Thresh always has a blast in the clover! <3
we're not kids anymore.

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â
styofa doing anything

Origami Around
cherry valley forever
Sade Olutola
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
Jules of Nature
noise dept.
Xuebing Du
Mike Driver
Cosimo Galluzzi

pixel skylines
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

@theartofmadeline

shark vs the universe

JBB: An Artblog!

JVL

ellievsbear
seen from TĂźrkiye
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@snakesneakers
Thresh always has a blast in the clover! <3
I spent this whole photoshoot with a giant aloe plant poking my butt But I got some of my favorite shots ever!
Party pythons đ happy year of the snake!
Cute from snoot to boot!
Keep on smilin'!
do you support the breeding of unhealthy morphs like the spider morph?
I do not :v
ARP Base morph
First Produced by
ARP Constrictors
Albino Ball Pythons
Regular, Faded, and High Contrast
From the Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife page on Facebook, based in AustraliaâŚ
The three-eyed snake warns The Dry is coming!
Our Rangers found a three-eyed snake on the Arnhem Highway near Humpty Doo just out of Darwin. It was a juvenile, approximately 40cm long.
The snake is peculiar as an x-ray revealed it was not two separate heads forged together, rather it appeared to be one skull with an additional eye socket and three functioning eyes.
It was generally agreed that the eye likely developed very early during the embryonic stage of development. It is extremely unlikely that this is from environmental factors and is almost certainly a natural occurrence as malformed reptiles are relatively common.
he has a hat.
Cinnamon Ghi Ball Yellow Belly
aka GHI Cinna Belly
First produced by Mat Humphrey
Leopard Ball Mystic Pastel Spider Yellow Belly
aka Leopard Bumble Belly Mystic
First produced by JNL Reptiles
Champagne Fire Lesser Pastel Pinstripe
aka Mantis
First produced by unknown
Oh sweet lil Raina
Fun Fact Friday: There are Species of Lesbian Lizards!
This is a New Mexico Whiptail Lizard (Aspidoscelis neomexicanus), and I am 100% sure that this lizard is a female! How can I know?Â
Well, because every New Mexico Whiptail Lizard is a female!
There are about 45 species of whiptail lizards (which used to be one genus but then were sorted mostly into the genera Aspidoscelis and Cnemidophorus), at least 15 of which are âunisexualâ species, i.e. all-female species.Â
(some species are fun colours!)
These lizards reproduce exclusively via parthenogenesis, which basically means they clone themselves every time they reproduce, laying eggs that contain genetically-identical offspring. Now, normally I would call such a species asexual lizards, to get some of that good ace rep, but hereâs the thing:
These all-female lizards still mate with each other.
(gal pals! đ)
Every breeding season, these lizards go through same-sex mating behaviours, including lengthy courtship rituals, which culminates in one female lizard mounting the other.Â
This process can last more than 10 minutes.
(I love this paper)
Without same-sex mating, a female might lay one or two eggs in a breeding season. Maybe. With same-sex mating, a female can lay up to 9 eggs in a season! Thatâs 2-3 clutches with 2-3 eggs in each, and a HUGE increase in reproductive success!
A BBC clip about these lizards from 2010 claims that the âmale-likeâ behaviour of the females is caused by an increase of âthe male hormone testosteroneâ, but thatâs actually not true. At all.Â
The BBC lied to me about Lesbian Lizards!!!
In reality, testosterone levels stay uniformly low throughout the breeding season, while the cycling of estrogen and progesterone are what triggers the different mating behaviours. Neither of these hormones are generally referred to as âmaleâ hormones.Â
(git gud, BBC. Honestly, this 2 minute clip has a bunch of mistakes, mostly to increase the Drama, but whatever, I guess).Â
(one of my favourite graphs in anything, tbh)
Before the ovulation, the lizardâs levels of estrogen increases, leading to âfemale-likeâ mating behaviour. After mating, but before the eggs are laid, estrogen drops off a clip while progesterone peaks, and the female goes off to mate with other females, this time in the âmale-likeâ role.
(This one is A. exsanguis, which is fun because itâs name means âlacking bloodâ although I am 99.999999% sure that they do have blood)
Once the eggs are laid, the female has a period of inactivity, probably because laying eggs is a lot of work and she doesnât have the TIME or ENERGY to deal with the ups and downs of courtship.Â
(Seriously, though, it probably is a way to recover after the metabolically-taxing work of reproduction. Let the new mom REST).
This has been Fun Fact Friday, telling you the story of the Lesbian Lizards because I love lesbian lizards so much you guys you donât even know.
Also, my city celebrates Pride in August, so Happy Pride to All! (But especially to Lesbian Lizards, my beloved)
Oh, look. More Sources:
Keep reading
I too keep Lesbian Lizards! These are Mourning Geckos (so called because some idjit decided that since theyâre all female, they must be âmourningâ their males). They also practice âpseudo-copulationâ and while they CAN lay eggs without it, they donât like to. They are very very vocal with each other and like living in little Lesbian colonies.
They are also very very teeny tiny. I have tried to convey this by showing one eating a fruit fly (you can see the wings sticking out of her mouth) and one next to small water droplets.