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- Reptile Occurrences Data in the Volga River Basin (Russia)
- Key and Checklist to the Lizards of Pakistan (Reptilia: Squamata: Sauria)
- A Checklist of the Amphibians and Reptiles of the Republic of Uzbekistan with a Review and Summary of Species Distribution David A
- Year of the Lizard News No
- A New Locality Record of Phrynocephalus Raddei Boettger, 1890 (Squamata: Agamidae) in Iran
- In the Lizard, Phrynocephalus Przewalskii (Agamidae)
- Genomic and Transcriptomic Investigations of the Evolutionary Transition from Oviparity to Viviparity
- A New Iranian Phrynocephalus (Reptilia: Squamata: Agamidae) from the Hottest Place on Earth and a Key to the Genus Phrynocephalus in Southwestern Asia and Arabia
- Mongolian Red List of Reptiles and Amphibians
- Cross-Species BAC Mapping Highlights Conservation of Chromosome Synteny Across Dragon Lizards (Squamata: Agamidae)
- SUKHANOV Translated by NASA Edited by George R. HERPETOLOGICAL 1 Rjformatiorj
- Phrynocephalus Przewalskii
- Evolutionary Strategies in Lizard Reproduction
- Moloch Horridus) Philipp Comanns1,*, Philip C
- Wch9 Book of Abstracts Oral
- Arabian Peninsula
- Phrynocephalus; Agamidae, Reptilia)
- Karyological Analysis of the Indo-Chinese Water Dragon, Physignathus Cocincinus (Squamata, Agamidae) from Thailand
- The Osteology and Myology of the Head and Neck Region of Callisaurus, Cophosaurus, Holbrookia, and Uma, the "Sand Lizards"
- Phylogeography of the Phrynocephalus Vlangalii Species Complex in the Upper Reaches of the Yellow River Inferred from Mtdna ND4-Trnaleu Segments
- The Review of the Autotomy of Agamid Lizards with Considerations About the Types of Autotomy and Regeneration
- Cfreptiles & Amphibians
- A High Mountain Lizard from Peru: the World's Highest-Altitude Reptile
- A New Locality Record of Phrynocephalus Maculatus ANDERSON, 1872, from Jordan
- Ecology and Signal Evolution in Lizards
- Smithsonian Herpetological Information Service No
- For Running Or Burying—The Toe Fringe of Phrynocephalus Mystaceus Is
- Sex- and Performance-Based Escape Behaviour in an Asian Agamid Lizard, Phrynocephalus Vlangalii