
Anolis - Wikipedia
Anolis is a genus of anoles (US: / əˈnoʊ.liz / ⓘ), iguanian lizards in the family Dactyloidae, native to the Americas.
Genus Norops - iNaturalist
Norops is the proposed generic name for 150 lizard species traditionally classified in the genus Anolis (family, Iguanidae). Guyer and Savage (1986) applied this name to a group that …
Genus Norops - taxonomy & distribution / RepFocus
Tropidodactylus Boulenger (type species: Norops onca O'Shaughnessy 1875; syn. Nicholson, Crother, Guyer & Savage 2012) Contents: 201 species, of which 128 (63.7%) are endemic. …
ADW: Norops: CLASSIFICATION
Species Norops ophiolepis Five-striped grass anole, Snakescale Anole. Species Norops ortonii Ortoni's Anole. Norops ortonii: pictures (1) Species Norops pachypus Thick Anole. Species …
Anolis limifrons - Wikipedia
Anolis limifrons, also known commonly as the slender anole or the border anole, is a species of lizard in the family Dactyloidae. The species is native to Central America. It grows to around …
ADW: Norops sagrei: INFORMATION
Norops sagrei is medium-sized, quite robust with a short and wide head, and is covered in small scales. It has a notably short snout compared to other anoles, long claws and a long tail. Its …
We present evidence from Norops capito, an arboreal species, and the second anole species to show a distinct south to north biogeographic pattern in contrast to previous hypotheses …
Anolis? Norops? Dactyloa? - Herping
Mar 11, 2023 · The oldest was that of Guyer & Savage in 1986, based on previous work by Etheridge and Williams, which recognized the genera Anolis (sensu stricto), Ctenonotus, …
Classification and Taxonomy of Norops - BioOne
The phylogenetic relationships among anoles have been much studied and difficult to unravel. Most work has focused on the Caribbean anoles, leaving the phylogenetic relationships …
Norops (Herpetofauna of Cusuco, Honduras) · iNaturalist
Anolis, or anoles, is a genus of iguanian (anole) lizards belonging to the family Dactyloidae. With 391 species, Anolis represents the world's most species-rich amniote tetrapod genus.
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