Artículo de revista
Comparative morphology of Liolaemus lizards precloacal glands
Fecha
2014Registro en:
Acta Herpetologica, Volumen 9, Issue 2, 2018, Pages 147-158
18279643
18279635
10.13128/Acta_Herpetol-13473
Autor
Valdecantos, Soledad
Martínez, Virginia
Labra, Antonieta
Institución
Resumen
© Firenze University Press. Liolaemid lizards and amphisbaenids have precloacal pores in the anterior border of the cloaca, where epidermal glands drain and expel pheromonal secretions. Precloacal glands occur usually only in males, but in those few species where both sexes have precloacal glands, these are larger in males. Only the morphology and/or histology of precloacal glands of amphisbaenids have been described, and it is unknown whether in lizards these glands differ across ages, sexes and/or species, and if the lack of pores is associated with a lack of glands. We investigated for the first time the morphology and histology of lizard precloacal glands, by studying three Liolaemus species that differ in the presence of pores in their cloaca: L. irregularis, in which adults and juveniles of both sexes have pores; L. poecilochromus, in which only adult males have pores, and L. neuquensis, in which the adults of both sexes lack pores. Results show that the number of pores varies am