What the heck is this !?!

PoshPenny

New Member
I know this not a Cham but any reptile experts have an idea??! It crawled in my garage. What the heck is it? It's mean as hell. It looks like a lost pet.
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100% anole. what kind I'm not so sure about. With that colour it might need help they should be lime green or chocolate brown.
 
In the south there are lots of anoles. Florida is teaming with them. They can be quite the biters as well. I'm not sure if you should let it go or not though based on where you are.
 
I'm in far north ga, it will drop in the 20's tonight. I'll help him. I found a link saying he is a male brown anole, his neck flap is bright red. His tail looks bruised :( I think he escaped or was thrown out.
 
Yay, a free friend! Any lizards foolish enough to wander into my garage would suddenly find themselves in their new "forever home". Doesn't happen too often in Missouri, though :D
 
To me it appears to be a green anole that a cat or something has messed w/. he's brown cause he's cold. a brown (bahamian or cuban) when brown would have a pattern of a sort, and a stubbier head.

Even in FL there aren't to many of them anymore. The invasive browns which are much more aggressive have basically taken over. 20 years ago I used to see more green ones, like 20-30% greens to browns. Now you see browns everywhere, and maybe one to two greens. In my back yard I have two males. One adult and juvi. In the side yard there is one or two more greens that live in the little palm tree. THERE ARE BROWN ANOLES EVERYWHERE. I also don't ever see green tree frogs in my yard. The HUGE cuban tree frogs have taken over. I have a big Cuban tree frog that resides in one of my sheds. Like clock work he comes out and perches on a tree branch above the shed every evening to hunt after dark. I have seen green tree frogs at a jobsite north of me about an hour from Tampa.
 
As others have said, it's an anole. They are very common in southern states, including Georgia. It's a wild one that probably came into your garage looking for a safe place to ride out cold weather. You can let it go into some thick bushes or near the outside of the house to find a safe place to hide. We had tons of them hide in the paneling or bricks of our house in Texas to keep a bit warmer. I used to catch them all the time and let them go again. They are feisty and will bite you for sure if they get a chance!
 
Funny thing as a youngster coming down here on vacation I remember taking two of them and having them latch onto our ear lobes. They'd hang there for quite sometime.
 
His tail is broken and bleeding ferret, how should I help that? I don't plan on holding him at all, he is very aggressive but it appears he had a romp with something and it messed him up. He is turning green now, but the tail is bleeding at the tip. I have another ten gallon tank from when my gecko was a baby. Nurse his tail then free him?
 
The loss of his tail is a defense mechanism. I find tails all the time on our back patio from the cat playing w/ them. It should stop on its own. Yep nurse him up a bit, wait till its reasonably warm, and stick him in a thick bush. He'll find somewhere to hunker down for the cooler weather.
 
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I looked up the basking temp and it's the same as my chams, so I gave him a basking spot with a humid hide under it with reptile moss and there is a cool humid hide on the other side, plus I gave him one small cricket to see if he would eat.
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he went straight to the basking spot, he is pretty badly bruised. Our neighbor has a cat. I'm not gong to touch the tail, but if it gets infected I'll take him to the vet then let him go this summer. Lol he just laid flat and spread his hind legs out. He is funny.
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He is eyeing a wax worm I dropped in. Thanks for all the help guys. The heat is drying up the blood on the tip of tail, and I think he will be okay. Funny fact these are known as the "American chameleon". Thanks again!
 
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