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Horned lizard

Phrynosoma, whose members are known as the horned lizards, horny toads, or horntoads, is a genus of North American lizards and the type genus of the family Phrynosomatidae. Their common names refer directly to their horns or to their flattened, rounded bodies, and blunt snouts.

Horned lizard
Regal horned lizard
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Iguania
Family: Phrynosomatidae
Genus: Phrynosoma
Wiegmann, 1828
Type species
Lacerta orbiculare
Linnaeus, 1758
Species

See text

The generic name Phrynosoma means "toad-bodied". In common with true toads (amphibians of the family Bufonidae), horned lizards tend to move sluggishly, often remain motionless, and rely on their remarkable camouflage to avoid detection by predators. They are adapted to arid or semiarid areas. The spines on the lizard's back and sides are modified reptile scales, which prevent water loss through the skin, whereas the horns on the head are true horns (i.e., they have a bony core). Of the 21 species of horned lizards, 15 are native to the USA. The largest-bodied and most widely distributed of the American species is the Texas horned lizard.

Defenses edit

 
Mexican Plateau horned lizard (Phrynosoma orbiculare) near Xalapa de Enríquez, Veracruz, Mexico, showing blood squirted from the eye as defensive behavior (20 April 2011)

Horned lizards use a variety of means to avoid predation. Their coloration generally serves as camouflage. When threatened, their first defense is to remain motionless to avoid detection. If approached too closely, they generally run in short bursts and stop abruptly to confuse the predator's visual acuity. If this fails, they puff up their bodies to cause them to appear more horned and larger so that they are more difficult to swallow.[1]

At least eight species (P. asio, P. cornutum, P. coronatum, P. ditmarsi, P. hernandesi, P. orbiculare, P. solare, and P. taurus) are also able to squirt an aimed stream of blood from the corners of the eyes for a distance up to 5 ft (1.5 m).[2][3][4][5] They do this by restricting the blood flow leaving the head, thereby increasing blood pressure and rupturing tiny vessels around the eyelids. The blood not only confuses predators but also tastes foul to canine and feline predators. It appears to have no effect against predatory birds. Only three closely related species (P. mcallii, P. modestum, and P. platyrhinos) are certainly known to either be unable to squirt blood or only do it extremely rarely.[3]

While previous thought held that compounds were added to the blood from glands in the ocular sinus cavity, current research has shown that the chemical compounds that make up the defense are already in the circulating blood.[3][4] It is possible that their diet of large quantities of venomous harvester ants could be a factor; however, the origin and structure of the chemicals responsible are still unknown. The blood-squirting mechanism increases survival after contact with canine predators;[4] the trait may provide an evolutionary advantage. Ocular autohemorrhaging has also been documented in other lizards,[6] which suggests blood-squirting could have evolved from a less extreme defense in the ancestral branch of the genus. Recent phylogenic research supports this claim, so the species incapable of squirting blood apparently have lost the adaptation for reasons yet unstudied.[7]

To avoid being picked up by the head or neck, a horned lizard ducks or elevates its head and orients its cranial horns straight up, or back. If a predator tries to take it by the body, the lizard drives that side of its body down into the ground so the predator cannot easily get its lower jaw underneath.[citation needed]

Population decline edit

 
Phrynosoma douglasii

A University of Texas publication notes that horned lizard populations continue to disappear throughout their distribution despite protective legislation. Population declines are attributed to a number of factors, including the fragmentation and loss of habitat from real estate development and road construction, the planting of non-native grasses (both suburban and rural), conversion of native land to pastureland and agricultural uses, and pesticides. Additionally predation by domestic dogs and cats place continued pressure upon horned lizards.[8]

Fire ants (Solenopsis invicta), introduced from South America via the nursery industry's potted plants, pose a significant threat to all wildlife including horned lizards. Phrynosoma species do not eat fire ants. Fire ants kill many species of wildlife, and are fierce competitors against the native ants, which horned lizards require for food (with their specialized nutritional content). Fire ants have given all ants a bad reputation, and human attempts to eradicate ants, including invasive species and the native species on which the lizards prey, contribute to the continued displacement of native ant species and the decline of horned lizards.[8]

The Texas horned lizard (Phrynosoma cornutum) has disappeared from almost half of its geographic range. Their popularity in the early to mid-20th-century pet trade, where collectors took thousands from the wild populations to sell to pet distributors, without provision for their highly specialized nutritional needs (primarily formic acid from harvester ants), resulted in certain death for almost all the collected lizards. In 1967, the state of Texas passed protective legislation preventing the collection, exportation, and sale of Phrynosoma, and by the early 1970s, most states enacted similar laws to protect and conserve horned lizards in the USA. As recently as the early 2000s, though, the state of Nevada still allowed commercial sale of Phrynosoma species. Despite limited federal protection in Mexico, horned lizards are still offered in Mexican "pet" markets throughout the country.[8]

In 2014, the Center for Biological Diversity in Tucson petitioned the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation to have the Texas horned lizard put on the endangered species list due to the massive decline of its population in Oklahoma, where it was once plentiful. The center said it may later seek protection for the animal on a federal level; it also said that reptiles in general are dying off at up to 10,000 times their historic extinction rate, greatly due to human influences.[9]

Species and subspecies edit

The following 21 species (listed alphabetically by scientific name) are recognized as being valid by the Reptile Database, three species of which have recognized subspecies:[10]

Image Common Name Scientific Name Subspecies Distribution
  Giant horned lizard Phrynosoma asio Cope, 1864 southern Mexico
Baur's short-horned lizard Phrynosoma bauri Montanucci, 2015 (disputed; may be conspecific with P. hernandesi) United States ( southern Wyoming and Nebraska south through eastern Colorado to northern New Mexico)
  San Diego horned lizard or Blainville's horned lizard Phrynosoma blainvillii Gray, 1839 United States (southern and central California), Mexico (northern Baja California).
  Short-tailed horned lizard Phrynosoma braconnieri A.H.A. Duméril, 1870 Mexico (Puebla and Oaxaca)
  Great Plains short-horned lizard Phrynosoma brevirostris (Girard, 1858) (disputed; may be conspecific with P. hernandesi) Canada and the United States
Cedros Island horned lizard Phrynosoma cerroense Stejneger, 1893 Mexico (Cedros Island)
  Texas horned lizard Phrynosoma cornutum (Harlan, 1825) United States (southeast Colorado, central and southern areas of Kansas, central and western areas of Oklahoma and Texas, southeast New Mexico, and extreme southeast Arizona), Mexico (eastern Sonora, most of Chihuahua, northeast Durango, northern Zacatecas and San Luis Potosí, and throughout most of Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas.)
  Coast horned lizard Phrynosoma coronatum (Blainville, 1835)
  • Cape horned lizard, P. c. coronatum (Blainville, 1835)
  • California horned lizard, P. c. frontale Van Denburgh, 1894
  • Central peninsular horned lizard, P. c. jamesi Schmidt, 1922
Mexico (Baja California Sur )
San Luis Valley short-horned lizard Phrynosoma diminutum Montanucci, 2015 (disputed; may be conspecific with P. hernandesi) United States (Colorado)
Ditmars' horned lizard or rock horned lizard Phrynosoma ditmarsi Stejneger, 1906 Mexico (Sonora), United States (Arizona)
  Pygmy short-horned lizard Phrynosoma douglasii (Bell, 1828) northwestern United States and adjacent southwestern Canada
Sonoran horned lizard, Goode's desert horned lizard Phrynosoma goodei Stejneger, 1893 United States (Arizona) and Mexico (Sonora)
  Greater short-horned lizard Phrynosoma hernandesi Girard, 1858 southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico
  Flat-tail horned lizard Phrynosoma mcallii (Hallowell, 1852) United States and Mexico
  Roundtail horned lizard Phrynosoma modestum Girard, 1852 United States( Texas, New Mexico eastern Arizona, southeastern Colorado), northcentral Mexico
  Mexican Plateau horned lizard or Chihuahua Desert horned lizard Phrynosoma orbiculare (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • P. o. bradti Horowitz, 1955
  • P. o. cortezii (A.H.A. Duméril & Bocourt, 1870)
  • P. o. dugesii (A.H.A. Duméril & Bocourt, 1870)
  • P. o. orbiculare (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • P. o. orientale Horowitz, 1955
Mexico (Chihuahua, Durango, Morelos, Nuevo León, Puebla, and Veracruz.)
Desert short-horned lizard Phrynosoma ornatissimum (Girard, 1858) (disputed; may be conspecific with P. hernandesi) Canada and the United States
  Desert horned lizard Phrynosoma platyrhinos Girard, 1852 southern Idaho in the north to northern Mexico
Guerreran horned lizard Phrynosoma sherbrookei Nieto-Montes de Oca, Arenas-Moreno, Beltrán-Sánchez & Leaché, 2014 Mexico.
  Regal horned lizard Phrynosoma solare Gray, 1845 Arizona and Mexico
  Mexican horned lizard Phrynosoma taurus Dugès, 1873 Mexico (Guerrero and Puebla)


Note: In the above list, a binomial authority or trinomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species or subspecies was originally described in a genus other than Phrynosoma.

 
Comparison of P. modestum and P. platyrhinos

Horned lizard (Phrynosoma) gallery edit

Symbol edit

The genus of horned lizards is the official state reptile of Wyoming.[11] Texas designated the Texas horned lizard (Phrynosoma cornutum) as the official state reptile in 1993[12] and the "TCU Horned Frog" is the mascot of Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas. TCU is the only known athletic team with the horned lizard as a mascot.

References edit

  1. ^ Winton, W. M. (1916-10-24). "Habits and Behavior of the Texas Horned Lizard, Phrynosoma cornutum, Harlan. I". Copeia. 36 (36). JSTOR: 81–84. doi:10.2307/1436504. ISSN 0045-8511. JSTOR 1436504.
  2. ^ Middendorf III, G.A.; Sherbrooke, W.C.; Braun, E.J. (2001). "Comparison of Blood Squirted from the Circumorbital Sinus and Systemic Blood in a Horned Lizard, Phrynosoma cornutum". The Southwestern Naturalist. 46 (3): 384–387. doi:10.2307/3672440. JSTOR 3672440.
  3. ^ a b c Sherbrooke, W.C.; Middendorf III, G.A. (2001). "Blood-Squirting Variability in Horned Lizards (Phrynosoma)" (PDF). Copeia. 2001 (4): 1114–1122. doi:10.1643/0045-8511(2001)001[1114:BSVIHL]2.0.CO;2. JSTOR 1448403. S2CID 86061329.
  4. ^ a b c Sherbrooke, W.C.; Middendorf III, G.A. (2004). "Responses of Kit Foxes (Vulpes macrotis) to Antipredator Blood-Squirting and Blood of Texas Horned Lizards (Phrynosoma cornutum)". Copeia. 2004 (3): 652–658. doi:10.1643/CH-03-157R1. JSTOR 1448486. S2CID 55365586.
  5. ^ Hodges, W.L. (2004). "Defensive blood squirting in Phrynosoma ditmarsi and a high rate of human-induced blood squirting in Phrynosoma asio". The Southwestern Naturalist. 49 (2): 267–270. doi:10.1894/0038-4909(2004)049<0267:DBSIPD>2.0.CO;2. JSTOR 3672697. S2CID 85923959.
  6. ^ Sherbrooke, W. C. (2000). "Sceloporus jarrovii (Yarrow's spiny lizard) Ocular Sinus Bleeding". Herpetological Review. 31: 243.
  7. ^ Leache, A. D.; J. A. McGuire (2006). "Phylogenetic relationships of hores lizards (Phrynosoma) based on nuclear and mitochondrial data: evidence for a misleading mitochondrial gene tree" (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 39 (3): 628–644. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2005.12.016. PMID 16488160.
  8. ^ a b c Pianka, Eric; Hodges, Wendy. . uts.cc.utexas.edu. University of Texas. Archived from the original on April 26, 2015. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  9. ^ Godfrey, Ed (December 20, 2014). "Center for Biological Diversity wants Texas horned lizard declared an endangered species in Oklahoma". The Daily Oklahoman. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  10. ^ Genus Phrynosoma at The Reptile Database www.reptile-database.org.
  11. ^ . Wyoming Secretary of State's Office. 2011. Archived from the original on September 6, 2011. Retrieved January 22, 2011.
  12. ^ Texas Horned Lizard. State Symbols USA. Retrieved on 2016-10-25.

External links edit

  • Horned lizard skulls and info at Digimorph.org
  • Horned Lizard Conservation Society
  • Horned Lizards at UTexas.edu
  • Argentine ants linked to declines in coastal horned lizards

horned, lizard, this, article, about, north, american, horned, lizard, australian, horned, lizard, thorny, devil, phrynosoma, whose, members, known, horned, lizards, horny, toads, horntoads, genus, north, american, lizards, type, genus, family, phrynosomatidae. This article is about the North American horned lizard For the Australian horned lizard see thorny devil Phrynosoma whose members are known as the horned lizards horny toads or horntoads is a genus of North American lizards and the type genus of the family Phrynosomatidae Their common names refer directly to their horns or to their flattened rounded bodies and blunt snouts Horned lizardRegal horned lizardScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaOrder SquamataSuborder IguaniaFamily PhrynosomatidaeGenus PhrynosomaWiegmann 1828Type speciesLacerta orbiculareLinnaeus 1758SpeciesSee textThe generic name Phrynosoma means toad bodied In common with true toads amphibians of the family Bufonidae horned lizards tend to move sluggishly often remain motionless and rely on their remarkable camouflage to avoid detection by predators They are adapted to arid or semiarid areas The spines on the lizard s back and sides are modified reptile scales which prevent water loss through the skin whereas the horns on the head are true horns i e they have a bony core Of the 21 species of horned lizards 15 are native to the USA The largest bodied and most widely distributed of the American species is the Texas horned lizard Contents 1 Defenses 2 Population decline 3 Species and subspecies 4 Horned lizard Phrynosoma gallery 5 Symbol 6 References 7 External linksDefenses edit nbsp Mexican Plateau horned lizard Phrynosoma orbiculare near Xalapa de Enriquez Veracruz Mexico showing blood squirted from the eye as defensive behavior 20 April 2011 Horned lizards use a variety of means to avoid predation Their coloration generally serves as camouflage When threatened their first defense is to remain motionless to avoid detection If approached too closely they generally run in short bursts and stop abruptly to confuse the predator s visual acuity If this fails they puff up their bodies to cause them to appear more horned and larger so that they are more difficult to swallow 1 At least eight species P asio P cornutum P coronatum P ditmarsi P hernandesi P orbiculare P solare and P taurus are also able to squirt an aimed stream of blood from the corners of the eyes for a distance up to 5 ft 1 5 m 2 3 4 5 They do this by restricting the blood flow leaving the head thereby increasing blood pressure and rupturing tiny vessels around the eyelids The blood not only confuses predators but also tastes foul to canine and feline predators It appears to have no effect against predatory birds Only three closely related species P mcallii P modestum and P platyrhinos are certainly known to either be unable to squirt blood or only do it extremely rarely 3 While previous thought held that compounds were added to the blood from glands in the ocular sinus cavity current research has shown that the chemical compounds that make up the defense are already in the circulating blood 3 4 It is possible that their diet of large quantities of venomous harvester ants could be a factor however the origin and structure of the chemicals responsible are still unknown The blood squirting mechanism increases survival after contact with canine predators 4 the trait may provide an evolutionary advantage Ocular autohemorrhaging has also been documented in other lizards 6 which suggests blood squirting could have evolved from a less extreme defense in the ancestral branch of the genus Recent phylogenic research supports this claim so the species incapable of squirting blood apparently have lost the adaptation for reasons yet unstudied 7 To avoid being picked up by the head or neck a horned lizard ducks or elevates its head and orients its cranial horns straight up or back If a predator tries to take it by the body the lizard drives that side of its body down into the ground so the predator cannot easily get its lower jaw underneath citation needed Population decline edit nbsp Phrynosoma douglasiiA University of Texas publication notes that horned lizard populations continue to disappear throughout their distribution despite protective legislation Population declines are attributed to a number of factors including the fragmentation and loss of habitat from real estate development and road construction the planting of non native grasses both suburban and rural conversion of native land to pastureland and agricultural uses and pesticides Additionally predation by domestic dogs and cats place continued pressure upon horned lizards 8 Fire ants Solenopsis invicta introduced from South America via the nursery industry s potted plants pose a significant threat to all wildlife including horned lizards Phrynosoma species do not eat fire ants Fire ants kill many species of wildlife and are fierce competitors against the native ants which horned lizards require for food with their specialized nutritional content Fire ants have given all ants a bad reputation and human attempts to eradicate ants including invasive species and the native species on which the lizards prey contribute to the continued displacement of native ant species and the decline of horned lizards 8 The Texas horned lizard Phrynosoma cornutum has disappeared from almost half of its geographic range Their popularity in the early to mid 20th century pet trade where collectors took thousands from the wild populations to sell to pet distributors without provision for their highly specialized nutritional needs primarily formic acid from harvester ants resulted in certain death for almost all the collected lizards In 1967 the state of Texas passed protective legislation preventing the collection exportation and sale of Phrynosoma and by the early 1970s most states enacted similar laws to protect and conserve horned lizards in the USA As recently as the early 2000s though the state of Nevada still allowed commercial sale of Phrynosoma species Despite limited federal protection in Mexico horned lizards are still offered in Mexican pet markets throughout the country 8 In 2014 the Center for Biological Diversity in Tucson petitioned the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation to have the Texas horned lizard put on the endangered species list due to the massive decline of its population in Oklahoma where it was once plentiful The center said it may later seek protection for the animal on a federal level it also said that reptiles in general are dying off at up to 10 000 times their historic extinction rate greatly due to human influences 9 Species and subspecies editThe following 21 species listed alphabetically by scientific name are recognized as being valid by the Reptile Database three species of which have recognized subspecies 10 Image Common Name Scientific Name Subspecies Distribution nbsp Giant horned lizard Phrynosoma asio Cope 1864 southern MexicoBaur s short horned lizard Phrynosoma bauri Montanucci 2015 disputed may be conspecific with P hernandesi United States southern Wyoming and Nebraska south through eastern Colorado to northern New Mexico nbsp San Diego horned lizard or Blainville s horned lizard Phrynosoma blainvillii Gray 1839 United States southern and central California Mexico northern Baja California nbsp Short tailed horned lizard Phrynosoma braconnieri A H A Dumeril 1870 Mexico Puebla and Oaxaca nbsp Great Plains short horned lizard Phrynosoma brevirostris Girard 1858 disputed may be conspecific with P hernandesi Canada and the United StatesCedros Island horned lizard Phrynosoma cerroense Stejneger 1893 Mexico Cedros Island nbsp Texas horned lizard Phrynosoma cornutum Harlan 1825 United States southeast Colorado central and southern areas of Kansas central and western areas of Oklahoma and Texas southeast New Mexico and extreme southeast Arizona Mexico eastern Sonora most of Chihuahua northeast Durango northern Zacatecas and San Luis Potosi and throughout most of Coahuila Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas nbsp Coast horned lizard Phrynosoma coronatum Blainville 1835 Cape horned lizard P c coronatum Blainville 1835 California horned lizard P c frontale Van Denburgh 1894 Central peninsular horned lizard P c jamesi Schmidt 1922 Mexico Baja California Sur San Luis Valley short horned lizard Phrynosoma diminutum Montanucci 2015 disputed may be conspecific with P hernandesi United States Colorado Ditmars horned lizard or rock horned lizard Phrynosoma ditmarsi Stejneger 1906 Mexico Sonora United States Arizona nbsp Pygmy short horned lizard Phrynosoma douglasii Bell 1828 northwestern United States and adjacent southwestern CanadaSonoran horned lizard Goode s desert horned lizard Phrynosoma goodei Stejneger 1893 United States Arizona and Mexico Sonora nbsp Greater short horned lizard Phrynosoma hernandesi Girard 1858 southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico nbsp Flat tail horned lizard Phrynosoma mcallii Hallowell 1852 United States and Mexico nbsp Roundtail horned lizard Phrynosoma modestum Girard 1852 United States Texas New Mexico eastern Arizona southeastern Colorado northcentral Mexico nbsp Mexican Plateau horned lizard or Chihuahua Desert horned lizard Phrynosoma orbiculare Linnaeus 1758 P o bradti Horowitz 1955 P o cortezii A H A Dumeril amp Bocourt 1870 P o dugesii A H A Dumeril amp Bocourt 1870 P o orbiculare Linnaeus 1758 P o orientale Horowitz 1955 Mexico Chihuahua Durango Morelos Nuevo Leon Puebla and Veracruz Desert short horned lizard Phrynosoma ornatissimum Girard 1858 disputed may be conspecific with P hernandesi Canada and the United States nbsp Desert horned lizard Phrynosoma platyrhinos Girard 1852 Southern desert horned lizard P p calidiarum Cope 1896 Northern desert horned lizard P p platyrhinos Girard 1852 southern Idaho in the north to northern MexicoGuerreran horned lizard Phrynosoma sherbrookei Nieto Montes de Oca Arenas Moreno Beltran Sanchez amp Leache 2014 Mexico nbsp Regal horned lizard Phrynosoma solare Gray 1845 Arizona and Mexico nbsp Mexican horned lizard Phrynosoma taurus Duges 1873 Mexico Guerrero and Puebla Note In the above list a binomial authority or trinomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species or subspecies was originally described in a genus other than Phrynosoma nbsp Comparison of P modestum and P platyrhinosHorned lizard Phrynosoma gallery edit nbsp Blainville s horned lizard P blainvillii nbsp Short tailed horned lizard P braconnieri Oaxaca Mexico 20 May 2013 nbsp Texas horned lizard P cornutum Armstrong County Texas USA 28 April 2013 nbsp Coast horned lizard P coronatum San Luis Obispo County California USA June 14 2008 nbsp Coast horned lizard P coronatum 25 April 2009 nbsp Greater short horned lizard P douglassi brevirostre Sweetwater County Wyoming USA 15 June 2016 nbsp Pygmy short horned lizard P douglasii Washington USA 5 June 2014 nbsp Mountain short horned lizard P hernandesi Culberson County Texas USA 19 May 2018 nbsp Flat tailed horned lizard P mcallii 9 November 2010 nbsp Round tail horned lizard P modestum Municipality of Tula Tamaulipas Mexico 15 August 2004 nbsp Mountain horned lizard P orbiculare orientale Municipality of Miquihuana Tamaulipas Mexico 24 September 2009 nbsp Desert horned lizard P platyrhinos San Bernardino County California USA 9 July 2019 nbsp Regal horned lizard P solare Apache Junction Arizona USA 25 March 2007 Symbol editThe genus of horned lizards is the official state reptile of Wyoming 11 Texas designated the Texas horned lizard Phrynosoma cornutum as the official state reptile in 1993 12 and the TCU Horned Frog is the mascot of Texas Christian University in Fort Worth Texas TCU is the only known athletic team with the horned lizard as a mascot nbsp The TCU mascot is commonly known as Super Frog to TCU fans and students He is usually present at TCU sporting events nbsp Horned lizard on a necktie at El Paso Texas in 1940References edit Winton W M 1916 10 24 Habits and Behavior of the Texas Horned Lizard Phrynosoma cornutum Harlan I Copeia 36 36 JSTOR 81 84 doi 10 2307 1436504 ISSN 0045 8511 JSTOR 1436504 Middendorf III G A Sherbrooke W C Braun E J 2001 Comparison of Blood Squirted from the Circumorbital Sinus and Systemic Blood in a Horned Lizard Phrynosoma cornutum The Southwestern Naturalist 46 3 384 387 doi 10 2307 3672440 JSTOR 3672440 a b c Sherbrooke W C Middendorf III G A 2001 Blood Squirting Variability in Horned Lizards Phrynosoma PDF Copeia 2001 4 1114 1122 doi 10 1643 0045 8511 2001 001 1114 BSVIHL 2 0 CO 2 JSTOR 1448403 S2CID 86061329 a b c Sherbrooke W C Middendorf III G A 2004 Responses of Kit Foxes Vulpes macrotis to Antipredator Blood Squirting and Blood of Texas Horned Lizards Phrynosoma cornutum Copeia 2004 3 652 658 doi 10 1643 CH 03 157R1 JSTOR 1448486 S2CID 55365586 Hodges W L 2004 Defensive blood squirting in Phrynosoma ditmarsi and a high rate of human induced blood squirting in Phrynosoma asio The Southwestern Naturalist 49 2 267 270 doi 10 1894 0038 4909 2004 049 lt 0267 DBSIPD gt 2 0 CO 2 JSTOR 3672697 S2CID 85923959 Sherbrooke W C 2000 Sceloporus jarrovii Yarrow s spiny lizard Ocular Sinus Bleeding Herpetological Review 31 243 Leache A D J A McGuire 2006 Phylogenetic relationships of hores lizards Phrynosoma based on nuclear and mitochondrial data evidence for a misleading mitochondrial gene tree PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 39 3 628 644 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2005 12 016 PMID 16488160 a b c Pianka Eric Hodges Wendy Horned Lizards Part 2 uts cc utexas edu University of Texas Archived from the original on April 26 2015 Retrieved March 1 2015 Godfrey Ed December 20 2014 Center for Biological Diversity wants Texas horned lizard declared an endangered species in Oklahoma The Daily Oklahoman Retrieved November 5 2018 Genus Phrynosoma at The Reptile Database www reptile database org State symbols Wyoming Secretary of State s Office 2011 Archived from the original on September 6 2011 Retrieved January 22 2011 Texas Horned Lizard State Symbols USA Retrieved on 2016 10 25 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Phrynosoma nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Phrynosoma Horned lizard skulls and info at Digimorph org Horned Lizard Conservation Society Horned Lizards at UTexas edu Argentine ants linked to declines in coastal horned lizards Horned Toads A field study of Short horned Lizards by students of Waterville Elementary School Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Horned lizard amp oldid 1209062373, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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