Soma
Sacred Earth => Animals, Birds, and all our other creature friends [Public] => Topic started by: Nichi on January 11, 2010, 06:45:17 AM
-
I just read that Florida is having such an uncharacteristic cold that iguanas are dropping from the trees. They go into a "paralysis" state when it gets too cold.
Here's a little video story about it:
http://www.weather.com/multimedia/videoplayer.html?clip=16226
(http://www.rfcah.com/images/animals/fijian_banded_iguana_.jpg)
-
What incredible creatures!
-
We don't have them where I am or north of here .. the climate has to be pretty tropical for them. Florida usually fits that bill, but the US has a lot of weird weather this year.
But yes, they are fascinating! So ancient, yet they have a petulance about them.
I'm not sure... you have some kin of them, if not themselves, right?
(http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3279/2405526774_d71bf0d35f.jpg)
Nat'l Geographic:
The Green Iguana (Iguana iguana) 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, the Florida Keys, Hawaii and the Rio Grande Valley of Texas. The Green iguana is a reptile commonly found in captivity as a pet and grows to 1.5 meters in length from head to tail, although a few specimens have grown more than 2 meters (6 feet) and can weigh upwards of 20 pounds (10 kg).
-
Not aware of anything like that in Aust. Xero may know different.
-
Our Ozzy Goanna was wrongly named after Iguanas, a Spanish word which might have been adapted from and Indian term for this group of distinctive lizards. - I don't know on that score. Our goanna is a monitor (it has a forked tongue - so is more closely related to snakes actually) Iganuas have a fleshy tongue of 'true' lizards. Though we have a number of lizards that look like them, like the Beaded Dragon and particularly the Forest Dragon from up north, these are a totally different family of lizards.
-
Thanks, X! Hey that forest dragon is also a handsome critter!
(http://www.wettropics.gov.au/st/rainforest_explorer/Resources/Images/animals/reptiles/BoydsForestDragon.jpg)