Central Bearded Dragon (Pogona vitticeps), family Agamidae, South Australia
photograph by Florian Denis
270 notes
·
View notes
A Central bearded dragon (Pogona vitticeps) in the Northern Territory, Australia
by Otto Bylén Claesson
167 notes
·
View notes
Gonna start posting the doodles here
Bit of an traditional spree
128 notes
·
View notes
©photography by Walter Jenkel 2023 Central bearded dragon -Red (Pogona vitticeps) WALTER JENKEL @WalterJenkel
With the Pogona, like the Iguana, I see a clear example of the links that these reptile species can have with humans. In my opinion, Pogonas are also pets and very docile and intelligent. Currently there are quite a few colors besides the Red (the one in the photo) such as Nominal, Gold, Citrus, Red, Blood Red, Redgold, Sunburst, Sandfire, Blue, Snow, Zero, Witblits, Albine, Wero, Paradox, etc. .. These phases are created by genetic selection only in captivity 🦎🧡
57 notes
·
View notes
After celebrating ten years with Zelda yesterday, I'm completely overwhelmed with sadness and heartbroken to announce that after 8 years together my beautiful beardy Fluffy has passed. Even though he rarely made appearances on this page, he was a big part of the family and I'm gonna miss my little dodongo so much
22 notes
·
View notes
click and drag for lizard time
51 notes
·
View notes
Eastern Bearded Dragon (Pogona barbata), family Agamidae, Eastern coastal Australia
photograph by Mick Fullerton Wildlife
297 notes
·
View notes
Pogona dragonborn
Yet another OC for a friend's RPG campaign, a dragonborn based off a pogona(bearded dragon)
Thanks for all the love!
Made in krita
Not for commercial use/AI training, please ask before reuploading.
Do consider supporting through kofi if you like my work!
Posted using PostyBirb
17 notes
·
View notes
©photography by Walter Jenkel 2023 Central bearded dragon - Orange (Pogona vitticeps) WALTER JENKEL @WalterJenkel
Pogonas are very popular as pets due to their docility and beauty, but very few people know that if we tried to handle one of these lizards in the wild, we would be surprised because they are capable of displaying spikes all over their bodies, similar to those of the cacti and they wouldn't hesitate to nail them to us. If we ever visit the deserts of Australia and come across one, I would think twice before touching them! 🦎🧡
28 notes
·
View notes