Articles related to "Marine Iguanas"Learn about marine iguanas in the Galapagos, tropical venomous seas snakes, the deadly salt water crocodile, and endangered sea turtles.
These 'clumsy lizards' disgusted Darwin at first, but they are a good example of an island species adapting to its environment.
There is an amazing variety of living and extinct reptiles of the sea. Ogopogo and the Loch Ness Monster might even exist!
Lizards and snakes are so morphologically similar that they are classified together into the same order and suborder.
Hundreds of miles off the coast of Ecuador the Galapagos hold some of the world's most unique wildlife.
It was there for five million years, but somehow they missed it until now: a pink iguana in the Galapagos Islands!
Adventurers, tourists, scientists, scuba divers and filmmakers love the Galapagos Islands. This volcanic archipelago is still evolving in the deep, blue Pacific Ocean.
Sea animals come in many shapes and sizes, most of them unfamiliar.
It is uncommon for sea turtles to range north of Oregon, but their appearance in Alaskan waters occurs often enough that they can't be considered accidental visitors.
The Earth is an amazing place and the Galapagos islands are one of the best places in the world to view animals, both above and below the water; a travelers must do.
Animals can be classified based on the specialized ways of temperature control they have. Here are the ways that ectotherms deal with varying hot and cold environments.
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