Mount d´Ambre leaf chameleon (Brookesia tuberculata)
The Mount d’Ambre leaf chameleon is a diminutive chameleon from far northern Madagascar. This species inhabits rainforest and during the day it is active in the leaf litter or on small branches a few centimetres above the ground. At
night it can be found roosting on branches approximately 5 – 15 cm above
the ground. It is considered ’Vulnerable’ by the IUCN red list.
Numbats are an Australian marsupial found in the continents west. They primarily eat termites, and as such need a well adapted tongue to do so. The Numbat needs to keep its tongue well coated in a sticky saliva, allowing them to catch up to 20,000 termites in a day.
gryffindor: allowed his kids to go wild attacking him with water pistols in front of his peers and a lot of electrical equipment
hufflepuff: almost died dancing to ‘cotton eyed joe’ in a lion costume in church on the hottest day of the year
slytherin: got drunk and censored the wrong part of m******fucker
ravenclaw: walked into a pole because he was too busy admiring the architecture of a bridge
The impressive croak sac on a South American common toad [also known as the crested toad; part of the Rhinella margaritifera species complex] photographed by Jean-Pierre Vacher. The stripe down it’s back serves as subtle but effective camouflage on the forest floor, as demonstrated in this video:
Your Kreepus Calyspo is encouraging the scaring behaviour of your baby cousin very deliberately, and I doubt she would accidentally faint in such a manner where she could break something or injure herself/your baby cousin.
It sounds like good, reciprocal play between the both of them!