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Chameleons
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Author:  lynnmlane [ Thu Oct 23, 2003 2:54 pm ]
Post subject:  Chameleons

For the first time, I have had a family of chameleons living on my large back porch and surrounding gardens. They have kept these areas pest-free. what happens to these creatures during the winter? Do they survive? Can I help with their habitat.

Author:  dcluck [ Thu Oct 23, 2003 7:25 pm ]
Post subject: 

Are you talking about these?

http://www.zo.utexas.edu/research/txher ... ensis.html

Growing up here in Dallas, I've always heard people call them "chameleons" even though they obviously aren't. They do shift color, so I suppose that's why people do. When I lived on the M Streets I had a huge herd of them that were there every spring, summer and fall. Just saw two of them here at our new house for the first time last week. Love the fence-line shows they put on during mating season. :D

~Dave

Author:  dustoff79 [ Fri Oct 24, 2003 12:02 pm ]
Post subject: 

Down here in San Antonio, there everywhere. My wife hates them, my cat loves them :wink: I have a large number around my home :P . Over the past few years I have been doing some renovations to my home and found that they are living in my walls, lots of shells. They over winter in the attic and walls. I am sure that is one reason I do not have many roaches.

Author:  The Ent [ Thu Oct 30, 2003 8:15 am ]
Post subject: 

Quote:
my cat loves them


Yeah, can you say 'Crunchy Kitty Snack'?

When I lived in Florida, we had these and the grey-brown anoles everywhere.

Author:  chuckfranke [ Thu Oct 30, 2003 11:07 am ]
Post subject: 

Any chance these are house geckos? We have them by the hundreds around here and frankly I encourage them - i run a clothing business and moths, I am reasonably certain, are evil, Satanic little cashmere munching beasts.

My daughter brings them inside, names them and promptly loses them... but there ain't no moths in the house :-)

If they hang out on your bricks at night they are probably house geckos. On a warm night when we have all the lights on in my office 8-10 will hang out on my window and converge from every direction when a moth lands.

Author:  dcluck [ Mon Nov 24, 2003 4:46 pm ]
Post subject: 

I just found a teenie tiny baby Anole laying ontop of one of my mulched beds. After this cold snap passes I'll be letting him lose on my compost where he has a better chance of making it through the winter. Hopefully he'll be able to avoid the garter snakes that roam the area around the pile.

For those of you wanting to learn more about these little critters, check out Under the Leaves

~Dave

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