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How do reptiles shift colour and why do geographical location limits them?

Reptiles like bearded dragons can change colour to suit their surroundings, but new research shows geography limits how far that change can go.

Updated on: Dec 10, 2025 03:13 PM IST
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If you drive through the desert and spot a bright orange bearded dragon stretched across a tree stump, don’t expect the colour to last. Take a few steps closer, and the orange quickly fades. The body darkens. Within seconds, the lizard blends into the ground instead of standing out against it.

Reptile colour change explained, from camouflage to climate (Unsplash)
Reptile colour change explained, from camouflage to climate (Unsplash)

That shift is not for show. It is a basic survival tool, and one reason reptiles continue to draw scientific interest.

Researchers at the University of Melbourne say colour change helps reptiles in several ways. Camouflage protects them from predators. Brighter tones can signal territory or warn rivals. Darker shades help absorb heat, which is crucial since reptiles depend on sunlight to warm their bodies.

But the ability to change colour has limits. And a reptile’s home environment plays a far bigger role than many people realise.

What do bearded dragons reveal about adaptation?

University of Melbourne biologists studied bearded dragons from different regions of Australia. Some came from the deep red sands around Alice Springs. Others lived in the yellow-sand country near Mildura in Victoria.

The colour change is automatic. Lizards are not choosing to fade or darken. Specialised skin cells move pigments like melanin around, changing how their skin reflects light. In some species, tiny crystal-like structures also shift to alter colour. Hormones and visual cues trigger these changes.

During tests, bearded dragons adjusted their colour quickly when placed on different sand types. When researchers stood nearby, the lizards darkened further. Once left alone, many returned to lighter shades, the University of Melbourne notes.

Why is the environment still setting limits

One unexpected finding came from experiments using black sand, something neither group encounters in the wild. Southern lizards performed better here, likely because their habitats include more dark surfaces such as branches and tree trunks.

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The takeaway is clear: reptiles respond to what they see, but they cannot override their evolutionary design. Colour change helps them adapt, but it does not erase where they come from. Nature still sets the final boundaries.

 
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