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         Lizards Endangered:     more books (25)
  1. Olly Oliver & Rap Jack: The Endangered Journey by Lisa Faire Graham, 2004-07-20
  2. Nature's Monster's Lizard, Endangered Reptiles by Brenda Ralph; McNab, Chriss Lewis, 2006
  3. Habitat requirements of the endangered pygmy bluetongue lizard, Tiliqua adelaidensis [An article from: Biological Conservation] by N.J. Souter, C.M. Bull, et all 2007-02-01
  4. Adding burrows to enhance a population of the endangered pygmy blue tongue lizard, Tiliqua adelaidensis [An article from: Biological Conservation] by N.J. Souter, C. Michael Bull, et all 2004-04-01
  5. Biological assessment: Possible impacts of exploratory drilling in section 18B, Naval Petroleum Reserve no. 2, Kern County, California on the endangered ... leopard lizard, and other sensitive species by Thomas P O'Farrell, 1981
  6. Biological assessment: Possible impacts of exploratory drilling in sections 8B and 18H, Naval Petroleum Reserve no. 2, Kern County, California on the endangered ... leopard lizard, and other sensitive species by Thomas Paul O'Farrell, 1982
  7. Assessment of proposed agricultural outleasing, Naval Air Station, Lemoore, California, on the endangered San Joaquin kit fox, Vulpes macrotis mutica, ... lizard, Crotaphytus (=Gambelia) silus by Thomas Paul O'Farrell, 1982
  8. Slender glass lizard: (Ophisaurus attenuatus) (Life tracks) by Bob Hay, 1992
  9. Possible effects of drilling operations in section 6D, Naval Petroleum Reserve no. 2, Kern County, California on the endangered San Joaquin kit fox, blunt-nosed ... leopard lizard, and other sensitive species by Thomas Paul O'Farrell, 1982
  10. Coachella Valley fringe-toed lizard facts (Uma inornata) (SuDoc I 49.2:C 63/12) by U.S. Dept of Interior, 2000
  11. Recovery plan for the St. Croix ground lizard, Ameiva polops by Sean B Furniss, 1984
  12. Island Night Lizard: An entry from Gale's <i>Beacham's Guide to Endangered Species: North America</i>
  13. Blunt-nosed Leopard Lizard: An entry from Gale's <i>Beacham's Guide to Endangered Species: North America</i>
  14. Coachella Valley Fringe-toed Lizard: An entry from Gale's <i>Beacham's Guide to Endangered Species: North America</i>

81. Cyclura - General Information About The Genus
lizards of the genus Cyclura are among the most endangered lizards because much oftheir fragile island habitat has been either destroyed by human development
http://islands.bio.miami.edu/Targets/Rock Iguanas/
Cyclura - General Information about the genus:
The Genus Cyclura is composed of eight species of West Indian rock iguanas that inhabit tropical dry forests and pine barrens throughout the Greater Antilles and the Bahamas (Alberts et al. 1997). Cyclura is a distinct lineage that is not closely related to any other iguanine (Malone et al. 2000). Endemism in this genus is extreme; each distinct lineage is restricted to only one island or one small island group (Malone et al. 2000). The general pattern of Cyclura radiation reflects a southeast to northwest directionality (Malone et al. 2000). Of the eight existing rock iguana species, three species are found on the islands of the Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos: C. carinata C. cychlura , and C. rileyi (Malone et al. 2000, Buckner and Blair 2000b, Gerber and Iverson 2000). Rock iguanas are the largest and most conspicuous lizards in the western hemisphere, inhabiting islands throughout the Greater and Lesser Antilles and the Bahamas (IUCN Specialist Group Reports 1998, Shedd Aquarium 2001). Cyclura lizards are large herbivorous lizards and are the largest native herbivores on many West Indian islands (Hartley et al. 2000, Shedd Aquarium 2001). Different populations of the same species of rock iguana may use remarkably different food resource plants, even if the vegetation of the habitats may be similar; such observations suggest that learning by the lizards and local variation in plant palatability may be important factors in determining diet (Auffenberg 1975). In addition to plants, rock iguanas may also consume other foods to obtain protein.

82. Table Of Contents - L
List of Texas Threatened and endangered Reptiles and Amphibians
http://www.nearctica.com/content/table_l.htm
Table of Contents - L Special Segments Butterflies of North America Conifers of North America Eastern Birds Home General Topics Natural History Ecology Family Environment Evolution Home Education Home Conservation Geophysics Paleontology Commercial Organizations
Labrador. Labrador - Rocks and Minerals La Brea Tar Pits Lacey Act - Regulations Lagomorpha ... Lava Tubes Lawns
Lawns - Diseases - Home and Garden
Lawns - Pests - Home and Garden
Lawns - Weeds - Home and Garden
Leafhoppers ... Lemnaceae Lice.
Lice - First Aid
Lice - Home and Garden
Lichens
Lichens - Organizations ...
Limnanthaceae Links.
Links - Birds
Links - Butterflies and Moths
Links - Fish
Links - Mushrooms ... Loranthaceae Louisiana.
Louisiana - Amphibians
Louisiana - Frogs
Louisiana - Mushrooms
Louisiana - Salamanders ... Lythraceae

83. Spilsbury - Endangered Species
By E.O. Brown. 24x30" postersized, 1000 pcs.
http://redirect-west.inktomi.com/click?u=http://clickserve.cc-dt.com/link/ddipro

84. Population Studies Of Endangered Kangaroo Rats And Blunt-nosed Leopard Lizards I
Population studies of endangered kangaroo rats and bluntnosed leopardlizards in the Carrizo Plain Natural Area, California. Published in
http://arnica.csustan.edu/esrpp/dfg91rp.htm
Population studies of endangered kangaroo rats
and blunt-nosed leopard lizards in the
Carrizo Plain Natural Area, California
Published in:
California Department of Fish and Game,
Nongame Bird and Mammal Section Rep. 93-01, 114 pp., 1993
by Daniel F. Williams
David J. Germano
and
Walter Tordoff III
Abstract
From July 1987 through December 1991, we studied interactions between cattle, the plant community, giant kangaroo rats ( Dipodomys ingens ), and blunt-nosed leopard lizards ( Gambelia sila ) in the Carrizo Plain Natural Area, with lesser efforts on short-nosed kangaroo rats ( D. nitratoides brevinasus ) and San Joaquin antelope squirrels ( Ammospermophilus nelsoni ). The main study sites were on the Elkhorn Plain, San Luis Obispo County, with additional sites on the Carrizo Plain, San Luis Obispo County, and along Panoche Creek in Fresno County, California. Impacts of cattle grazing on populations of kangaroo rats and blunt-nosed leopard lizards were not apparent statistically, but grazing only occurred during a 20-month period. Numbers of short-nosed kangaroo rats declined throughout the study, reaching a lowpoint in spring 1991 when none were captured. An increase in density of giant kangaroo rats in 1988 and 1989 may have contributed to the decline of short-nosed kangaroo rats. No recruitment of young was seen between summers 1988 and 1991. Numbers of giant kangaroo rats increased in 1988, remained high in 1989 despite drought, probably because of large seed stores made in 1988, declined to a lowpoint in spring 1991, then began to increase in summer 1991. Estimated densities varied from about 59/ha in springs of 1988 and 1989 to

85. Cyclura.com
Curator of Ectotherms, Nashville Zoo Blue Iguana, Battle against Extinction Themagnificent Blue Iguana, possibly the most critically endangered reptile on
http://www.cyclura.com/

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Sightings Puzzles ... Guestbook Lizard Shops Store Books Critter Corner Gifts, Art ... Specialty Items Conservation Sites ISG TSA UI TCA ... ICFFCI Mailing List Format: Text HTML News Around the World IIS Informational Bulletin - Understanding the basics and IIS projects. Honduras This Week, March 31, 2003 - Utila for Sale - Where will the iguanas go? Honduras This Week, March 3, 2003 - Utila Iguana Conference:3/17~24/03 Hoosier Times, Jan 5, 2003 - Zoo is home to many rare and exotic iguanas New Articles USA Today visits Joel Friesch Giant Galliwasps Giant Galliwasps at the Nashville Zoo. by: Dale McGinnity, Curator of Ectotherms, Nashville Zoo The Utila Queen 4.8M MOV file By: John Binns Cinematographer: Alex Lau Utila Photo Journal - Click here New Sightings / Stories Photos and stories submitted by Susan, Justin and Julie Williams, Amy Armes, Sal and Jack. Review March Sightings. AJ Gutman tells the heart warming story of Bradbury,

86. REPTILE RESOURCES
Cuban Rock Iguana Cyclura nubila nubila research report on the most endangeredspecies of lizards cyclura in the world; describes breeding, health, diet
http://www.lib.duke.edu/bes/reptiles/lizards.htm
duke libraries catalog databases ask a librarian ... BIOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES LIBRARY LIZARDS Varanus komodoensis: Photo by Herb Ellerbrock, Pittsburgh Herpetological Society Bearded Dragon Pogona barbata - factsheet by Prof. Kathryn Tosney, Professor of Biology, University of Michigan. Pagona - from an Australian Perspective by Raymond Hoser. Coast Horned Lizard Phrynosoma coronatum - San Diego Natural History Museum Field Guide entry Collared Lizard Crotaphytus collaris - Colorado Herpetological Society factsheet Crocodile Lizard Shinisaurus crocodilurus - Brent Ward's page from Sedgwick County Zoo in Wichita, Kansas Cuban Rock Iguana Cyclura nubila nubila - research report on the most endangered species of lizards cyclura in the world; describes breeding, health, diet, and habitat from the Center for Reproduction of Endangered Species (CRES), authored by Jeff Lemm and Allison Alberts, Ph.D. Fringe-toed Lizards Uma inornata Galapagos Marine Iguana Amblyrhynchus cristatus - by Robert Rothman, Ph.D., Rochester Institute of Technology Gila Monster Heloderma suspectum - Dr Seward's Gila Monster Web Site Green Anole Anolis carolinensis - Account by Thomas A. Jenssen, Biology Department, Virginia Tech

87. Lizard Printouts - AllAboutNature.com
prey). A sampling of lizards Basilisk A South American lizard that canwalk on water. predator. lizards There are 2,500 types of lizards.
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/reptiles/lizard/printouts.shtml
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Animal Printouts Go to Online Animal Coloring Pages A B C D ... More Biomes Click on an animal to go to that printout.
For the top 25 printouts, click here Lizard Printouts Lizards are small, cold-blooded animals that have eyelids and a long tail. These reptiles usually have four legs (a group of lizards called amphisbaenas have no legs). There are about 2,500 different species of lizards. Only two of these species are poisonous (including the beaded lizard and the Gila Monster ; the Komodo Dragon has a disease-ridden bite that infects and kills its prey). A sampling of lizards: Basilisk A South American lizard that can walk on water. Blue-tongued Skink An Australian lizard with a long, blue tongue. Frilled Lizard A lizard with a huge neck frill. Gecko Geckos are the only lizards that make noise. Gila Monster A venomous lizard from deserts of southwestern North America.

88. Blunt-Nosed Leopard Lizard
caused the reduction, fragmentation of populations and decline of bluntnosed leopardlizards. The blunt-nosed leopard lizard was listed as endangered by the
http://sacramento.fws.gov/es/animal_spp_acct/blunt_nosed_lizard.htm
Blunt-Nosed Leopard Lizard
FWS Photo BLUNT-NOSED LEOPARD LIZARD
Gambelia silus CLASSIFICATION: Federal Endangered Species Federal Register 32:4001; March 11, 1967) CRITICAL HABITAT: None designated RECOVERY PLAN: The Recovery Plan for the Upland Species of the San Joaquin Valley , September 30. 1998. DESCRIPTION: The blunt-nosed leopard lizard ( Gambelia silus ) is a relatively large lizard the Iguanidae family. It has a long, regenerative tail, long, powerful hind limbs, and a short, blunt snout. Adult males are slightly larger than females, ranging in size from 3.4 to 4.7 inches in length, excluding tail. Females are 3.4 to 4.4 inches long. Males weigh 1.3 to 1.5 ounces, females 0.8 to 1.2. Blunt-nosed leopard lizards feed primarily on insects (particularly grasshoppers, crickets and moths), other lizards and occasionally plant material. Although blunt-nosed leopard lizards are darker than other leopard lizards, they exhibit tremendous variation in color and pattern on their backs. Their background color ranges from yellowish or light gray-brown to dark brown, depending on the surrounding soil color and vegetation. Their undersides are uniformly white. They have rows of dark spots across their backs, alternating with white, cream-colored or yellow bands. See the Recovery Plan for more details about identification.

89. Animal Fact Sheets
Act, and listed on Appendix I. Many species of snakes and lizards are consideredendangered or threatened by the pet trade, or the animal products trade.
http://www.zoo.org/educate/fact_sheets/kom_dragon/komodo.htm
back Komodo Dragon
Varanus komodoensis Classification and Range
Komodo dragons are also known as Komodo monitors, or by the local Indonesian name, "ora." These giant lizards belong to the family Varanidae, which includes 52 species of monitor lizards. All varanids belong to a single genus. Varanus includes very tiny lizards only a few inches long to the immense Komodo dragon. Komodo dragons live on four southeastern Indonesian islands in the Lesser Sunda region: Flores, Gili Motang, Komodo and Rinca. As recent as the 1970s, their habitat also included the island of Padar.
If you like this animal and find it particularly fascinating you can adopt it! Habitat
Komodo dragons inhabit hot, seasonally arid grasslands, savannas and monsoon forests. They live mostly in the lowlands, but have occasionally been found at elevations up to 1,967 feet (600 m). Physical Characteristics
Male length: Commonly up to 9 feet (2.75 m) long, including tail, although the record is slightly over 10 feet (3 m).

90. CyberSpace Search!
SEARCH THE WEB. Results 1 through 2 of 2 for komodo lizards.
http://www.cyberspace.com/cgi-bin/cs_search.cgi?Terms=komodo lizards

91. Cyclura.com Gallery : Our 50 Lizards
Our 50 lizards. All Galleries Our 50 lizards. Chameleons section. Others(34) To read more about our other lizards, please visit their section.
http://images.cyclura.com/cgi-bin/imageFolio.cgi?direct=Our_50_Lizards

92. Anniella Introduction
a proposed federal rule to list the black California legless lizard as an endangeredspecies. Although subsequent evaluation of the lizards recovered during
http://www.anniella.org/AnniellaIntroduction.html
I. INTRODUCTION
The California legless lizard ( Anniella pulchra Gray 1852; Sauria: Anniellidae) is a fossorial (burrowing) animal that typically inhabits sand or loose soil ( Fig. 1 They are nearly endemic to California, but also found in northern Baja California (Stebbins 1954, Hunt 1984, Bury 1985, Jennings 1987, Jennings and Hayes 1994). State agencies regard Anniella pulchra as a Species of Special Concern because of human impacts to coastal dune habitats (Jennings and Hayes 1994, California Department of Fish and Game 2000). Two unofficial designations for A. pulchra primarily reflect differences in dorsal coloration and distribution (Hunt 1983, Hunt and Zander 1997). Very dark animals are commonly called black legless lizards (subspecies A. p. nigra) , and most workers refer to lighter colored adults as silvery legless lizards (subspecies A. p. pulchra). Genetic studies are inconclusive, especially those comparing populations in central California (Murphy and Smith 1985, Jennings 1987, Hunt and Zander 1997). Proposed amendments to the nomenclature (addition of subspecies designations) remain unchanged.

93. JanMarch2002Newsletter - Page 10 Of 14
Tremendous efforts have gone into aiding the recovery of two criticallyendangered lizards, the Jamaican iguana and the Grand Cayman iguana.
http://www.uctp.org/Volume5/JanMarch2002/index10.html
10 of 13 LA VOZ DEL PUEBLO TA VOLUME 5, ISSUSE 1 West Indian Rock Iguanas are a group of large, ground dwelling, herbivorous lizards that inhabit Caribbean islands throughout the Greater Antilles and the Bahamas. There are eight species with a total of Rock iguanas inhabit fragile ecosystems and have suffered greatly activities and introduced (foreign) animals. Today, these reptiles are endangered group of lizards, several species verging on extinction. Tremendous efforts have gone into aiding the recovery of two critically endangered lizards, the Jamaican iguana and the Grand Cayman iguana. The Jamaican iguana (Cyclura collie) has a remarkable story. Fear extinct for nearly half a century, this adult specimen in a rugged region of southeastern Jamaica. Regarded as the surviving population is estimated between 50 and 200. Residing in the Dominican Republic and Haiti, the Rhinoceros Iguana (Cyclura cornuta) is an endangered species. This population remains intact probably because of because of its remoteness and inaccessibility of the harsh, dry ecosystem in which

94. Herps Of Texas
Acknowledgements Texas Memorial Museum 07 January 2000 Comments to David Cannatella Texas Memorial Museum at UT Austin Copyright 2000
http://www.zo.utexas.edu/research/txherps

Acknowledgements
Texas Memorial Museum 07 January 2000
Comments to David Cannatella
Texas Memorial Museum
at UT Austin

95. Dan Suzio Photography - Stock Photo Catalog
Click on the general categories below to see a catalog of availablephotos. This site includes only a small sampling of the thousands
http://www.suziophoto.com/catalog.html
ask for it
Amphibians Endangered species
salamanders Life cycle/
metamorphosis
Reptiles Snakes Tortoises Lizards Endangered
species Coming soon . . . Birds
Bugs
Flowers
Habitats and Landforms
Mammals
Places Plants Sun and moon, including eclipses Sequences What's the oldest living thing on Earth? Don't see what you're looking for? Ask for it here! Name: Company: E-mail: Message:
Home What's New Find a Photo In the News ... Ethics Dan Suzio Photography P.O. Box 5803 Berkeley, CA 94705 voice 510-548-8157 fax 510-843-0142 Dan@suziophoto.com

96. Fort Worth Zoo - Conservation Projects
Instead, this SSP will concentrate its attention on two of the most critically endangeredlizards in the world the Grand Cayman iguana (Cyclura nubila lewisi
http://www.fortworthzoo.com/esuiguan.html
Conservation Projects
AZA Species Survival Plan Profile: West Indian Rock Iguanas

The West Indian rock iguanas, Cyclura,
Though zoos have long been concerned with the plight of these impressive dinosaur-like lizards, it was only recently that a coordinated effort was made to respond to it. At the inaugural meeting of the American Zoo and Aquarium Association (AZA) Lizard Advisory Group (LAG) in 1990, Cyclura were designated as their highest conservation priority. Since then, several landmark events have occurred in which zoos played key roles and provided strong leadership for rock iguana conservation. These events, plus the tremendous efforts that have gone into forging in situ partnerships to aid in the recovery of two critically endangered rock iguanas, have recently culminated in the formation of the AZA's first lizard Species Survival Plan (SSP), the West Indian Rock Iguana SSP.
The rock iguana that most people are familiar with, and the one most often seen is zoos, is the rhino iguana (Cyclura cornuta) from Hispaniola. Though rhino iguanas have proved excellent surrogates for gaining husbandry experience over the years, this species' status in the wild is fairly secure; thus, it will not be the primary focus of the Rock Iguana SSP. Instead, this SSP will concentrate its attention on two of the most critically endangered lizards in the world: the Grand Cayman iguana

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