No, most can not, but large adults may break your skin.
It doesn't. Crickets are primarily herbivores and detrivores. Anoles eat crickets. Crickets can bite off toes and chunks of the lizard's feet.
lizard
You know when your Anole is dead when it stops moving completely and when it decomposes (which means,when its skin is coming off).
The Yellow Spotted Lizard in the book "Holes" by Louis Sachar is fictional.
When you cook the turkey the skin's oil/juice comes into action. When you bite into it the skin slips off.
When a lizard sheds its skin completely, it is called "ecdysis" or "molting." This process allows lizards to remove old or damaged skin and is a natural part of their growth cycle. Ecdysis can vary in frequency depending on the lizard's age, species, and environmental conditions.
I personnally think that treps are unnecessary and that you should try to catch one yourself, unless you lure it into a cage and set it free somewhere else.
Yes, they do. I pick up ladybugs all the time, and they bite. it's hard to get them off when they latch on to your skin.
Possibly it isn't humid enough when he sheds so the shed builds up eventually making feet fall off.
I imagine it would depend on where exactly they bite you, but generally no, their bite does not hurt. I have lived in Florida my entire life and have caught these lizards and hung them from my ears and my nose. I would just put their mouth near my ear and once they bite down they don't let go. So they will just hang there.The larger brown anole can pinch a little when you try to pry them back off of you, but that is only because they are a little more aggressive and won't let go.
Yes, in fact, if it does bite you, many say not to jerk it off of you because its teeth have a grip so firm that if you pull back too hard you might rip it's jaw off.
Yes, most lizards bite. Some lizards squirt blood through their naked eye, whilst other lizards wave their tail to scare predators away. Yes, most lizards can bite as a weapon for self defense. However lizards that are kept in captivity, such as iguanas, are less likely to bite humans because they are used to human contact. Some lizards give a warning before biting - if a lizard opens its mouth wide, swells and hisses at the same time, this is a warning that it may be about to bite.