Kids playing at the market place in Trinidad Cuba
Yikes !!!!!!
My first Common blue ~ Icarusblauwtje (Polyommatus…
Talus Dome 02
Stairway to the Chapel of Our Lady of Fátima (1924…
Keukenhof, Lisse, The Netherlands...
MARTINIQUE
AMSTERDAM
AMSTERDAM
GERARDMER
LA CATHEDRALE DE ROUEN
SIESTE DANS LES SOUKS 2
Autumn Scenery in the Park...
...Friendly Colors...
PORTO
VIGNES
National Museum Luang Prabang
...purple rose...
We and our Reflections...
Pura Dan Terima Kasih
Carlos Relvas photographic studio (1876).
Amphitheatre El Djem
Sleedoorn (Prunus spinosa)...
Happy kids in Subagan
Residential district with shopping center
Where Vultures are Resting
44/50
Che
Begegnung
Orange tip ~ Oranjetipje (Anthocharis cardamines)…
London Eye
Betsey Island near Hobart
SAINT QUENTIN en PICARDIE
On the Way
...stone and wood...
...where the love has remained in the world ?...
Dernière rose du jardin...
HONFLEUR
SOUVENIR DU MAROC
VIGNES VERTUS
...she is waiting in the rosegarden...
...flying...the lightness of being...
VERTUS
Immaculate white: church, chimneys and roofs.
Autumnial Dolomites
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Monitor crosses the side walk วงศ์เหี้ย
Monitor lizards, also known as biawak or goannas, genus Varanus, are members of the family Varanidae. Varanus is a group of largely carnivorous lizards which includes the largest living lizard, the Komodo dragon, and the crocodile monitor. The closest living relatives are the anguid and helodermatid lizards.
Monitor lizards are usually large reptiles, although some can be as small as 12 centimeters in length. They have long necks, powerful tails and claws, and well-developed limbs. Most species are terrestrial, but arboreal and semi-aquatic monitors are also known. Almost all monitor lizards are carnivorous, although Varanus bitatawa, Varanus prasinus and Varanus olivaceus are also known to eat fruit.They are oviparous, laying from 7 to 37 eggs, which they often cover with soil or protect in a hollow tree stump.
Monitor lizards are usually large reptiles, although some can be as small as 12 centimeters in length. They have long necks, powerful tails and claws, and well-developed limbs. Most species are terrestrial, but arboreal and semi-aquatic monitors are also known. Almost all monitor lizards are carnivorous, although Varanus bitatawa, Varanus prasinus and Varanus olivaceus are also known to eat fruit.They are oviparous, laying from 7 to 37 eggs, which they often cover with soil or protect in a hollow tree stump.
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