Dan Suzio Photography

  • Home
  • Photo Catalog
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • About
  • Contact
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
106 images found
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • Desert Spiny Lizard, Sceloporus magister, in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040038.jpg
  • Female Side-blotched Lizard, Uta stansburiana, in Coachella Valley Preserve, near Palm Springs, California
    19040015.jpg
  • Female Side-blotched Lizard, Uta stansburiana, in Coachella Valley Preserve, near Palm Springs, California
    19040014.jpg
  • Desert Spiny Lizard, Sceloporus magister, in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040037.jpg
  • Desert Spiny Lizard, Sceloporus magister, in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040035.jpg
  • Female Side-blotched Lizard, Uta stansburiana, in Coachella Valley Preserve, near Palm Springs, California
    19040013.jpg
  • Casque-headed Lizard, Corytophanes cristatus, near Arenal Volcano National Park, La Fortuna, Costa Rica. Also called Helmet-headed Lizard, Helmeted Basilisk, or Smooth-helmeted Iguana
    17050396.jpg
  • Casque-headed Lizard, Corytophanes cristatus, near Arenal Volcano National Park, La Fortuna, Costa Rica. Also called Helmet-headed Lizard, Helmeted Basilisk, or Smooth-helmeted Iguana
    17050395.jpg
  • Common Zebra-tailed Lizard, Callisaurus draconoides draconoides, at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, near Tucson, Arizona
    19040051.jpg
  • Common Zebra-tailed Lizard, Callisaurus draconoides draconoides, in Saguaro National Park, Arizona
    19040049.jpg
  • Common Zebra-tailed Lizard, Callisaurus draconoides draconoides, in Saguaro National Park, Arizona
    19040048.jpg
  • Female Striped Basilisk, Basiliscus vittatus, also known as Brown Basilisk or Jesus Christ lizard for its ability to walk on water.  Tortuguero National Park, Costa Rica
    17050110.jpg
  • Female Striped Basilisk, Basiliscus vittatus, also known as Brown Basilisk or Jesus Christ lizard for its ability to walk on water.  Tortuguero National Park, Costa Rica
    17050111.jpg
  • Female Striped Basilisk, Basiliscus vittatus, also known as Brown Basilisk or Jesus Christ lizard for its ability to walk on water.  Tortuguero National Park, Costa Rica
    17050115.jpg
  • Female Striped Basilisk, Basiliscus vittatus, also known as Brown Basilisk or Jesus Christ lizard for its ability to walk on water.  Tortuguero National Park, Costa Rica
    17050112.jpg
  • Female Striped Basilisk, Basiliscus vittatus, also known as Brown Basilisk or Jesus Christ lizard for its ability to walk on water.  Tortuguero National Park, Costa Rica
    17050114.jpg
  • Female Striped Basilisk, Basiliscus vittatus, also known as Brown Basilisk or Jesus Christ lizard for its ability to walk on water.  Tortuguero National Park, Costa Rica
    17050113.jpg
  • A male side-blotched lizard, Uta stansburiana, watches carefully as a potential predator flies overhead. Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    11040672-side-blotched-lizard.jpg
  • Side-blotched lizard, Uta stansburiana, female.  Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    07100442-side-blotched-lizard.jpg
  • Male side-blotched lizard, Uta stansburiana, in Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    11040673-side-blotched-lizard.jpg
  • Male side-blotched lizard, Uta stansburiana, in Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    11040666-side-blotched-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, Mount Diablo State Park, California
    07040244-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, Alameda County, California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1033-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, Mount Diablo State Park, California
    07040246-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, Mount Diablo State Park, California
    07040251-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, Alameda County, California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1038-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, Alameda County, California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1030-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, Alameda County, California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1028-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110322.jpg
  • Hind foot of Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112044.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112025.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112019.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110302.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110288.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110251.jpg
  • Tracks of Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110121.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata, buried in sand.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112097.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata, buried in sand.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112089.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata, buried in sand.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112087.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112023.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110317.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110314.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110234.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112100.jpg
  • Tracks of Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112072.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112017.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata, buried in sand.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06112013.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110313.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110303.jpg
  • Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110280.jpg
  • Hind foot of Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard, Uma notata.  Algodones dunes, Imperial County, California
    06110307.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, digs a burrow at the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040063.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, digs a burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040065.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, digs a burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040074.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, stands at the entrance to its burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040073.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, stands at the entrance to its burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040072.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, digs a burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040070.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, emerges from a burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040069.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, digs a burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040067.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, digs a burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040066.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, emerges from a burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040062.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040061.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, emerges from a burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040071.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, digs a burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040068.jpg
  • Sonoran Tiger Whiptail, Aspidoscelis tigris punctilinealis, stands at the entrance to its burrow in the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
    19040064.jpg
  • Desert Iguana, Dipsosaurus dorsalis, in Saguaro National Park, Arizona
    19040034.jpg
  • Black Iguana (Spiny-tailed Iguana), Ctenosaura similis, on the bank of the Tarcoles River, Costa Rica
    17050576.jpg
  • Slender Anole, Anolis limifrons (Norops limifrons), on a flowering shrub at Monteverde, Costa Rica
    17050444.jpg
  • Slender Anole, Anolis limifrons (Norops limifrons), on a leaf near Arenal Volcano National Park, La Fortuna, Costa Rica
    17050391.jpg
  • Slender Anole, Anolis limifrons (Norops limifrons), at La Selva Biological Station, Costa Rica
    17050346.jpg
  • Pug-nosed Anole, Anolis capito, on a branch at Monteverde, Costa Rica
    17050441.jpg
  • House Gecko, Hemidactylus frenatus, in a hotel room in Sarapiquí, Costa Rica
    17050347.jpg
  • Slender Anole, Anolis limifrons (Norops limifrons), on a flowering shrub at Monteverde, Costa Rica
    17050448.jpg
  • Slender Anole, Anolis limifrons (Norops limifrons), on a flowering shrub at Monteverde, Costa Rica
    17050447.jpg
  • Slender Anole, Anolis limifrons (Norops limifrons), on a flowering shrub at Monteverde, Costa Rica
    17050446.jpg
  • Slender Anole, Anolis limifrons (Norops limifrons), on a flowering shrub at Monteverde, Costa Rica
    17050445.jpg
  • Slender Anole, Anolis limifrons (Norops limifrons), on a branch at Monteverde, Costa Rica
    17050443.jpg
  • Juvenile Common Basilisk, Basiliscus basiliscus, on the shore of the Tarcoles River, Costa Rica
    17050594.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, with western black-legged tick, Ixodes pacificus, carrier of Lyme disease in California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1049-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, with western black-legged tick, Ixodes pacificus, carrier of Lyme disease in California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1047-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, with western black-legged tick, Ixodes pacificus, carrier of Lyme disease in California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1052-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, with western black-legged tick, Ixodes pacificus, carrier of Lyme disease in California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1046-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, with western black-legged tick, Ixodes pacificus, carrier of Lyme disease in California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1044-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Western fence lizard, Sceloporus occidentalis, with western black-legged tick, Ixodes pacificus, carrier of Lyme disease in California.  Researchers at UC Berkeley have found that fence lizards' blood contains a substance that kills the Lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, when a lizard is bitten by a tick.  This may explain the relatively low incidence of Lyme disease in California.
    r1042-fence-lizard.jpg
  • Shasta alligator lizard (Northern alligator lizard), Elgaria coerulea shastensis. Mendocino County, California
    12100032.jpg
  • Shasta alligator lizard (Northern alligator lizard), Elgaria coerulea shastensis. Mendocino County, California
    12100033.jpg
  • Shasta alligator lizard (Northern alligator lizard), Elgaria coerulea shastensis. Mendocino County, California
    12100031.jpg
  • Female Striped Basilisk, Basiliscus vittatus, also known as Brown Basilisk or Jesus Christ lizard for its ability to walk on water.  Tortuguero National Park, Costa Rica
    17050109.jpg
  • Juvenile Mojave glossy snake, Arizona elegans candida (Arizona occidentalis candida). The snake's stomach area is distended, exposing the skin between the scales, because it has recently swallowed a lizard or small rodent. Alabama Hills near Lone Pine, California
    11040390.jpg
  • Juvenile Mojave glossy snake, Arizona elegans candida (Arizona occidentalis candida). The snake's stomach area is distended, exposing the skin between the scales, because it has recently swallowed a lizard or small rodent. Alabama Hills near Lone Pine, California
    11040378.jpg
  • Great Basin whiptail, Cnemidophorus tigris tigris.  Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    07100283-whiptail-lizard.jpg
  • Great Basin whiptail, Cnemidophorus tigris tigris.  Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    07100240-whiptail-lizard.jpg
  • Great Basin whiptail, Cnemidophorus tigris tigris.  Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    07100236-whiptail-lizard.jpg
  • Great Basin whiptail, Cnemidophorus tigris tigris.  Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    07100231-whiptail-lizard.jpg
  • Great Basin whiptail, Cnemidophorus tigris tigris.  Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    07100229-whiptail-lizard.jpg
  • Great Basin whiptail, Cnemidophorus tigris tigris.  Wildrose Canyon, Death Valley National Park, California
    07100227-whiptail-lizard.jpg
  • Desert grassland whiptail, Cnemidophorus uniparens, an all-female species that reproduces by parthenogenesis. Sycamore Canyon, Coronado National Forest, Arizona.
    06110943.jpg
  • Desert grassland whiptail, Cnemidophorus uniparens, an all-female species that reproduces by parthenogenesis. Sycamore Canyon, Coronado National Forest, Arizona.
    06110966.jpg
  • Desert grassland whiptail, Cnemidophorus uniparens, an all-female species that reproduces by parthenogenesis. Sycamore Canyon, Coronado National Forest, Arizona.
    06110936.jpg
  • Desert grassland whiptail, Cnemidophorus uniparens, an all-female species that reproduces by parthenogenesis. Sycamore Canyon, Coronado National Forest, Arizona.
    06110926.jpg
Next