The male will bob his head while showing his dewlap. the male is larger and has a red thing called a dewlap. The male will get on top of the female and bite her neck. After a few minutes they will break up. Then after a week the female will lay her eggs
you have to check if they are a girl or a boy the males are bigger and have a large red thing under their neck that they use for mating. Leave them alone for a week. Check the cage for eggs. You may not see them mate because they mate for a few minutes. The male will bob his head and show his read thing called a dewlap. Give them a hiding place for them to hide. 20 gallon cage and make it look as natural as possible
yes the anole has offspring good question. it gives birth to live young once a year.
Yes they do.
No. As with most reptiles, anoles abandon their offspring as eggs. The young will instinctively attack anything that moves, even a gum wrapper, consuming everything that fits into their mouths, which, in my experience, is mainly ants. Many terrestrial anoles sit and wait head-down on the trunks of trees, making a mad dash at prey that veers too close. Green anoles, on the other hand, slowly stalk their prey, pouncing when it is in reach. They tend to catch more flighted insects that their terrestrial counterparts, but everything is instinctual.
No, Anoles are actually related to Iguanas".
Ther are more anoles then crickets because anoles are found in florida,africa and ny.
Both anoles and dinosaurs belong to the diapsid group of reptiles. However, dinosaurs belonged to the order Dinosauria, and anoles are lizards, which are part of the Squamata order. Therefor, dinosaurs are distant relatives of anoles.
anoles lay eggs when they are about 2-3 years old
yes green anoles love their habitat humid
yes there are a few types of anoles left in parts of Florida
Missing tails are no cause for alarm; anoles can regenerate their lost tails
nothing
yes
yes!
no