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So, your out in the yard working...
#11
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-s...6077_n.jpg

bugs aren't winning at my house... I have about 10 of these guys and the red and green ones as well. I lot of lizard crap, but it's worth it not to have any spiders or bugs! Big Grin

edit: I don't know how to tell the diff between male and female tho.
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#12
Those are anoles. The way to sex lizards is by holding them in your hand, belly down, facing away from you. Gently lift the tail up until its a little past 90 degrees. At the base of the underside of the tail it will either be smooth (female) or two bumps on the outisde edges (male). The other lizard you mention is the day gecko.
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#13
How do you catch anoles ?

Cheers

rainyjim
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#14
Carefully...

As kids we used to take a long piece of grass and make a loop at one end and use it as a stick/lasso.

Honestly, early morning or evening is the time to do it. For reptiles heat=energy so you have to get them before they warm up or after they cool off, they move slower. You have to block them in with something physical, so with anoles around here I'll get them in the early morning hanging on a sun facing screen as the sun comes up. Trap them between the corners of the frame and your hand.

Day geckos are party animals. They like sweet and I've noticed they like the sweet liqueurs. So they'll hang out around the neck of a bottle. My roommate has left shot glasses with schnapps in it (a drop or two left in the bottom) and found a gecko with the tail sticking out of the top licking the bottom.

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#15
Yeah, I haven't seen any jackson's here but loads of the Anole's chameleon. It's cool to watch them turn from dark brown to brown and green. Smile

I think if you have cats you won't have any visible lizards hanging around. Cats and even some dogs will kill them. I'd think if a bird spotted one it would be history as well. I have a good sized covered deck and they like to hang around some of the see though plastic panels to warm up. Especially the Day Gecko. The day gecko will come right up to me and eat some ice cream. Next time I should get some pictures of that.

I kinda find it fun to watch the turf wars between the Anole chameleon and day gecko's so far the Gecko's seem to be winning and man can they move. I also find it interesting to watch the day gecko do it's tweaked out dance when it meets a female it's hard to explain but they kind of act like a robot tweaker moving in micro tweak type movements.
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#16
Eden Roc has Jackson's, the neighbors found the heads, after their cats ate the rest.

Peace and long life
Peace and long life
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#17
Female Jacksons are the ones that don't have horns from what I have been told. They change from dark to bright as well, but are very recognizable because they look so alien Smile. Big, protruding, orbital eyes, funky little hands with a fierce grip, a tail that is prehensile, meaning they use it like a hand, grabbing things, and the males have three horns like a triceratops spiking out from their foreheads!!

Melissa Fletcher
___________________________
"Make yurts, not war" Bill Coperthwaite, 1973
Melissa Fletcher
___________________________
"Make yurts, not war" Bill Coperthwaite, 1973
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#18
Anoles aren't chameleons. A lot of lizards will change color based on their heat needs. If the are dark they are trying to absorb heat, if they are light colored they are shedding heat.

Chameleons are known for changing colors because it is more dramatic with them and because its a social marker. For example, a male veiled chameleon is dark green with 2 or 3 lime green bars on his side. When another veiled enters his area the lime bars turn yellow, and he flattens his body to make it appear large.

You usually don't have to do the tail thing with chameleons because they sexes appear very different. Male jacksons have three horns. There is also the quadrecornis which has four horns but I have not heard of them on the islands.
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#19
Ah, the anole -- one of my favorite lizards. The anole is often called the American chameleon because of its beady chameleon-like eyes and its ability to change colors. But the anole is in fact more like an iguana, and its color-changing ability is very limited. You can see in the picture at the right those lop-sided, clawed iguana feet, which also have sticky pads of scales, which allow it to clamber up tree limbs, no matter how smooth they may be. The head shown at left has the scaled, independently movable eyes of a chameleon, but the head itself is long and slender, unlike a chameleon. Anoles were, in fact, once classified in the family Iguanidae, but were recently given their own family: Polychrotidae, meaning "multi-colored."
The color changing ability of the anole is limited, but breath-taking nonetheless. Defensively, anoles usually camouflage themselves in greens and browns, but I've seen them take on vivid blues and deep purples, and even, under extreme duress, a deep jet black. They seem to do this unconsciously, taking on the color of whatever background they happen to be on, or even changing color according to mood. They seem more likely to be green when relaxed, and brown when provoked or pursued. The males have a large throat pouch or dewlap, which they will extend like a flag when another male appears. They flatten their bodies laterally and turn their side to the rival, making themselves appear as large and threatening as possible, all the while bouncing up and down on their front legs. The dewlap is usually red beneath the white underscales, giving a pink appearance, but can be dappled with blues, greens, and yellows. I've even seen male anoles display at their own images in a mirror!

Mine change all kinds of colors when defending their turfs of other lizards. So.. Call em what you want they can change all kinds of colors depending on their moods... Seen it happen first hand on my deck many times. Smile
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