. Bulletin of the Natural History Museum Zoology. 66 ARNOLD CO =J E o t5 o e £ 03 LU Q O Q LU DC i CO E o Q_ O TO CO 'to CO m CL O TO CO TJ 'a. _CD CO CO CO Q. > "> CO CO N CO c CO CD "O c CO CO co CD TO T3 CO jo o Q. CO CD Q. CO Q. o TO CO O O X CO CO CO a3 to CO TO O O .c o CO CO o o Q. CO 'c 'to CD TJ CO "a C CO to > o CO CO CO c CD o co O E CO o c5 "co c c o .Q CO CO o o c o E CO CO CD CD CO TO re CD X! CO CO > CD 03 4-. TJ r r r r r r r T t r r r r â c â c o â c r U > a) a> CO Cl) a> cd a> CI) CD CD a 0 a) a) CD TO a; aj 03 "TO -^ o O


. Bulletin of the Natural History Museum Zoology. 66 ARNOLD CO =J E o t5 o e £ 03 LU Q O Q LU DC i CO E o Q_ O TO CO 'to CO m CL O TO CO TJ 'a. _CD CO CO CO Q. > "> CO CO N CO c CO CD "O c CO CO co CD TO T3 CO jo o Q. CO CD Q. CO Q. o TO CO O O X CO CO CO a3 to CO TO O O .c o CO CO o o Q. CO 'c 'to CD TJ CO "a C CO to > o CO CO CO c CD o co O E CO o c5 "co c c o .Q CO CO o o c o E CO CO CD CD CO TO re CD X! CO CO > CD 03 4-. TJ r r r r r r r T t r r r r â c â c o â c r U > a) a> CO Cl) a> cd a> CI) CD CD a 0 a) a) CD TO a; aj 03 "TO -^ o O O TJ O o o o o O O c o o o CJ o CJ to 03 co CO CO o CO CO CO CO m CO CO cr CO m CO CO CO m LL O < H _i _J _l U- _l _J _l _i _l _l _l _J _i _i _l _l < _l _i CO o "o o -a co a. o. co o CO n CD O CO CO Q. CD O Q. O o CO CO c CO CO Z m m TJ **- a. CO â c CD CO â c CD o CO _l CO c (D o 03 U 03. Fig. 1 Estimate of phylogeny for the Lacertidae. Relationships among many primitive Palaearctic taxa are largely unresolved. For contents of assemblages within the paraphyletic genus Lacerta see p. 65. As it is shown here the Lacerta saxicola group is not a clade. Takydromus (E Asia). This genus is made up of two sister clades, the subgenera Takydromus and Platyplacopus, with T. amurensis either basal to both or basal within the subgenus Takydromus (Arnold, 1997). Basal species in the genus Takydromus tend to be mainly ground dwelling but in each of the two constituent clades there is progressive shift to extensive climbing in flimsy vegetation such as grass and herbs. However, various morphological features likely to give performance advan- tage in such situations occur throughout the genus, which suggests that it may have been ancestrally climbing. If so there may have been a shift to a more ground-dwelling life mode and then two reversions to climbing (Arnold, 1997). Lacerta agilis group (Europe, SW Asia) Ground-dwelling and climbing especially in brambles (Rubus) and si


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