Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Green Anole

Anolis carolinensis

Description:

The typical coloration for a green anole ranges from the richest and brightest of greens to the darkest of browns, with little variation in between. The color spectrum is a result of three layers of pigment cells or chromatophores: the xanthophores, responsible for the yellow pigmentation; cyanophores, responsible for the blue pigmentation, and melanophores, responsible for the brown and black pigmentation when the background is other than green and the anole changes color to camouflage itself. A lack in one of the pigment genes causes color exceptions. These color mutations are also called phases. The rare blue-phased green anole lacks xanthophores, which results in a blue, rather than red, often pastel blue, anole. These specimens have become popular recently in the pet trade market. When the anole is completely lacking xanthophores, it is said to be axanthic and the animal will have a completely pastel- or baby-blue hue. They are extremely rare—usually produced in one of every 20,000 individual anoles in the wild. Another phase is the yellow-phased green anole, which lacks cyanophores. Colonies of these rare color-phased anoles have been reported, but anoles with these color mutations rarely live for long, since the green color provides camouflage for hunting down prey, as well as hiding from predators.

Habitat:

Orlando Wetlands

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

No Comments

James McNair
Spotted by
James McNair

Florida, USA

Spotted on Apr 28, 2014
Submitted on Apr 29, 2014

Related Spottings

Anolis Anolis Anolis Anolis lizard

Nearby Spottings

Spotting Spotting Duck potato (arrowhead) Narrow leaved sunflower
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team