Trabajo presentado en el III Iberian Congress of Biological Systematics (CISA 2015), celebrado en Vitoria-Gasteiz el 17 y 18 de diciembre de 2015.Mesalina is a widespread lacertid lizard genus that inhabits arid areas from North Africa to Pakistan. With around 13 species, many of them exhibit high genetic diversity and complex phylogenetic and biogeographic patterns. The taxonomic history of Mesalina is troubled, given the confusing morphological differentiation together with the geographical overlap between many species and the lack of samples for both morphological and molecular studies. Previous phylogenetic studies of this genus show that M. guttulata represents a species complex but the phylogenetic...
[Background] The Hajar Mountains of Oman and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is the highest mountain ...
The family Lacertidae (lizards) belongs to the class Reptilia (reptiles) and the order Squamata (sca...
*Kankılıç, Tolga ( Aksaray, Yazar )Genetic diversity is not always congruent with phenotypic heterog...
The lacertid lizards of the genus Mesalina inhabit the arid regions of the Old World, from North Afr...
Mesalina are small diurnal lacertid lizards inhabiting arid areas from North Africa to northwestern ...
The lacertid lizard Mesalina watsonana is widely distributed on the Iranian plateau where it is one ...
Trabajo presentado en el XIII Iberian Congress of Herpetology (XIII Congresso Luso-Espanhol de Herpe...
Until relatively recently, many groups of terrestrial reptiles were considered to contain only few ...
The Levant region witnessed dramatic tectonic events and climatic fluctuations that changed the hist...
Apathya is a lacertid genus occurring mainly in south-east Turkey and its adjacent regions (part of ...
The agamid Pseudotrapelus lizards inhabit the mountainous areas of the Arabian Peninsula and eastern...
[cat] Les zones àrides del Nord d'Àfrica i d'Aràbia s'estenen per diversos milions de kilòmetres qua...
Abstract: These notes on some Egyptian lacertid lizards contribute to faunal data for the planning o...
Asaccus geckos are distributed in southwest Asia, mainly in Iran and Arabia. Currently, seven Asaccu...
© 2022Mountains play a key role in forming biodiversity by acting both as barriers to gene flow amon...
[Background] The Hajar Mountains of Oman and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is the highest mountain ...
The family Lacertidae (lizards) belongs to the class Reptilia (reptiles) and the order Squamata (sca...
*Kankılıç, Tolga ( Aksaray, Yazar )Genetic diversity is not always congruent with phenotypic heterog...
The lacertid lizards of the genus Mesalina inhabit the arid regions of the Old World, from North Afr...
Mesalina are small diurnal lacertid lizards inhabiting arid areas from North Africa to northwestern ...
The lacertid lizard Mesalina watsonana is widely distributed on the Iranian plateau where it is one ...
Trabajo presentado en el XIII Iberian Congress of Herpetology (XIII Congresso Luso-Espanhol de Herpe...
Until relatively recently, many groups of terrestrial reptiles were considered to contain only few ...
The Levant region witnessed dramatic tectonic events and climatic fluctuations that changed the hist...
Apathya is a lacertid genus occurring mainly in south-east Turkey and its adjacent regions (part of ...
The agamid Pseudotrapelus lizards inhabit the mountainous areas of the Arabian Peninsula and eastern...
[cat] Les zones àrides del Nord d'Àfrica i d'Aràbia s'estenen per diversos milions de kilòmetres qua...
Abstract: These notes on some Egyptian lacertid lizards contribute to faunal data for the planning o...
Asaccus geckos are distributed in southwest Asia, mainly in Iran and Arabia. Currently, seven Asaccu...
© 2022Mountains play a key role in forming biodiversity by acting both as barriers to gene flow amon...
[Background] The Hajar Mountains of Oman and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is the highest mountain ...
The family Lacertidae (lizards) belongs to the class Reptilia (reptiles) and the order Squamata (sca...
*Kankılıç, Tolga ( Aksaray, Yazar )Genetic diversity is not always congruent with phenotypic heterog...