Top View
- Five-Lined Skink (Plestiodon Fasciatus), Great Lakes/St
- Peninsular Florida Species Conservation and Consultation Guide Sand Skink and Blue-Tailed
- Prairie Skink (Plestiodon Septentrionalis) in Canada
- Eumeces Skfltonfanus(Baird and Girard) Western Sklnk
- A New Species of Plestiodon (Squamata: Scincidae) from Sierra Madre Del Sur of Guerrero, México
- A Taxonomic and Ecological Study of the Western Skink (Eumeces Skiltonianus)
- Common Five-Lined Skink Plestiodon Fasciatus
- Western Red-Tailed Skink (Plestiodon Gilberti Rubricaudatus) Distribution and Habitat Use in Southern Nevada, USA
- Plestiodon Obsoletus (Great Plains Skink)
- The High-Level Classification of Skinks (Reptilia, Squamata, Scincomorpha)
- Snakes and Lizards of Minnesota COMMON Five-Lined Skink
- Year of the Lizard News No
- A Pocket Guide to Kansas Amphibians, Turtles and Lizards
- Evolution of Digits in a Clade of Fossorial Lizards (Brachymeles,Scincinae)
- Management Plan for the Western Skink (Plestiodon Skiltonianus) in Canada
- Western Skink (Plestiodon
- Five-Lined Skink (Plestiodon Fasciatus), Great Lakes/St
- Common Five-Lined Skink (Plestiodon Fasciatus) Occur Primarily in Open Areas Within the Eastern Deciduous Forest of North America
- Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles. Eumeces Egregius
- Plestiodon Marginatus) (Reptilia: Scincidae) of the Ryukyu Archipelago, Japan, with Special Reference to the Relationship of a Northern Tokara Population1
- Plestiodon Skiltonianus) in the Okanagan Region Of
- Lizards of Sabino Canyon, Coronado National Forest
- Drowning in a Sea of Development: Distribution and Conservation Status of a Sand-Swimming Lizard, Plestiodon Reynoldsi
- Detecting the Anomaly Zone in Species Trees and Evidence for a Misleading Signal in Higher-Level Skink Phylogeny (Squamata: Scincidae)
- A Taxonomic and Ecological Study of the Western Skink (Eumeces Skiltonianus) Wilmer W
- Western Skink (Plestiodon Skiltonianus) in Canada
- A New Species of Plestiodon (Squamata: Scincidae) from the Balsas Basin, Mexico
- Experimental Translocation of the Florida Sand Skink (Plestiodon [=Neoseps] Reynoldsi): Success of a Restricted Species Across Diverse Microhabitats