i question the information for myth #4. i've seen several pictures of chameleons who changed a specific portion of their body to match a small object, while the area of their body away from the object stayed the same color. done consistently, this can't be a coincidence.
secondly, having the ability to change color (whether dramatically or whether marginally) is a tremendous survival advantage in the wild, and the idea that it would only be used for an interspecies survival mechanism seems absurdly unlikely to me. *shrug*
i question the information for myth #4. i've seen several pictures of chameleons who changed a specific portion of their body to match a small object, while the area of their body away from the object stayed the same color. done consistently, this can't be a coincidence.
secondly, having the ability to change color (whether dramatically or whether marginally) is a tremendous survival advantage in the wild, and the idea that it would only be used for an interspecies survival mechanism seems absurdly unlikely to me. *shrug*
secondly, having the ability to change color (whether dramatically or whether marginally) is a tremendous survival advantage in the wild, and the idea that it would only be used for an interspecies survival mechanism seems absurdly unlikely to me. *shrug*