can fall up to 50 feet (15 m) and land unhurt (iguanas use their hind leg claws to clasp leaves and branches to break a fall). During cold, wet weather, green iguanas prefer to stay on the ground for greater warmth.[6] When swimming, an iguana remains submerged, letting its four legs hang limply against its side. They propel through the water with powerful tail strokes. Because of the green iguana’s popularity in the pet trade and as a food source in Latin America, they are listed on the CITES Appendix II, which means that while they are not an endangered species, “their trade must be controlled so as to not harm the species in the future”. Due to a combination of events, the green iguana is considered an invasive species in South Florida and is found along the gulf coast of Florida from Key West to Pinellas County. The original small populations in the Florida Keys were animals that had arrived there due to hurricanes and storms; others were stowaways on ships carrying fruit from South America. Over the years, other iguanas were introduced into the wild mostly originating through the pet trade. Some were escapees and some were intentionally released by their owners, these iguanas survived and then thrived in their new habitat. They commonly hide in the attics of houses and on beaches. They often destroy gardens and landscaping. They also seem to be fond of eating a native endangered plant, Cordia globosa and feeding on Nicker nut (Caesalpinia) a primary food plant of the endangered Miami Blue Butterfly (Cyclargus thomasi bethunebakeri); additionally on Marco Island, green iguanas have been observed using the burrows of the Florida Burrowing Owl, a species of special concern, all of which can make them more of a serious threat to Florida’s ecosystem than originally believed. In January 2008, large numbers of feral iguanas in Florida dropped from the trees in which they lived, due to uncommonly cold nights causing their metabolisms to go into a “state of suspended animation” in which they lost their grips on the tree branches. Though no specific numbers were provided by local wildlife officials, local media described the phenomenon as a “frozen iguana shower” in which dozens “littered” local bike paths. Upon the return of daytime warmth many (but not all) of the iguanas “woke up” and resumed their normal activities. The green iguana is established in Maui, Hawaii as a feral species (despite strict legislation)and the Rio Grande Valley of Texas. As most reptiles carry salmonella, this is also a concern and a reason legislation has been sought to regulate the trade in Green iguanas. In the aftermath of two Caribbean hurricanes in 1995 , a group of fifteen green iguanas was found to be living on Anguilla; an island where that species have never been recorded previously. Biologist Ellen Censky, of the Connecticut State Museum of Natural History, believes that the new iguanas had accidentally gotten caught on the trees and rafted two hundred miles across the ocean from Guadaloupe, where green iguanas are an indigenous species. By examining the weather patterns and ocean currents, Censky has shown that the iguanas had spent three weeks at sea before arriving on the island.This colony began breeding on the new island within two years of its arrival. Wikipedia /
This little Green Anole was very curious of the passing visitors to the Eden Project in Cornwall UK. / . / Nikon D3000. Nikkor 18-200 f/3.5 – 5.6. F/8 1/250sec 105mm / . / Featured by The World group – 22nd Feb 2009 / Featured by LMAO ART – your funniest work group – 11th April 2009 / Featured by Shameless Self-Promotion – 12th April 2009 / Featured by Funny Kritters – 10th June 2009 / Featured by Freedom In Words and Art – 20th June 2009 / Journal / Featured by The Woman Photographer – 20th June 2009 / Journal / Featured by Color Me a Rainbow” – 6th Aug 2009 / Journal / 2nd place – Wild Animals Chalenge in Shameless Self-Promotion – April 2009 / Top Ten of / Color Me A Rainbow – Green Challenge – 13th Aug 2009 / Journal
coloured pencil/pen/photography / They were getting it on on my kitchen wall last night,and I just thought they were so cute all tangled up like that..so I took a photo, drew them and then photographed them on the wood. / :-) /
I love these little Garden Lizards, they are so tiny and fragile looking, their little toes so delicate and perfect…enjoy the humble Australian Garden Lizard. I use a Canon Powershot A480.
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