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1 Anonymous. 1991. Lizards long gone. Florida Department of Natural Resources, Office of Land Use Planning and Biological Services, Resource Management Notes 32(3):6.
2 Arndt, R. G. 1995. Red-bellied woodpecker, Melanerpes carolinus, predation on adult green anole, Anolis carolinensis. Florida Scientist 58:249–251.
3 Auffenberg, W. 1956. Additional records of Pleistocene lizards from Florida. Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences 19:157–167.
4 Babbitt, L. H., and C. H. Babbitt. 1951. A herpetological study of burned-over areas in Dade County, Florida. Copeia 1951:79.
5 Barichivich, W. J., and C. K. Dodd, Jr. 2002. The effectiveness of wildlife barriers and underpasses on U.S. Highway 441 across Paynes Prairie State Preserve, Alachua County, Florida. Phase II post-construction. Final Report, Florida Caribbean Science Center, Gainesville, Florida, USA. Florida Department of Transportation Contract No. BB-854. 36pp.
6 Bartlett, R. D. 1988. In search of reptiles and amphibians. E. J. Brill, New York, New York, USA. 363pp.
7 Bartlett, R. D. 1993. Agile anoles and clambering chameleons. Tropical Fish Hobbyist 42(3):148–156, 158, 160–162.
8 Bartlett, D. 1995. Anoles of the United States. Reptiles Magazine 2(5):48–62, 64–65.
9 Bartlett, R. D., and P. P. Bartlett. 1997. Anoles, basilisks, and water dragons. Barron's Educational Series, Hauppauge, New York, USA. 96pp.
10 Bartlett, D. 1998. Notes from the field. Florida's Keys and the southern peninsula, revisited. Reptiles Magazine 6(7):62–68.
11 Bartlett, R. D. 1999. Green anoles and brown anoles: an introduction to a confusing group of lizards. Reptile & Amphibian Hobbyist 4(12):40–46.
12 Bartlett, R. D., and P. Bartlett. 2001. Reptile keeper's guides: anoles. Barron's Educational Series, Hauppauge, New York, USA. 46pp.
13 Bartram, W. 1791. Travels through North & South Carolina, Georgia, East & West Florida, the Cherokee country, the extensive territories of the Muscogulges, or Creek Confederacy, and the country of the Chactaws; containing, an account of the soil and natural productions of those regions, together with observations on the manners of the Indians. James & Johnson, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. 522pp. Bartram, W. 1947. The travels of William Bartram [edited by Mark van Doren]. Dover, New York, New York, USA. 414pp.
14 Beck, W. H., Jr. 1948. An ecological study of the cold-blooded vertebrates of a north Florida lake. M.S. Thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 123pp.
15 Beck, J. 1987. Experimental design: a plan for field-testing competitive interactions between Anolis carolinensis and Anolis sagrei in southern Florida. Page 32 (abstract) in Proceedings of the 67th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists and 3rd Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, 21–26 June 1987, Albany, New York, USA.
16 Beebe, L. 1995. Leaping lizards! Are those chameleons or anoles. Reprinted in League of Florida Herpetological Societies Newsletter (February):27.
17 Beltz, E. 1994. HerPET-POURRI. Bulletin of the Chicago Herpetological Society 29(10):235–237.
18 Blatchley, W. S. 1902. A nature wooing at Ormond by the Sea. Nature Publishing Company, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. 245pp.
19 Blatchley, W. S. 1931. My nature nook or notes on the natural history of the vicinity of Dunedin, Florida. Nature Publishing Company, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. 302pp.
20 Blatchley, W. S. 1932. In days agone: notes on the fauna and flora of subtropical Florida in the days when most of its area was a primeval wilderness. Nature Publishing Company, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. 338pp.
21 Brach, V. 1977. Notes on the introduced population of Anolis cristatellus in south Florida. Copeia 1977:184–185.
22 Brach, V. 1996. Those lizard hoboes: Florida's exotic anoles. Reptile Hobbyist 2(4):44–46, 48–49.
23 Brandt, L. A., K. L. Montgomery, A. W. Saunders, and F. J. Mazzotti. 1993. Gopherus polyphemus (gopher tortoise). Burrows. Herpetological Review 24:149.
24 Brown, P. R., and A. C. Echternacht. 1987. A comparison of intraspecific and interspecific behavioral interactions in Anolis carolinensis and Anolis sagrei. Page 54 (abstract) in Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the 35th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles and the 30th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, 9–15 August 1987, Veracruz, Veracruz, Mexico.
25 Brown, P. R., and A. C. Echternacht. 1991. Interspecific behavioral interaction of adult male Anolis sagrei and gray-throated Anolis carolinensis (Sauria: Iguanidae): a preliminary field study. Anolis Newsletter IV:21–30.
26 Buth, D. G., G. C. Gorman, and C. S. Lieb. 1980. Genetic divergence between Anolis carolinensis and its Cuban progenitor, Anolis porcatus. Journal of Herpetology 14:279–284.
27 Butterfield, B. P., W. E. Meshaka, Jr., and C. Guyer. 1997. Nonindigenous amphibians and reptiles. Pages 123–138 in D. Simberloff, D. C. Schmitz, and T. C. Brown, editors. Strangers in paradise. Impact and management of nonindigenous species in Florida. Island Press, Covelo, California, USA.
28 Campbell, T. S. 1990. The common green anole (Anolis carolinensis). League of Florida Herpetological Societies Newsletter (April):15–17.
29 Campbell, T. S. 1995. Asymmetric competition between the brown anole (Anolis sagrei) and the green anole (A. carolinensis) on experimental islands. Page 54 (abstract) in Proceedings of the 38th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 8–13 August 1995, Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina, USA.
30 Campbell, T. S., and G. P. Gerber. 1996. Anolis sagrei (brown anole). Saurophagy. Herpetological Review 27:200.
31 Campbell, T. S. 1998. Experimental analyses of interactions between native and exotic lizard species using dredge spoil islands in Florida. Abstract in Proceedings of the 78th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, 41st Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 46th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, 14th Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, and the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association of Herpetologists, 16–22 July 1998, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
32 Campbell, T. 1999. Consequences of the Cuban brown anole invasion in Florida: it's not easy being green. Anolis Newsletter V:12–21.
33 Campbell, T., and C. Bleazy. 2000. Anolis carolinensis (green anole). Nectivory and flower pollination. Herpetological Review 31:239.
34 Campbell, T. S. 2000. Analysis of the effects of an exotic lizard (Anolis sagrei) on a native lizard (Anolis carolinensis) in Florida, using islands as experimental units. Dissertation, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA. 336pp.
35 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1940. A contribution to the herpetology of Florida. University of Florida Publications, Biological Sciences 3:1–118.
36 Christman, S. P. 1980. Preliminary observations on the gray-throated form of Anolis carolinensis (Reptilia: Iguanidae). Florida Field Naturalist 8:11–16.
37 Chun, W. C., and J. W. Archie. 1999. Population systematics of the Carolina anole, Anolis carolinensis Vogt (Sauria: Polychrotidae): geographic variation in morphology. Page 84 (abstract) in Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the 79th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, 15th Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, 47th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, and the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 24–30 June 1999, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania, USA.
38 Clark, D. R., Jr. 1995. Dicofol and DDT residues in lizard carcasses and bird eggs from Texas, Florida, and California. Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 54:817–824.
39 Collette, B. B. 1961. Correlations between ecology and morphology in anoline lizards from Havana, Cuba and southern Florida. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 125:137–162.
40 Coote, J. 1994. Green anoles: their captive husbandry and reproduction. Practical Python Publishers, Nottingham, United Kingdom. 46pp.
41 Corey, D. T. 1988. Comments on a wolf spider feeding on a green anole lizard. Journal of Arachnology 16:391–392.
42 Corn, M. J. 1971. Upper thermal limits and thermal preferenda for three sympatric species of Anolis. Journal of Herpetology 5:17–21.
43 Crews, D. 1980. Interrelationships among ecological, behavioral, and neuroendocrine processes in the reproductive cycle of Anolis carolinensis and other reptiles. Advances in Studies of Behavior 11:1–74.
44 Dalrymple, G. H. 1994. Non-indigenous amphibians and reptiles. Pages 67–71, 73–78 in D. C. Schmitz and T. C. Brown, project directors. An assessment of invasive non-indigenous species in Florida's public lands. Florida Department of Environmental Protection Technical Report No. TSS-94-100, Tallahassee, Florida, USA.
45 Dodd, C. K., Jr., and E. E. Possardt. 1987. Geographic distribution: Anolis carolinensis (green anole). Herpetological Review 18:56.
46 Duellman, W. E., and A. Schwartz. 1958. Amphibians and reptiles of southern Florida. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences 3:181–324.
47 Echternacht, A. C., and D. M. MacDonald. 1987. Red and gray dewlap Anolis carolinensis in Florida: female choice. Page 72 (abstract) in Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the 35th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles and the 30th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, 9–15 August 1987, Veracruz, Veracruz, Mexico.
48 Echternacht, A. C. 1999. Possible causes for the rapid decline in population density of green anoles, Anolis carolinensis (Sauria: Polychrotidae) following invasion by the brown anole, Anolis sagrei, in the southeastern United States. Anolis Newsletter V:22-27.
49 Echternacht, A. C. 1999. Possible causes for the rapid decline in population density of green anoles, Anolis carolinensis, following invasion by the brown anole, Anolis sagrei, in the southeastern United States. Page 97 (abstract) in Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the 79th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, 15th Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, 47th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, and the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 24–30 June 1999, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania, USA.
50 Enge, K. M. 1991. Herptile exploitation. Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission, Nongame Wildlife Section Annual Report, Tallahassee, Florida, USA. 55pp.
51 Enge, K. M. 1993. Florida's commercial trade in native amphibians and reptiles. Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Southeastern Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies 47:403–413.
52 Enge, K. M. 1994. Lizards of the Florida scrub. Florida Wildlife 48(3):17–20.
53 Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission. n.d. Snakes can kill. Tallahassee, Florida, USA. 6pp.
54 Franz, R., and S. R. Telford, Jr. 1972. Occurrence of two trematodes in Florida anoles. Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences 35:163–164.
55 Gerber, G. P. 1991. Anolis sagrei and Anolis carolinensis in Florida: evidence for interspecific predation. Anolis Newsletter IV:49–53.
56 Gerber, G. P. 1999. A review of intraguild predation and cannibalism in Anolis. Anolis Newsletter V:22–27.
57 Goin, O. B. 1955. The world outside my door. MacMillan, New York, New York, USA. 184pp.
58 Greenberg, C. H., D. G. Neary, and L. D. Harris. 1994. A comparison of herpetofaunal sampling effectiveness of pitfall, single-ended, and double-ended funnel traps used with drift fences. Journal of Herpetology 28:319–324.
59 Grow, G. 1985. "Chameleons" (properly called anoles). ENFO (Florida Conservation Foundation) 85(1):2.
60 Hammer, R. L. 1984. Anolis carolinensis (green anole). Inter-breeding. Herpetological Review 15:112.
61 Hansen, K. L., and D. E. Sweat. 1962. Spermiation in Rana p. pipiens in response to heteroplastic pituitary materials. Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences 25:109–120.
62 Harcourt, H. 1889. Home life in Florida. John P. Morton and Company, Louisville, Kentucky, USA. 433pp.
63 Hasty, G. L. 1993. Parapatric hybridization in the green anoles (Anolis carolinensis, Sauria: Polychridae) of southwestern Florida. Abstract in Proceedings of the 1993 Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 7–12 August 1993, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, USA.
64 Hoff, G. L., and F. H. White. 1977. Salmonella in reptiles: isolation from free-ranging lizards (Reptilia, Lacertilia) in Florida. Journal of Herpetology 11:123–129.
65 Holman, J. A. 1996. The large Pleistocene (Sangamonian) herpetofauna of the Williston IIIA Site, north-central Florida. Herpetological Natural History 4:35–47.
66 Hoole, W. S., editor. 1974. East Florida in 1834: letters of Dr. John Durkee. Florida Historical Quarterly 52:294–308.
67 Hunziker, R. 1994. Green anoles: selection, care and breeding. T.F.H., Neptune City, New Jersey, USA. 64pp.
68 Kattan, G. H. 1987. Humidity acclimation and skin permeability in the lizard Anolis carolinensis. M.S. Thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 28pp.
69 King, F. W. 1966. Competition between two south Florida lizards of the genus Anolis. Dissertation, University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, USA. 104pp.
70 Klein, T. A., D. G. Young, and S. R. Telford, Jr. 1987. Vector discrimination and experimental transmission of Plasmodium floridense by bites of infected Culex (Melanoconion) erraticus. Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 3:165–175.
71 Kushlan, J. A., and M. S. Kushlan. 1975. Food of the white ibis in southern Florida. Florida Field Naturalist 3:31–38.
72 Kushlan, J. A. 1979. Feeding ecology and prey selection in the white ibis. Condor 81:376–389.
73 Kushlan, J. A., and M. S. Kushlan. 1980. Everglades alligator nests: nesting sites for marsh reptiles. Copeia 1980:930–932.
74 Kushlan, J. A., S. A. Vorhees, W. F. Loftus, and P. C. Frohring. 1986. Length, mass, and calorific relationships of Everglades animals. Florida Scientist 49:65–79.
75 Layne, J. N., J. A. Stallcup, G. E. Woolfenden, M. N. McCauley, and D. J. Worley. 1977. Fish and wildlife inventory of the seven-county region included in the Central Florida Phosphate Industry Areawide Environmental Impact Study. U.S. Department of Commerce, National Technical Information Services PB-278 456, Volume 1. 643pp.
76 Lee, D. S. 1969. Floridian herpetofauna associated with cabbage palms. Herpetologica 25:70–71.
77 Lewis, J. C. 1973. Food habits of Florida burrowing owls. Florida Field Naturalist 1(2):12–14.
78 Limbaugh, J. 1991. No-care breeding of brown anoles; or, mini-Komodo-monitor management. Gainesville Herpetological Society Newsletter 8(2):18–19.
79 Lips, K. R. 1991. Vertebrates associated with tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus) burrows in four habitats in south-central Florida. Journal of Herpetology 25:477–481.
80 Litt, A. R., L. Provencher, G. W. Tanner, and R. Franz. 2001. Herpetofaunal responses to restoration treatments of longleaf pine sandhills in Florida. Restoration Ecology 9:462–474.
81 Lockwood, S. 1876. The Florida chameleon. American Naturalist 10:4–16.
82 Loennberg, E. 1894. Notes on reptiles and batrachians collected in Florida in 1892 and 1893. Proceedings of the U.S. National Museum 17:317–339.
83 Losos, J. B., and K. de Queiroz. 1997–1998. Darwin's lizards. Natural History 106(11):34–39.
84 Lovern, M. B., T. A. Jenssen, and K. S. Orrell. 1998. Comparisons of temporal display structure across contexts and populations in male Anolis carolinensis: signal stability or lability? Abstract in Proceedings of the 78th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, 41st Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 46th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, 14th Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, and the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association of Herpetologists, 16–22 July 1998, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
85 Lovern, M. B., and T. A. Jenssen. 1998. Comparisons of temporal display structure across contexts and populations in male Anolis carolinensis: signal stability or lability? Virginia Journal of Science 49:65 (abstract).
86 Lovern, M. B., T. A. Jenssen, K. S. Orrell, and T. Tuchak. 1999. Comparisons of temporal display structure across contexts and populations in male Anolis carolinensis: signal stability or lability? Herpetologica 55:222–234.
87 Ludlow, M. 1994. Snake exhibits fatal gluttony. Florida Department of Environmental Protection, Resource Management Notes 6(2):8.
88 Mammoser, D. 1998. Leaping lizards: Florida's native anole. Florida Wildlife 52(5):18–20.
89 May, P. G., S. T. Huelett, T. M. Farrell, and M. A. Pilgrim. 1997. Live fast, love hard, & die young: the ecology of pigmy rattlesnakes. Reptile & Amphibian Magazine (January–February):36–49.
90 McCoy, J. 1987. The regulation and metabolism of glucose in the green anole (Anolis carolinensis). Dissertation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 113pp.
91 Medvin, M. B. 1990. Sex differences in coloration and optical signalling in the lizard Anolis carolinensis (Reptilia, Lacertilia, Iguanidae). Animal Behaviour 39:192–193.
92 Meshaka, W. E., Jr., and J. N. Layne. 2002. Herpetofauna of a long-unburned sandhill habitat in south-central Florida. Florida Scientist 65:35–50.
93 Meyer, K. D., and M. W. Collopy. 1995. Status, distribution, and habitat requirements of the American swallow-tailed kite (Elanoides forficatus) in Florida. Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission, Nongame Wildlife Program Project Report, Tallahassee, Florida, USA. 137pp.
94 Meyerriecks, A. J. 1960. Green anole threatens wasp. Copeia 1960:60.
95 Meylan, P. A., W. A. Auffenberg, and R. C. Hurlbert. 2001. Reptilia 2: lizards, snakes, and crocodilians. Pages 137–151 in R. C. Hurlbert, editor. The fossil vertebrates of Florida. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
96 Michaud, E. J., and A. C. Echternacht. 1995. Geographic variation in the life history of the lizard Anolis carolinensis and support for the pelvic constraint model. Journal of Herpetology 29:86–97.
97 Neill, W. T. 1951. A bromeliad herpetofauna in Florida. Ecology 32:140–143.
98 Neill, W. T. 1951. Florida's air-plants and their inhabitants. Florida Naturalist 24:61–66.
99 Netting, M. G. 1940. Anolis carolinensis eaten by Eumeces laticeps. Copeia 1940:266.
100 Oliver, J. A. 1948. The anoline lizards of Bimini, Bahamas. American Museum Novitates No. 1383. 36pp.
101 Oliver, J. A. 1950. Anolis sagrei in Florida. Copeia 1950:55–56.
102 Packard, W. 1910. Florida trails as seen from Jacksonville to Key West and from November to April inclusive by Winthrop Packard ... illustrated from photographs by the author and others. Small, Maynard and Company, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 300pp.
103 Pavia, A. 2003. Anoles: the original "starter" lizards. Reptiles Magazine 11(5):78–89.
104 Porter, S. B. 1996. Distribution of Anolis carolinensis in Florida: an evaluation of the continuous distribution hypothesis. Page 60 (abstract) in Proceedings of the 39th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 24–29 July 1996, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, USA.
105 Porter, S. B. 1999. The role of food availability in interspecific competition between Anolis carolinensis and Anolis sagrei. Page 186 (abstract) in Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the 79th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, 15th Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, 47th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, and the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 24–30 June 1999, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania, USA.
106 Robinson, G. B., S. C. Robinson, and J. Lane. 1996. Discover a watershed: the Everglades. The Watercourse, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, USA. 278pp.
107 Safford, W. E. 1919. Natural history of Paradise Key and the near-by Everglades of Florida. Pages 377–434 in Smithsonian Report for 1917. [Publication No. 2508, Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.]
108 Simpson, C. T. 1920. In lower Florida wilds: a naturalist's observations on the life, physical geography, and geology of the more tropical part of the state. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, New York, USA. 404pp.
109 Simpson, C. T. 1924. Out of doors in Florida: the adventures of a naturalist, together with essays on the wild life and the geology of the state. E. B. Douglas Company, Miami, Florida, USA. 412pp.
110 Stevenson, D., and D. Crowe. 1992. Geographic distribution: Anolis carolinensis (green anole). Herpetological Review 23:89.
111 Stevenson, J. 1992. Run Bambi run. Florida Department of Natural Resources, Office of Resource Management, Resource Management Notes 4(4):13–14.
112 Stoner, D. 1937. Reptiles and amphibians in relation to celery insects in the Sanford, Florida, district. Florida Entomologist 19:49–53.
113 Telford, S. R., Jr. 1978. A hemoparasite survey of Florida lizards. Journal of Parasitology 64:1126–1127.
114 Telford, S. R., Jr. 1988. A contribution to the systematics of the reptilian malaria parasite, family Plasmodiidae (Apicomplexa: Haemosprorina). Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences 34:65–96.
115 Telford, S. R., Jr. 1992. Factors affecting the distribution of Neoseps reynoldsi, the sand skink, in Ocala National Forest. Unpublished Report, Ocala National Forest, Silver Springs, Florida.
116 Thompson, F. G. 1954. Notes on the behavior of the lizard Anolis carolinensis. Copeia 1954:299.
117 Tokarz, R. R., and J. W. Beck, Jr. 1987. Behaviour of the suspected lizard competitors Anolis sagrei and Anolis carolinensis: an experimental test for behavioural interference. Animal Behaviour 35:722–734.
118 Vance, T. 1991. Morphological variation and systematics of the green anole, Anolis carolinensis (Reptilia: Iguanidae). Bulletin Maryland Herpetological Society 27:43–89.
119 Vincent, T. C. 1997. Preliminary results of a study of interspecific competition between two lizard species using enclosures in combination with field observations. Abstract in Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the 77th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, 45th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, and 40th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 26 June–2 July 1997, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
120 Vincent, T. C. 1999. A method for visual discrimination of two sympatric species of Anolis lizards—a short note. Anolis Newsletter V:123–125.
121 Vincent, T. C. 1999. The competitive impact of Anolis sagrei (Sauria: Polychrotidae) on the reproductive output of Anolis carolinensis: an enclosure study. Anolis Newsletter V:114–122.
122 Vogl, R. J. 1973. Effects of fire on the plants and animals of a Florida wetland. American Midland Naturalist 89:334–347.
123 Wade, J. K., A. C. Echternacht, and G. F. McCracken. 1983. Genetic variation and similarity in Anolis carolinensis (Sauria: Iguanidae). Copeia 1983:523–529.
124 Walter, R. 1979. Demographic control of Anolis carolinensis (Reptilia, Iguanidae). ASB Bulletin 26:68 (abstract).
125 Wharton, C. H. 1958. The ecology of the cottonmouth, Agkistrodon piscivorus piscivorus Lacepede, of Sea Horse Key, Florida. Dissertation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 225pp.
126 Wharton, C. H. 1969. The cottonmouth moccasin on Sea Horse Key, Florida. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences 14:227–272.
127 Wilson, L. D., and L. Porras. 1983. The ecological impact of man on the south Florida herpetofauna. University of Kansas Museum of Natural History, Special Publication No. 9, Lawrence, Kansas, USA. 89pp.
128 Wilson, M. A. 1986. Geographic variation in the CTMIN of Anolis carolinensis along a north-south transect. Page 116 (abstract) in Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the 34th Annual Meeting of The Herpetologists' League and 29th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 10–15 August 1986, Southwest Missouri State University, Springfield, Missouri, USA.
129 Wilson, M. A., and A. C. Echternacht. 1987. Geographic variation in the critical thermal minimum of the green anole, Anolis carolinensis (Sauria: Iguanidae), along a latitudinal gradient. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part A Comparative Physiology 87:757–760.
130 Wilson, M. A., and A. C. Echternacht. 1990. A comparison of heat and cold tolerance of two morphs of Anolis carolinensis (Iguanidae) from southern Florida. Journal of Herpetology 24:330–333.
131 Witz, B. W., D. S. Wilson, and M. D. Palmer. 1991. Distribution of Gopherus polyphemus and its vertebrate symbionts in three burrow categories. American Midland Naturalist 126:152–158.
132 Wozniak, E. J., and S. R. Telford, Jr. 1990. The fate of Hepatozoon sp. in potential mosquito and soft tick vectors and experimentally infected lizard hosts. Abstract 65 in American Society of Parasitology Annual Meeting Program.
133 Wozniak, E. J., S. R. Telford, Jr., and G. L. McLaughlin. 1996. Molecular differentiation in two New World saurian Plasmodium species in different host species using the polymerase chain reaction. Journal of Parasitology 82:372–375.
134 Yosef, R., and T. C. Grubb, Jr. 1993. Effect of vegetation height on hunting behavior and diet of loggerhead shrikes. Condor 95:127–131.
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