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  • A side-blotched lizard (Uta stansburiana) rests in a crack in a sandstone cliff in the Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument near Tuweep, Arizona.
    Lizard_SideBlotched_4594.jpg
  • A northern plateau lizard (Sceloporus undulates elongatus) blends in with the rocks along the rim of the Black Canyon of the Gunnison in Colorado. The northern plateau lizard, which lives in rock outcrops and canyon walls, feeds on grasshoppers, crickets, leaf hoppers, flying ants, moths and other insects.
    Lizard_NorthernPlateau_GunnisonNP_20...jpg
  • A male ornate tree lizard (Urosaurus ornatus) suns itself on a rock in a lush area near Montezuma Well in Montezuma Castle National Monument, Arizona.
    Lizard_Ornate-Tree_Montezuma-Well_55...jpg
  • A long-tailed sage brush lizard (Urosaurus graciosus) navigates a ledge in an area known as The Wave in the Coyote Buttes Wilderness near the Utah/Arizona border.
    Lizard_LongTailedBrush.jpg
  • A common side-blotched lizard (Uta stansburiana) rests between two rocks in the Sonoran Desert near Superior, Arizona.
    Lizard_Side-Blotched_Boyce-Thompson_...jpg
  • A female Western Fence Lizard (Sceloporus occidentalis) emerges from its burrow high in Tilden Regional Park, Orinda, California.
    Lizard_Western-Fence_Burrow_Tilden_1...jpg
  • A side-blotched lizard (Uta stansburiana) rests in a crack in a sandstone cliff in Tuweep, Arizona.
    Lizard_SideBlotched_4589.jpg
  • A Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum) extends its tongue while sunning itself in the Great Basin Desert in southern Arizona. The Gila monster is the only venomous lizard native to the United States. This image is of a captive model.
    Gila-Monster_Tongue_6836.jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves shoot 50 feet into the air through a tiny hole in a lava shelf off on the Kauai coast known as the Spouting Horn blowhole. It sounds like a whale breathing, but Hawaiian legend says the sound is actually the "lizard woman" moaning. She would attack anyone who got too close. One day she chased a fisherman into a lava tube. He escaped; she's still stuck.
    SpoutingHorn.jpg
  • A captive blue-faced honeyeater (Entomyzon cyanotis) rests on a branch. The blue-faced honeyeater is common in northern and eastern Australia and southern New Guinea. It generally forages in the branches and foliage of trees and mainly feeds on small insects, including cockroaches, termites, grasshopers, beetles, flies, moths, bees, ants and spiders. It is occasionally known to also feed on small lizards.
    Honeyeater_Blue-Faced_Captive_3367.jpg
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