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| Lizard reproductive strategies vary; they may be: | | Lizard reproductive strategies vary; they may be: |
| * '''oviparous''' - laying eggs (most lizards) | | * '''oviparous''' - laying eggs (most lizards) |
− | * '''ovoviviparous''' - the eggs are retained within the female until birth of live young (all monitors, most iguanids, water dragons, all geckos, most chameleons) | + | * '''ovoviviparous''' - the eggs are retained within the female until birth of live young (all [[Monitor|monitors]], most iguanids, [[Water Dragon|water dragons]], all geckos, most [[Chameleon|chameleons]]) |
− | * '''viviparous''' - live-bearing, with a placental type of circulatory connection (blue-tongued skinks, shingle-backed skink, prehensile-tailed skink, Jackson's chameleon) | + | * '''viviparous''' - live-bearing, with a placental type of circulatory connection (blue-tongued skinks, [[Stump-tailed Skink|shingle-backed skink]], [[Prehensile-tailed Skink|prehensile-tailed skink]], [[Chamelone|Jackson's chameleon]]) |
| * '''parthenogenic''' - asexual reproduction found in lizards such as certain ''Lacerta'' spp. and whiptail lizards (Aspidocelis [''Cnemidophorus''] spp.) consisting entirely of females. Although they reproduce asexually, these females still show courting and pseudocopulation. | | * '''parthenogenic''' - asexual reproduction found in lizards such as certain ''Lacerta'' spp. and whiptail lizards (Aspidocelis [''Cnemidophorus''] spp.) consisting entirely of females. Although they reproduce asexually, these females still show courting and pseudocopulation. |
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| ==Temperature-Dependent Sex Determination== | | ==Temperature-Dependent Sex Determination== |
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− | A few species of lizards, such as the leopard gecko (''Eublepharis macularius'') have temperature-dependent sex determination where the sex of the developing fetus is determined by the temperature at which the eggs are incubated. The exact temperatures are species dependent; however the shift from one sex to the other is not absolute. A range of temperatures exists at which both sexes are produced at varying proportions and therefore most incubators used by breeders are not accurate. | + | A few species of lizards, such as the [[Leopard Gecko|leopard gecko]] (''Eublepharis macularius'') have temperature-dependent sex determination where the sex of the developing fetus is determined by the temperature at which the eggs are incubated. The exact temperatures are species dependent; however the shift from one sex to the other is not absolute. A range of temperatures exists at which both sexes are produced at varying proportions and therefore most incubators used by breeders are not accurate. |
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