Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Desert Spiny Lizard

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Close-up of the male desert spiny lizard. While the females tend to be a more or less sandy color, the males have very dark markings on the neck, with turquoise to blue under the jaw and along the belly - often with orange to yellow markings on the side.

Copyright
© 2013
Image Size
4288x2848 / 7.8MB
Keywords
America, American Southwest, Animalia, California, Chordata, Coachella, Coachella Valley, Coachella Valley Preserve, Lacertilia, Palm Springs, Phrynosomatidae, Riverside County, S. magister, San Andreas Fault, Sceloporus, Sceloporus magister, Squamata, USA, United States, Vertebrata, animal, animals, beautiful, beauty, camouflage, cold-blooded, color, colorful, creature, critter, desert, exotic, eye, green, iguana, lizard, native, natural, nature, oasis, reptilia, reptilian, saurian, scale, scaly, skin, southwest, spiny, spring, striped, summer, terrestrial, vertebrate, wild, wildlife, reptile, lizard
Contained in galleries
Spiny Desert Lizards and Their Allies (Phrynosomatidae)
Close-up of the male desert spiny lizard. While the females tend to be a more or less sandy color, the males have very dark markings on the neck, with turquoise to blue under the jaw and along the belly - often with orange to yellow markings on the side.