Yes
No, Anoles are actually related to Iguanas".
Just like iguanas, they stop water from going put from it's body.
The scientific name of a lizard is Lacertilia.
Sophie Lockwood has written: 'Chameleons' -- subject(s): Chameleons, Juvenile literature 'Iguanas' -- subject(s): Iguanas, Juvenile literature 'Bats (World of Mammals)' 'Foxes' -- subject(s): Foxes, Juvenile literature 'Dragonflies (World of Insects)' 'Zebras (World of Mammals)' 'Skunks (World of Mammals)' 'Polar Bears (The World of Mammals)' 'Chimpanzees' -- subject(s): Chimpanzees, Juvenile literature 'Flies (World of Insects)' 'Giraffes (The World of Mammals)'
Geckos, chameleons, monitor lizards and iguanas, among others.
There is no specific collective noun for chameleons. The collective noun for lizards is 'a lounge of lizards', which could be used for 'a lounge of chameleons'. If that doesn't suit the situation, any suitable noun can serve as the collective noun. By looking at collective nouns for other species such as "A Lounge of Lizards" and "A Mess of Iguanas", one finds that these particular nouns do not categorize the species on any scientific basis, rather they make generic connections based on observed behavioral patterns. Therefore logical extrapolation of this would lead to a collective noun based on the Chameleons ability to change the coloration of its skin cells. Nouns such as concealment, camouflage, illusion or ambuscade could be used when describing a collection of Chameleons. For Example: "A camouflage of Chameleons" or "An Illusion of Chameleons" would be perfectly acceptable.
yes iguanas have scaly skin. An Iguanas' skin is rough and coarse similar to dry fish scales
There is no specific collective noun for chameleons. The collective noun for lizards is 'a lounge of lizards', which could be used for 'a lounge of chameleons'. If that doesn't suit the situation, any suitable noun can serve as the collective noun. By looking at collective nouns for other species such as "A Lounge of Lizards" and "A Mess of Iguanas", one finds that these particular nouns do not categorize the species on any scientific basis, rather they make generic connections based on observed behavioral patterns. Therefore logical extrapolation of this would lead to a collective noun based on the Chameleons ability to change the coloration of its skin cells. Nouns such as concealment, camouflage, illusion or ambuscade could be used when describing a collection of Chameleons. For Example: "A camouflage of Chameleons" or "An Illusion of Chameleons" would be perfectly acceptable.
Iguanas are picky.
Domestic iguanas do.
are chameleons territorial
chameleons reproduce