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Issues
September 2020
ISSN 0022-1511
eISSN 1937-2418
In this Issue
Identification and Species Delimitation of the Enigmatic Marsh Frog Pulchrana rawa (Matsui, Mumpuni, and Hamidy, 2012): Second Confirmed Specimen and First Country Record for Malaysia
Kin Onn Chan; Mohd Abdul Muin; Baizul Hafsyam Badli-Sham; Muhamad Fatihah-Syafiq; Robin Kurian Abraham; Amirrudin Ahmad; Rahmad Zakaria
Physiology
ECOLOGY
BEHAVIOR
Long-term Memory of a Complex Foraging Task in Monitor Lizards (Reptilia: Squamata: Varanidae)
Taylor L. Cooper; Caroline L. Zabinski; Emily J. Adams; Savannah M. Berry; Juanita Pardo-Sanchez; Emma M. Reinhardt; Katherine M. Roberts; Julia Watzek; Sarah F. Brosnan; Robert L. Hill; Emily G. Weigel; Joseph R. Mendelson, III
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Cover Image
Cover Image
58-02
Image by Todd L. Green and text by Michael C. Granatosky
The Australian Green Tree Frog (Ranoidea caerula) is native to Australia and New Guinea, with introduced populations in the United States. As arboreal specialists, Australian Green Tree Frogs maintain grasps nearly ten times their body weight due to a combination of mucous adhesion and manual and pedal flexor musculature. Photograph taken in Old Westbury, New York.
A Historical Resurvey of Flatland Lizards in the Mojave Desert
Amber N. Wright, Anthony J. Barley, Gregory B. Pauly, Levi N. Gray, Robert C. Thomson
Princes and Paupers: Effects of Annual and Early-life Resource Variability on Demography in Populations of Common Garter Snakes, Thamnophis Sirtalis
Carli Dinsmore, Anne Bronikowski, Amanda M. Sparkman, David Muñoz, Courtney L. Davis, Julian Avery, Stevan J. Arnold, David A. W. Miller
A Re-Examination of Body Size Reduction in Plethodon Yonahlossee Populations Due to Climate Change
Zachary T. Vegso, Jon M. Davenport
Evaluating the Role of Melanic Coloration and Environmental Conditions on Heat Gain Among Patagonian Lizards (Liolaemus Fitzingerii Group)
Paula C. Escudero, Kevin I. Sanchez, Luciano J. Avila