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Lizard found in kindergartner’s salad becomes new class pet

The lizard, named Green Fruit Loop.
The lizard, named Green Fruit Loop. Supplied photo -- Mark Eastburn

PRINCETON, N.J. — A New Jersey elementary school science class has a new pet after a lizard was discovered in a student’s salad after being refrigerated for days.

Riverside Elementary School science teacher Mark Eastburn told NJ.com the 3-inch green anole lizard was found in a bundle of tatsoi greens last week by a kindergartner.

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The lizard had been cold and lifeless after being confined in a refrigerator for days, but has since been warmed and lives in a cage in Eastburn’s class.

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The lizard, dubbed “Green Fruit Loop,” came from Florida. Eastburn said green anole lizards live in the southeastern states, from Texas to North Carolina.

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“It probably has some moderate adaptation to the cold which is why it made it through,” Eastburn said.

The tatsoi had been bought from Whole Earth Center, a natural foods store in Princeton. Mike Atkinson, the store’s produce manager, said the greens are cleaned as they’re stocked and that the lizard must’ve been tucked away in a leaf.

“I’ve been in produce for 17 years and I’ve never heard of a lizard making it to the customer,” Atkinson said.

He said he doesn’t think the lizard would have made it in conventional, non-organic box.

“It might normally surprise or freak out conventional shoppers, but the majority of organic shoppers realize that produce is grown on a farm and there’s lots of bugs and animals that live on a farm too,” Atkinson said.

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