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No change in size ,  17:28, 10 June 2010
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{{review}}
 
{{review}}
[[Image:DSC01794.JPG|150px|thumb|right|'''Lizard ear''']]  
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[[Image:DSC01794.JPG|300px|thumb|right|'''Lizard ear''']]  
    
Most lizards seem to hear in the same range as the [[Green Iguana|green iguana]] (500 to 4,000Hz range), with a sensitivity peak at 700 Hz, equal to about 24 dB. For lizards lacking a tympanic membrane, such as the lesser (Northern) earless lizard (''Holbrookia maculata'') and many fossorial (burrowing) and semi-fossorial lizards (for example the legless Anniella), hearing is limited to lower frequencies. However, even without a surface or subsurface-mounted tympanic membrane, many "earless" reptiles can indeed "hear", though to varying degrees.  
 
Most lizards seem to hear in the same range as the [[Green Iguana|green iguana]] (500 to 4,000Hz range), with a sensitivity peak at 700 Hz, equal to about 24 dB. For lizards lacking a tympanic membrane, such as the lesser (Northern) earless lizard (''Holbrookia maculata'') and many fossorial (burrowing) and semi-fossorial lizards (for example the legless Anniella), hearing is limited to lower frequencies. However, even without a surface or subsurface-mounted tympanic membrane, many "earless" reptiles can indeed "hear", though to varying degrees.  
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