News

In the wild, brown anoles can live up to five years. In captivity, they can live up to eight years, though the average is closer to four. Both male and female brown anoles reach sexual maturity at ...
They found a greater negative effect by predatory curly-tailed lizards on female brown anoles who spent time on the ground, which is where their insect food is found. But surprisingly, male ...
Male brown anoles have a red/orange dewlap edged in yellow. Female green anoles often have a white stripe down their backs. Female brown anoles have a light brown stripe, edged with diamond or ...
After rounding up 21 female brown anoles from the wilds of Orlando, Florida, the researchers gently anesthetized the lizards and opened them up. In anoles, the ovaries are transparent, making it ...
Brown anoles, like other lizard species ... Following successful copulations, the female will begin to lay clutches of a single egg. By laying an egg about every two weeks, a female can lay ...
Through the summer, female anoles lay a single egg every seven ... As the morning heat builds, we spot our first lizards: Cuban brown anoles near to the ground, and the mottled scales of ...
The brown anoles, having few enemies ... is the natural time to see the new babies as they hatch. During that time, a female will lay one egg approximately every 14 days until nights begin ...
In South Florida, two Caribbean lizard species met for the first time. What followed provided some of the clearest evidence to date of evolution in action. James Stroud, an assistant professor in ...
Libby He found that in the presence of brown anoles, the green natives moved about 17 times higher in trees, or about 8.3 meters in median perch height, to coexist. But the shift did not allow ...
Researchers suspect the answer might be 'yes.' Invasive brown anoles inflict their own ills on our ecosystems. For one, this Cuban native nudges out native lizards. But when mosquitoes fill up on ...
These lizards, which can be found on the ground or trees, are called brown anoles (Anolis sagrei), and they have been spotted at an increasing frequency across the island. The catch is ...