نتایج جستجو برای: agamidae

تعداد نتایج: 205  

2012
Jemina Stuart-Smith Roy Swain Andrew Welling

The mountain dragon, Rankinta (7ympanocryptis) diemensis (Gray, 1841), is the only member of the Agamidae in Tasmania. It occurs in some of the coldest regions occupied by any dragon in Australia, and is found in a variety of habitats ranging from coastal heath to alpine scrub. This paper examines the reproductive ecology of R. diemensis in the most southerly range of its distribution, providin...

2015
Songsong Lu Ying Xin Xiaolong Tang Feng Yue Huihui Wang Yucheng Bai Yonggang Niu Qiang Chen

Phrynocephalus erythrurus (Lacertilia: Agamidae) is considered to be the highest living reptile in the world (about 4500-5000 m above sea level), whereas Phrynocephalus przewalskii inhabits low altitudes (about 1000-1500 m above sea level). Here, we report the differences in hematological traits between these two different Phrynocephalus species. Compared with P. przewalskii, the results indica...

2014
Vida Hojati Mahsa Malekmohammadi Soheila Rahmani

The understudied Black-tailed toad agama, Phrynocephalus maculatus maculatus, (Anderson, 1872) belongs to the Agamidae family. Iranian specimens are rare in collections and are distributed in the central and south-eastern deserts of Iran. In this research, biological studies including food habits, morphology, behaviors and habitats of these species were performed from April to September, 2013. ...

Journal: :iranian journal of animal biosystematics 0
a gholamifard n rastegar pouayni hr esmaeili

the revised checklist of reptiles for fars province, southern iran, comprises of 63 species in 41 genera, 17 families and two orders (squamata and testudines). the most diverse suborder is the sauria with 38 species or 60.31% of the herpetofauna, followed by serpentes (23 species, 36.5%) and the testudines (2 species, 3.17%). the most diverse families are the colubridae and gekkonidae with 15 a...

2015
Arthur Georges Qiye Li Jinmin Lian Denis O’Meally Janine Deakin Zongji Wang Pei Zhang Matthew Fujita Hardip R. Patel Clare E. Holleley Yang Zhou Xiuwen Zhang Kazumi Matsubara Paul Waters Jennifer A. Marshall Graves Stephen D. Sarre Guojie Zhang

BACKGROUND The lizards of the family Agamidae are one of the most prominent elements of the Australian reptile fauna. Here, we present a genomic resource built on the basis of a wild-caught male ZZ central bearded dragon Pogona vitticeps. FINDINGS The genomic sequence for P. vitticeps, generated on the Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform, comprised 317 Gbp (179X raw read depth) from 13 insert librar...

2014
Dan Cogălniceanu Aurora M Castilla Aitor Valdeón Alberto Gosá Noora Al-Jaidah Ali Alkuwary Essam O. H. Saifelnasr Paloma Mas-Peinado Renee Richer Ahmad Amer Mohd Al-Hemaidi

We have updated the list of the lizard species present in Qatar and produced the first distribution maps based on two field surveys in 2012 and 2013. We used the QND95/Qatar National Grid with a grid of 10 × 10 km squares for mapping. Our results show the occurrence of 21 lizard species in Qatar, from the 15 species indicated in the last biodiversity report conducted in 2004. The most abundant ...

2007
J. J. Cuervo R. Shine

Sexual dichromatism is common in lizards, and may play an important role in sex recognition and mating systems. Nonetheless, relatively few published papers provide quantitative analyses of colour, deal with Australian taxa or are based on large-bodied species. Water dragons Physignathus lesueurii (Agamidae) from eastern Australia are very large (upto 1m total length) and sexually dichromatic, ...

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