The lizard named
Uroplatus phantasticus
is more commonly known as the Satanic leaf-tailed gecko. You can see
why in this photograph, only because the background is gone. There’s a
picture at Wired that challenges you to figure out what is gecko and
what is real leaf. It’s an amazing camouflage adaptation for these
creatures found only in Madagascar. Good luck finding one.
Reinforcing
this camouflage for the satanic leaf-tailed geckos is their behavior:
They’ll spend the day hanging motionless off of branches or snuggling
among dead leaves, often twisting their leafy tails around their bodies.
Other larger species in the satanic’s genus have still another strategy
for sleeping safely during the day, flattening their bodies against
tree trunks and limbs, making good use of those famously grippy feet (a
magic power derived, by the way, from countless hair-like structures
that allow some geckos to even stick to inverted glass panes, not that
nature would ever ask them to). Fringes and flaps along the edges of
their bodies help erase their outlines and shadows, dissolving the
geckos into the bark.
We can see why they are called
leafy-tailed, but what’s satanic about them? If you confront one,
they’ll stare and scream at you, and local folks are afraid of them.
They come in all colors, too, just as the leaves they hide among vary.
You’ll see quite a few more
pictures of this gecko and his camouflaged relatives at Wired.
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