No. The Sugar Glider is its own unique self.
some lizards have very good camouflage!
A lot of marine animals use camoflague but to name a few: cuttlefish, octopus, dolpins...
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Yes. All animals are consumers.
So they can be camouflaged, so their prey (or predators) won't see them.
It depends which exotic animal you want. An example of an exotic animal you can keep is a sugar glider. As long as the exotic pet you want is legal in your state you can usually get it.
Could possibly be a sugar glider
Absolutely not. Australia has very strict laws about keeping its native wild animals. It is fortunate, for the gliders, that no species of glider is allowed to be kept as a pet in Australia.In addition, there are only five species of glider in Australia:mahogany gliderfeathertail gliderlesser glider (also known as the yellow bellied glider)greater glidersquirrel glider
The male sugar glider has a longer, more "stringy" tail and the female usually has a bigger underbelly ( for storing eggs).
Many animals have evolved to be stripy in order to be camouflaged to their environment. This means they will be less visible to predators and more likely to live long lives.
Tigers are usually jungle hunters, and the tiger stripes mimic the dappled sunlight seen in jungles.