yes they can and they can also fly and eat small frogs
yes
It should ask "Is there" not their. Honestly.
some octopi, cameleon, and some other fish(From Penelopy) Marine Life: Side-swimming bottom feeding Flounder, Peacock Flounder, Mimic Octopus, Wonderpus OctopusMammals: Artic Fox, Artic Hare, Barren Ground Caribou, Ermine and PtarmiganReptiles and Insects: Chameleon, Goldenrod Crab Spider, Peron's Tree Frog, Golden Tortoise Beetlewhy-and-how-do-animals-change-color
YEA THEY CHANGE THE COLOR OF THE BODY TO MATCH THE COLOUR OF THE SURROUNDING check out the April 27 new yorker magazine - article on ramachandran's experiment on pages 79-80 - says they can match polka dots and checkerboard patterns!
Unfortunately, you cannot change the color of the eraser tool. If you want to avoid the checkerboard pattern, I suggest using the brush tool set to match the background color and paint over the line you wish to get rid of.
Yes. There is a famous set of photos showing a flounder matching light and dark backgrounds, and even doing a passable attempt at a chequerboard! See the related link below.
An octopus can change colors into whatever it feels like being.
Myth: Chameleons change color to match their environment. Chameleons don't change color to match their environment. Rather, they change color as a response to mood, temperature, health, communication, and light.
It only takes a chameleon a few milliseconds to change color. Despite popular belief, chameleons don't necessarily change color to match their background. In fact, chameleons change color to maintain a favorable body temperature since their bodies can't generate it's own body heat.
We had one in the bathroom that changed it's color to match the mirror frame. The frame is black with gold specks. Then it flew onto the wall and again changed to match the wall's color (beige). I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes!
Yes
Not really. While there are reptiles that can change color, none of them live in the ocean.