TL;DR: It is concluded that maternal nesting behaviour and nesting phenology are traits subject to sex ratio selection in P. lesueurii, and thus, must be considered among the repertoire of ESD species for responding to climate change.
Abstract: Theoretical models suggest that in changing environments natural selection on two traits, maternal nesting behaviour and pivotal temperatures (those that divide the sexes) is important for maintaining viable offspring sex ratios in species with environmental sex determination (ESD). Empirical evidence, however, is lacking. In this paper, we provide such evidence from a study of clinal variation in four sex-determining traits (maternal nesting behaviour, pivotal temperatures, nesting phenology, and nest depth) in Physignathus lesueurii, a wide-ranging ESD lizard inhabiting eastern Australia. Despite marked differences in air and soil temperatures across our five study sites spanning 19° latitude and 1200 m in elevation, nest temperatures did not differ significantly among sites. Lizards compensated for climatic differences chiefly by selecting more open nest sites with higher incident radiation at cooler sites. Clinal variation in the onset of nesting also compensated for climatic differences, but to a lesser extent. There was no evidence of compensation through pivotal temperatures or nest depth. More broadly, our results extend to the egg stage the life history prediction that behaviour is the chief compensatory mechanism for climatic differences experienced by species spanning environmental extremes. Furthermore, our study was unique in revealing that nest site choice influenced mainly the daily range in nest temperatures, rather than mean temperatures, in a shallow-nesting reptile. Finally, indirect evidence suggests that the cue used by nesting lizards was radiation or temperature (through basking or assessing substrate temperatures), not visual detection of canopy openness. We conclude that maternal nesting behaviour and nesting phenology are traits subject to sex ratio selection in P. lesueurii, and thus, must be considered among the repertoire of ESD species for responding to climate change.
TL;DR: Observations on twelve species (five families) of non-Chelonian reptiles heating and cooling in air and water show that strongly predictable relationships exist between thermal time constants and body size, and the predictions of a simple model are compared.
TL;DR: The structure and topography of cutaneous receptors of 21 species of iguanian lizards were studied using histology and scanning electron microscopy to hypothesized to serve several functions (as mechano- and thermoreceptors, and possibly sensitivity to humidity).
Abstract: The structure and topography of cutaneous receptors of 21 species of iguanian lizards were studied using histology and scanning electron microscopy. Sense organs with "hairs" are found in the integument of Ceratophora, Draco, Phrynocephalus, Stellio, and Trapelus (agamids), and in Anolis, Chal- arodon and Oplurus (iguanids). Sense organs without "hairs" are found in the integument of Physignathus (agamid) and Sceloporus (iguanid). The chameleons have generalized epidermal receptors with simplified structure. Familial differences were observed in the numbers of receptors on the scales of the head and the tail: iguanids have 5-7 times more receptors than agamids. Physignathus differs from other agamids in the morphology, size, and number of receptors. These receptors are hypothesized to serve several functions (as mechano- and thermoreceptors, and possibly sensitivity to humidity). Integumental sense organs were first de- scribed for reptiles in 1868 by Leydig in the lizard genera Lacerta and Anguis, and in the snake genus Coronella. The small depressions he found in the surface of their scales were considered "organs of the sixth sense"; Leydig compared them with the taste buds of fishes
TL;DR: The topography and numerical distribution of the skin receptors in 29 lizard species including 18 agamids, eight iguanids and three gekkonids, are compared and contrasted and there are no marked differences in the number of receptors in the dorsal and ventral surfaces of the body in the different groups.
Abstract: The topography and numerical distribution of the skin receptors in 29 lizard species including 18 agamids, eight iguanids and three gekkonids, are compared and contrasted. There are no marked differences in the number of receptors in the dorsal and ventral surfaces of the body in the different groups. The maximal density of the receptors occurs on the head and decreases in the caudal direction.
Iguanids and gekkonids have 5–6 times more receptors than agamids. Agamids Gonocephalus grandis from S.E. Asia, Pogona barbata, Diporiphora bilineata from Australia and Ceratophora tennentii from Sri-Lanka, however, are distinguished by their high density of receptors, especially on the head. Species of Physignathus are similar to iguanids in this way. The agamid Phrynocephalus mystaceus shows considerable differences, in receptor number, from other species of this genus. There is a high density of receptors on the caudal scales of the Madagascan iguanid Oplurus, and a similar high density of receptors on the ventral surface of the gecko Teratoscincus scincus.
Abstract: Caimanopsgen. novo is proposed for Diporiphora amphiboluroides Lucas & Frost. The following species and subspecies of Physignathus and Diporiphora are studied: P. longirostris (Boulenger), P. temporalis (Giinther), P. g. gilberti (Gray), P. g. centralis Loveridge, D. convergens nov., D. a. albilabris nov., D. a. sobria nov., D. b. bennettii (GraY), D. b. arnhemica nov., D. magna nov., D. lalliae nov., D. reginae Glauert, D. winneckei Lucas & Frost, D. b. bilineata Gray, D. b. margaretae nov., and D. superba novo