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Identifying a Lizard?

Identifying a Lizard - light brown lizard on concreteIs this a brown anole? If so what exactly do they eat?

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Silver Answer Medal for All Time! 320 Answers
April 3, 20200 found this helpful

If it is one, they eat insects. Crickets and such. Here is a care sheet. Keep the little guy warm! www.petsmart.com/.../A0160.html

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April 3, 20200 found this helpful

They have an unusual face and I can't quite see the face on yours. Here is a picture:

whitepython.com/.../

They mostly eat insects. They may eat fruit and berries, but insects are their favorite.

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April 3, 20200 found this helpful

These are neat but it is difficult to tell for sure from your picture.
I live in Florida and I have these in my yard - not sure where they came from - but they have mingled with other lizards so not too many remain true 'anoles.

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They seem to eat insects and very little else but mine are outside.

Here are a couple of close-up pictures that might help identify yours.

www.cabi.org/.../107830#toPictures

animaldiversity.org/.../

en.wikipedia.org/.../Brown_anole

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April 4, 20200 found this helpful

This is a Brown Anole Lizard - they are native to Cuba & Bahamas, now they are found coastal, southern states and as far as Texas. They are often sold as pet Lizards. More info- wikipedia.org/.../brown-anole

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April 5, 20200 found this helpful

If you are looking to make a pet out of the lizard you need to go to the pet store and buy the heat rocks, lamps, cage just to name a few. They sell special foods at the pet store that this lizard will eat. I have hundreds of lizards all around my home and yard because I live I the topics. it is fun to keep hem for a few days and when the grandkids visit they catch them, keep them for 2 days and let them go.

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I would suggest that you might like this little guy but he does belong out in nature. Keep him for a few days and have fun watching him then let him go. They do better in nature than they do locked up in a cage for sure.

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April 6, 20200 found this helpful

Small crickets, meal worms, flys

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