* Tree frogs: Tree frogs have a variety of adaptations that help them camouflage themselves, including bumpy skin, cryptic coloration, and the ability to change their skin color.
* Praying mantises: Praying mantises have long, slender bodies and green or brown coloration that helps them blend in with the stems and leaves of plants.
* Leaf insects: Leaf insects have flat, leaf-shaped bodies that make them look just like leaves.
* Stick insects: Stick insects have long, thin bodies that make them look like twigs.
* Moths: Many moths have cryptic coloration that helps them blend in with their surroundings. Some moths even have wings that resemble leaves or bark.
* Owls: Owls have mottled feathers that help them blend in with trees and other vegetation.
* Grasshoppers: Grasshoppers have green bodies that help them blend in with grass.
* Earwigs: Earwigs are brown or black and can look like bits of twigs or debris
* Lacewings: Lacewings are delicate, insect-eating insects whose larvae blend in by camouflaging themselves with specks of dirt, pieces of wood or lichen