Reptile Pictures
Reptile Pictures
A Tree-python looks into the glasses of an animal keeper at Wuppertal's zoo, Friday, May 11, 2001. The baby Python changes its colour from yellow to green after 10 months. (AP Photo/Roland Weihrauch)
A timber rattlesnake is shown in its Philadelphia Zoo Tuesday, July 18, 2000 in Philadelphia. (AP Photo)
A large snapping turtle crawls into a pond near the Stillwater River in Kalispell, Montana, Tuesday, July 9, 2002. The turtle was being released back to the wild after a city worker captured it in a duck pond at Woodland Park Tuesday afternoon. Maintanance worker Jay Marsh, who jumped into the pond to capture the turtle, estimated it weighed 50-70 pounds. Parks supervisor Ken Bauska says his department has been receiving reports of a large turtle eating waterfowl in the pond for about four years. According to Jim Vashro of the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, snapping turtles are not native to this part of Montana. (AP Photo/Daily Inter Lake, Robin Loznak)
In this photo released by Brookfield Zoo, a blue tongued skink munches on a cicada turned loose in its habitat Thursday, May 24, 2007, at Brookfield Zoo in Brookfield, Ill. Cicadas are more than just really noisy insects to zoo nutritionists. They're extremely nutritious and such a welcome addition to the diets of the animals, the zoo bringing them to the animals who live inside so they can enjoy them, too. (AP Photo/Brookfield Zoo, Jim Schulz)
A photo of two Everglades Rat Snakes taken in their natural habitat.
This Monitor Lizard crawls out onto a tree limb on a warm sky blue day at Matusadona National Park at the Zimbabwe Nature Wildlife Refuge.
A Komodo dragon walks around her enclosure at Chester Zoo, Chester, England, in this Dec. 18, 2006 file photo. (AP Photo/Dave Thompson, File)
a Spiny-tailed iguana found in Half Moon Caye, Belize. There is little known about the spiny tailed iguana. They can be found in the Caribbean coastal area, Florida, and mostly Mexico.. The spiny tailed iguana can typically grow up to 24-34 inches in length They love to lay and soak up the sun and are often found around stones and brick walls. They are not good in captivity.
This is a Round-tailed Horned Lizard, sometimes called the "horny" toad, but it is not a toad at all. They can be found in western States of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, including areas in Mexico. They mainly eat ants and enjoy sandy, hot and dry climates.
A threatened green sea turtle is shown on Eastern Island in the Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2005. Green Sea Turtles are some of the most popular of the ocean turtles and they are protected by many countries. (AP Photo/Luci Pemoni)














