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ENVIRONMENTAL ATTITUDES ANIMALS ADOPT

Phung My Trung - Nguyen Thi Lien Thuong - ADMIN

The ability to change colour and appearance to blend with the environment is common. It helps some species avoid their enemies and others to hunt.
A white mantis of the Mantidae looks like a white flower among fragrant flowers that lure insects to come for nectar and pollinate them. The predator doesn’t have to move, just wait.
The spotted flying dragon, Draco maculatus, which can fly from tree to tree in hunting and finding a partner in the mating season, has talent in camouflage. This is a fairly common species in well-protected forests. It often chooses big, old plants to live in and hide in when threatened. In the mating season, the male has a gular flag on its neck to attract a partner. If it doesn’t have the flag, there is no guarantee the female can recognise it against bark. Photo: 2010, Mai fall, Tan Phu, Dong Nai Province.
One can barely tell that this is a larva of a night butterfly. Photo: 2010, in Bu Gia Map National Park, Binh Phuoc Province.
The walking-stick insect Diapheromera sp. is ancient, found in the Late Triassic, and it can be seen only when it moves to hunt or flees an enemy. Photo: 2010, Vinh Cuu Protected Area, Dong Nai Province.

At a distance of two metres, even with very sharp eyes, it is hard to distinguish the gliding gecko Ptychozoon trinotaterra from old bark. Thanks to its disguise, this gecko is called ‘killer of the rainforest’. It just waits for prey to turn up. This is a very rare species and difficult to photograph in the wild. Photo: early 2011,  Na Nung  Protected Area, Dac Nong Province, Central Highlands.

 

 

 

 
One of species in Tettigonidae family Picture: Đang Viet Đai
 

 

 

 
Ptychozoon lionotum Picture : Le Khac Quyet
 

 

 

 
Draco maculatus Picture: Nguyen thi Lien Thuong
 

 

 

 
Hymenopus coronatus Picture: Phung My Trung
 

 

 

 
Kallima inachus Picture: Phung My Trung
 

 

 

 
Caprimulgus affinis Picture: Swiss Winnasis
 

 

 

 
Diapheromera sp. Picture: Phung My Trung
 

 

 

 
Calotes bachae Picture: Vu Viet Anh
 

 

 
 

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