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they do by there back color/pattern as many people think snakes are NOT color blind so they know there surroundings
Octopi species all have the ability to change color to match their surroundings, and can squirt a jet of ink like substance in the water to mask their escape.
It would then be called a lizard
Chameleons don't change color to match their environment. Rather, they change color as a response to mood, temperature, health, communication, and light. As the seasons change, the Arctic fox changes the color of its coat. In the spring and summer, it has a dark coat to match the brown dirt in its environment. In fall and winter, it turns white to match the surrounding snow. Cuttlefish have the ability to change color too. It can generate a wide range of colors and interesting patterns. By perceiving the color of a backdrop and constricting the right combination of its chromatophores, the cuttlefish can blend in with all sorts of surroundings.
They defend themselves by changing their color to match their surroundings.
Seahorses change their color to match their surroundings and then they hide in plants and suck them in through the plant so that the prey won't see them.
Queen Trigger fish live in the Caribbean ocean. They are typically found along the reef and change color to match with their surroundings.
They have poison glands behind their eyes. Animals who attempt to eat them usually spit them out (if they are lucky).
No. Frogs are not mammals nor endothermic, which is why they change their heart rate and temperature to match their surroundings. Humans regulate their body temperature and heart rate at a steady rate no matter what their surroundings are.
Bays and chestnuts and other earthy colors, simply because they lived in the wild for thousands of years, and they needed earthy tones to match their surroundings.
Yes Bustec offer a exact color match. The made the color match to match last years model.
shiny surfaces should match surroundings