Cool, nice pics. Caught a female the other day actually, bit of a rarity as I spot 50 A. sagrei for every A. carolinensis I see. If I had to guess I'd say the one in the foreground in the first pic is a male and others look female. No real reason that I can explain but looking at the dewlap area I'm leaning male on that one. The more olive-green colored one in the second set of pics looks nice & chunky.
Jason they're not particularly delicate IMO, but they're not as hardy as a lot of the other common petshop lizards like beardies and leos. They're very active so they'd do with a larger enclosure than what you'd want for a larger less active lizard. They're dew drinkers so daily spraying and/or a drip system is a must. They do best on a diet of small insects, smaller than the standard crickets, which can make feeding a pain unless you raise crix. And in the end I don't think they're particularly long-lived, even in the wild, so even if you do everything right you're not likely to have them all that long.
Oh and yeah that's what you were catching in Baton Rouge. Not sure how far north and west the brown anole has spread though, so if you were down south again you might find more of them than the greenies.
Jason they're not particularly delicate IMO, but they're not as hardy as a lot of the other common petshop lizards like beardies and leos. They're very active so they'd do with a larger enclosure than what you'd want for a larger less active lizard. They're dew drinkers so daily spraying and/or a drip system is a must. They do best on a diet of small insects, smaller than the standard crickets, which can make feeding a pain unless you raise crix. And in the end I don't think they're particularly long-lived, even in the wild, so even if you do everything right you're not likely to have them all that long.
Oh and yeah that's what you were catching in Baton Rouge. Not sure how far north and west the brown anole has spread though, so if you were down south again you might find more of them than the greenies.