Lizards
Find out everything there is to know about lizards and stay updated on the latest lizard news with the comprehensive articles, interactive features and pictures of lizards at LiveScience.com. Learn more about these fascinating reptiles as scientists continue to make amazing discoveries about lizards.
Latest about Lizards
Short-horned lizard: The inflatable 'horny toad' that squirts toxic blood from its eyes
By Lydia Smith published
This little lizard can fire blood up to 5 feet from its face, has spiky horns and inflates itself to choke predators.
'Scuba-diving' lizards breathe underwater by wearing air bubbles on their noses — just like in a cartoon
By Elise Poore published
Scuba-diving lizards use bubbles to stay submerged in water for long periods of time.
Thorny devil: The spike-covered lizard that sucks water from sand through its skin
By Lydia Smith published
Thorny devils have a plethora of defenses against predators, including a fake head and a weird jerky walk.
Watch chameleon erupt in color 'as if uttering her last words' in her final moments before death
By Hannah Osborne published
Footage of Labord's chameleon in last moments of her short life shows her skin burst into 'chaotic technicolor patterns' — a spectacle never observed in the wild before.
Surprise discovery of snake-like lizard feared extinct leaves scientists amazed
By Patrick Pester published
Researchers found three species of skink in Australia they feared could be extinct, including the Lyon's grassland striped skink.
Earless monitor lizards: The 'Holy Grail' of reptiles that looks like a mini dragon
By Patrick Pester published
Researchers are only beginning to understand the cryptic lives of the earless monitor lizards of Borneo.
Newly discovered Cretaceous sea monster named after world-ending Norse serpent
By Jennifer Nalewicki published
Paleontologists have described a new species of mosasaur with "angry eyebrows" that lived 80 million years ago.
This psychedelic-eyed gecko isn't what we thought it was
By Harry Baker published
The bright-eyed reptiles were identified as a new species after a genetic analysis of other geckos revealed they were separate from another closely related species.
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