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Tug of war between survival and reproductive fitness: how chameleons become brighter without predators around

by Whiting | Jul 21, 2023 | Animal signals, Behaviour, Chameleons, Visual ecology

Republished from The Conversation Martin Whiting, Author provided Martin Whiting, Macquarie UniversityInvasive species offer a rare research opportunity, as they often colonise new environments very different to their native habitat. One such species is the Jackson’s...

A new paper on the natural hisory of flap-necked chameleons

by Whiting | Sep 27, 2012 | Chameleons, Ecology, Publications

See our new paper on the natural history of the flap-necked chameleon from southern Africa. It can be downloaded for free from the MCZ web page:...
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We acknowledge the traditional custodians of the Macquarie University land, the Wattamattagal clan of the Darug nation, whose cultures and customs have nurtured, and continue to nurture, this land, since the Dreamtime.  We pay our respects to Elders past, present and future.

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