Articles related to "Transvestite Lizards Imitate Females"Young males of the Augrabies Flat Lizard protect themselves from aggressive adults by pretending to be females, at the same time ensuring sexual partners for themselves.
Cheating crayfish can avoid fights with aggressive rivals by waving large claws that are not as powerful or dangerous as they look, Australian researchers have found.
An entirely new species of iguana has been discovered living on Fiji, 8,000 miles and 13 million years from its ancestral home in South America.
The blue-striped fangblenny fish can change its colouring to blend in with shoals of cleaner fish on coral reefs, hiding from predators while getting an easy meal.
Male Fiddler Crabs will quite happily protect a female neighbour, but do so partly in exchange for sex, according to a new study from The Australian National University
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