spotted this little guy on the exterior wall of a storefront yesterday. i think he's a moth, but i would love some help trying to identify him down to the genus if not the species
Brown Anole, member of the Anole community at Eckerd College
The wild Opossum seen was only a baby and its shape was small and furry. The coloration was a grey back and ears with a white face and brighter underside.
Habitat is woodland and the distribution is the east coast, middle and some of the west coast of USA.
About 56 cm maybe more, the organism was mainly white in color with a couple of black feathers, round body with a small head, long thin orange beak and legs. This organism is a chordate, it’s a vertebrate, it is a bird and in the group aves because it has wings.The reference I’m using is https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/browse/taxonomy/Threskiornithidae. These birds are wetland birds and are usually around freshwater marshes,coastal areas, mangrove forests, flooded pastures, swamps and mudflats.
Millipedes: annoying, but important - UF/IFAS Extension Sarasota County (ufl.edu)
Black with yellow stripes
About 2 inches long
Multiple red legs
habitat: was found near shrubs/ undergrowth