Hi! I live in Louisiana, and green anoles are common. I found one half an hour ago in my apartment. Normally, I would just put him outside, but it is 54 degrees outside right now. If I put him out now, will it kill him? I think being in here is stressing him out, because he is turning brown (a sign of anole stress). Should I leave him in here till it hits a decent anole temperature of 65 (around 2:30 pm) or can I safely put him outside in a sunny spot?
>>2038843
put him in your basement or attic if you have one
chances are he came in the attic through a vent stack and found his way around via hvac ducts
>>2038857
Not OP, but another louisifag. There are no basements here because of flooding and OP said they live in an apartment, meaning they probably don't have an attic
>>2038843
I'm in Louisiana as well. I've actually never seen one of these guys.
>>2038868
can verify lack of basements. We got people who have their houses on stilts, though. That's just as cool, right?
>>2038905
No actually the entire state is shit to live in. If you have to build your house on stilts and giant levies around cities to keep the water out, that means you shouldn't be living there. Seeing all you mental defectives crying on tv every time a hurricane comes along and buttfucks you makes my day.
>>2038843
Take him to your local herps center or wildlife center if you can, they'll take him off your hands
It lives there, so you can wait if you want, but it won't kill it if you put it out now. (Don't quote me there putting it back out in general it could die because nature)
>>2038905
Don't they normally wrap the lower section in paneling and at least put a garage door in, and use the rest of the area as closed storage? What the actual fuck?