Chamaeleo calyptratus. - this is entirely incorrect due to the fact that this is just a binomial name for a species known as the veiled chameleon or Yemen chameleon. chamaeleo is just the name of the genus and not the family. technically speaking, i think this answers your question that the the family that all these lizards belong to is chameleonidae
All chameleons belong to the family Chamaeleonidae. The Chamaeleonidae are arranged into two subfamilies, Chamaeleoninae and Brookesiina (dwarfs). These two groups are further subdivided into about 9 more subgroups, and then further divided into 150+ species.
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Chamaeleonidae
Those are 5 of them and im positive about them, i just dont know how to do the last 2. Sry
i don't know the chameleon's species so ask some one smarter than yourself jk it's they are lizards
Chameleons (which are lizards) belong to the taxonomical family Chamaeleonidae. There are many, many generas and species of chameleon within that family.
different kinds of chameleons have different names. however all chameleons belong to the family Chamaeleonidae.
theyre lizards lol:D
There are approximately 80 different species in the chameleon family.
There are many kinds of chameleon different species have different habits.
It started in the lizards.
There are approximately 80 different species in the chameleon family.
I have a number of different species - including panther chameleons, horned chameleons, Jackson's chameleon and 'common' chameleons.
Chameleons are limited to Africa, western Asia and southern Europe. Most chameleon species will be found on Madagascar. There are 150+ species of chameleons, most are arboreal but a few species are more ground dwellin. One species lives in the desert of Namibia.
Yes some species such as the Parsons Chameleon are endangered.
Some species of chameleon do live in deserts.
No, not really. I, am studying about a chameleon, and i have read that they are not endangered species.
Yes, some species of chameleon live in Madagascar
30-40 days after copulation, the female chameleon will lay her eggs. Depending on the species, it will be 5-6 months until the eggs hatch. Smaller species may hatch sooner, and larger species take a longer period of time.
No, a Chameleon is a reptile. Some chameleon species give birth to live young,and the term for this is viviparous. However, they are not mammal because they do not produce milk for their young as all other mammals do.