Hello Tony,

Thanks for the pointers.  I have been continuing to do some research, and maybe you 
could look over the partial phylogeny of E. macularius that I have come up with.  As 
you know, there are some differing opinions about the Eublepharines in the general 
phylogeny of Order Squamata.


Class Reptilia
        Order Squamata
                Suborder Sauria
                        Infraorder Iguania
                                Famly Iguaninae
                                        Genus Iguana
                                                Species iguana (Green Iguana)
                        Infraorder Gekkota
                                Family Dibamidae (Blind Lizards)
                                Family Geckonidae
                                Family Eublepharinae
                                        Genus Coleonyx
                                        Genus Eublepharis
                                                Species macularius (Leopard Gecko)
                                        Genus Goniurosaurus
                                        Genus Hemitheconyx
                                        Genus Holodactylus
                                Family Pygopodidae (Legless Lizards)



Best regards,
Steve
  
======= At 2004-08-04, 18:30:44 you wrote: =======

>Hello Steve,
>You can find a phylogeny for the Eublepharidae here:
>Grismer,L.L. 1988. Phylogeny, Taxonomy, Classification, and Biogeography of 
>Eublepharid
>Geckos. Pages 369-469 in: Estes,R. & Pregill,G. (eds.). Phylogenetic
>Relationships of the Lizard Families. Stanford University Press.
>
>A Gekkotan phylogeny can be found here:
>Kluge, A.G. 1987. Cladistic relationships in the Gekkonoidea
>(Squamata: Sauria). Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan 173: 1-54
>
>Both should be available at most university libraries.  The GGA also
>sells the Kluge paper. Check out http://www.gekkota.com/
>
>
>Wednesday, August 4, 2004, 8:43:53 AM, you wrote:
>lhc> Hi.  I'm looking for a chart that indicates the gecko
>lhc> evolutionary tree, i.e., how different gecko species relate to
>lhc> each other.  I'm actually interested in how the eublepharinae
>lhc> relate to each other and to the rest of the gecko family.  I
>lhc> would like to put such a chart on my website.
>
>lhc> I'd really appreciate it if someone could point me to this information.
>
>lhc> Thanks,
>lhc> Steve
>lhc> http://www.leopardlounge.tk
>
>-- 
>Best regards,
> Tony                            mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
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= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
                        
Steven Groginsky
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
2004-08-04


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