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STOCK FOOTAGE DIRECTORY
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Basilisk Lizard Silvertip Digital Libraries
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Green Anole Silvertip Digital Libraries
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Green Iguana Silvertip Digital Libraries
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Iguana Silvertip Digital Libraries
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Agama lizard Cinenet
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Mangrove Lizard Cinenet
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Lizard Creatas
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Desert Iguana Creatas
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Monitor Lizard Creatas
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Lizard Finley Holiday Stock
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Marine Iguana Ocean Footage
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Bearded Dragon Show Poppers
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Dragon Lizard DavidIreland.com
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Frill Necked Lizard DavidIreland.com
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Iguana DavidIreland.com
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Lace Monitor DavidIreland.com
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Komodo Dragon DavidIreland.com
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Chameleon Footage World
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Crocodile Monitor Footage World
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Gila Monster Footage World
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Goanna Footage World
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Komodo Dragon Footage World
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Lizard Footage World
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Spiny Lizard Native Light Productions
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Frilled Lizard Global Cuts
This sun-loving lizard is the reptile emblem of Australia, depicted on our now defunct two-cent coin This reptile is part of the Dragon family a sub-species of Lizards They are usually active during the day and move very fast on their two hind legs. Although, we captured this guy when resting on a branch. This footage is shot with a 3CCD DV camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps. Visit Site
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Galapagos Land Iguana Global Cuts
The Galapagos land iguanas resemble the mythical creatures of the pastdragons with long tails, clawed feet and spiny crests. In reality, these harmless lizards are alive today, but endangered in their own native land. When Charles Darwin visited Galapagos in 1835, he wrote about the land iguanas: ""...they are ugly animals, of a yellowish orange beneath, and of a brownish-red colour above: from their low facial angle they have a singularly stupid appearance."" The Land Iguana footage is shot with a 3CCD DVCAM camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-NTSC format dimensions, 720 x 486 pixels, at a frame rate of 30 fps. Keywords: Land Iguana, Conolphus Subscristatus Galapagos Land Iguana, Reptile, Reptiles, Iguanas, Galapagos, Equador. Visit Site
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Galapagos Marine Iguana Global Cuts
The Galapagos marine iguana is one of the most unusual forms of marine mammal life found anywhere in the world. In short, the Galapagos marine iguana is the only known iguana in the world that will purposely go into the ocean. Once in the water, the Galapagos marine iguana uses its specially adapted tail to dive at least fifteen meters below sea-level, where it will stay and eat the seaweed for anything up to thirty minutes before resurfacing. Perhaps no member of the Galapagos fauna has met with as much revulsion by historic visitors as the marine iguana. The Black Marine Iguana footage is shot with a 3CCD DVCAM camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-NTSC format dimensions, 720 x 486 pixels, at a frame rate of 30 fps. Keywords: Black Marine Iguana, Amblyrhynchus Cristatus, Lizard, Reptile, Reptiles, Iguanas, Galapagos Islands, Equador. Visit Site
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Red Marine Iguana Global Cuts
Just about every rocky shoreline in the Galapagos Islands is home to the marine iguana, the only sea-going lizard in the world. The marine iguana is an extraordinary animal which lives on land but grazes on a variety of seaweed, either on exposed rocks or by diving into the cold seawater. This habit, totally unique in iguanas, provides them with an abundant food source but can make them vulnerable to predation by sharks and other large fish. They are found nearly throughout the whole Galapagos archipelago, in coastal concentrations of up to 4,500 individuals per mile. The total population has been estimated at between 200,000 and 300,000. The iguanas show their colour as they mature - the young are black, while adults range from red and black to black, green, red and grey depending on the island. Here you'll find Black Marine Iguana Footage. The Red Marine Iguana footage is shot with a 3CCD DVCAM camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-NTSC format dimensions, 720 x 486 pixels, at a frame rate of 30 fps. Keywords: Red Marine Iguana, Amblyrhynchus Cristatus, Lizard, Reptile, Reptiles, Iguanas, Galapagos Islands, Equador. Visit Site
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Savannah Monitor Global Cuts
The Savannah Monitor in the wild can weigh five to five and a half kilograms, yet in captivity it is often found weighing over six kilograms. In the wild, the average length of this Monitor is of approximately 1 to 1.5 meters. Adults Savannah Monitor in the wild will eat birds, snakes, snails, small mammals, and even carrion. Due to their undeveloped sharp teeth, yet keeping with their carnivorous diet, juveniles will eat an assortment of insects. Savannah monitors are hard to find in the wilderness, especially close up. So we visited a reptile expert outside Stockholm and got what we needed. This collection includes multi-angle footage of a monitor doing his thing. Like dining on mice. These clips might take some posting, but it could be well worth the effort. This Savannah monitor footage is shot with a Canon XL-1 camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in DV-PAL format dimensions, 720 x 576 pixels, at a frame rate of 25 fps. Visit Site
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Gecko Global Cuts
Geckos are small to moderately large lizards belonging to the family Gekkonidae and found in warm climates throughout the world. Geckos are unique among lizards in their vocalizations, making chirping sounds in social interactions with other geckos. The toes of the gecko have attracted a lot of attention, as they adhere to a wide variety of surfaces, without the use of liquids or surface tension. Recent studies (2004) of the setae on gecko footpads demonstrates that the attractive forces that hold geckos to surfaces are van der Waals interactions between the finely divided setae and the surfaces themselves. That these kinds of interactions involve no liquids (or no gases) is important; in theory, a boot made of synthetic setae would adhere as easily to the surface of the International Space Station as it would to a living room wall. Anyhow, here you have a Gecko sitting on a branch in the Amazon Jungle in Peru. The Gecko footage is shot with a 3CCD DVCAM camcorder and is supplied in flattened QuickTime format. It is shot and captured in NTSC format dimensions, 720 x 486 pixels, at a frame rate of 30 fps. Keywords: Lizard, Gecko, Chordata, Reptilia, Squamata, Sauria, Gekkonidae, Amazonas, Amazon, Rain Forest, Peru, South America. Visit Site
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