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  2. Viviparous lizard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viviparous_lizard

    The viviparous lizard, or common lizard, (Zootoca vivipara, formerly Lacerta vivipara) is a Eurasian lizard.It lives farther north than any other species of non-marine reptile, and is named for the fact that it is viviparous, meaning it gives birth to live young (although they will sometimes lay eggs normally). [3]

  3. Lizard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lizard

    Around 20 percent of lizard species reproduce via viviparity (live birth). This is particularly common in Anguimorphs. Viviparous species give birth to relatively developed young which look like miniature adults. Embryos are nourished via a placenta-like structure. [24] A minority of lizards have parthenogenesis (reproduction from unfertilised ...

  4. Parthenogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthenogenesis

    This is because in asexual reproduction a successful genotype can spread quickly without being modified by sex or wasting resources on male offspring who will not give birth. Some species can produce both sexually and through parthenogenesis, and offspring in the same clutch of a species of tropical lizard can be a mix of sexually produced ...

  5. Parthenogenesis in squamates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthenogenesis_in_squamates

    Parthenogenesis is a mode of asexual reproduction in which offspring are produced by females without the genetic contribution of a male. Among all the sexual vertebrates, the only examples of true parthenogenesis, in which all-female populations reproduce without the involvement of males, are found in squamate reptiles (snakes and lizards). [1]

  6. Armadillo girdled lizard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armadillo_girdled_lizard

    The female armadillo girdled lizard gives birth to one [3] or two [6] live young; the species is one of the few lizards that does not lay eggs. The female may even feed her young, which is also unusual for a lizard. Females give birth once a year at most; some take a year off between births.

  7. Desert night lizard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert_night_lizard

    Like all night lizards, the desert night lizard is viviparous, giving birth to live young and producing 1 to 3 young from August to December.Unusually for a lizard, it forms family social groups with a father-mother pair and offspring, which may delay dispersing for years.

  8. Yellow-spotted tropical night lizard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow-spotted_tropical...

    The yellow-spotted night lizard is sometimes suggested to be the inspiration for the "yellow-spotted lizards" in the children's novel Holes by Louis Sachar.However, in the making of the movie adaptation of the novel, the filmmakers used bearded dragons and painted yellow spots on them, rather than using actual yellow-spotted night lizards.

  9. Lacertidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lacertidae

    Troodos lizard Phoenicolacerta troodica Terminology and scalation of lacertids. The Lacertidae are the family of the wall lizards, true lizards, or sometimes simply lacertas, which are native to Afro-Eurasia. It is a diverse family with at about 360 species in 39 genera. They represent the dominant group of reptiles found in Europe.