-
characteristics that
dibamids share with
other squamates contributed to the
formulation of
different taxonomic hypothesis.
Dibamids, and
particularly Dibamus...
-
Phylogenetics of Squamata: The
Position of Snakes, Amphisbaenians, and
Dibamids, and the Root of the
Squamate Tree".
Systematic Biology. 53 (5): 735–757...
-
phylogenetics of Squamata: the
position of snakes, Amphisbaenians, and
Dibamids, and the root of the
squamate tree".
Systematic Biology. 53 (5): 735–757...
-
origins of the group.
Despite the
close resemblance of the
fossils to
extant dibamids in the
genera Dibamus and Anelytropsis, some
distinguishing features such...
-
suggest that the
various limbless groups – snakes, amphisbaenians, and
dibamids – are unrelated, and
instead arose independently from lizards. The male...
- Alfred's
blind skink (Dibamus alfredi), also
known commonly as Alfred's
dibamid lizard, Alfred's
limbless skink, and Taylor's
limbless skink, is a species...
-
Phylogenetics of Squamata: The
Position of Snakes, Amphisbaenians, and
Dibamids, and the Root of the
Squamate Tree".
Systematic Biology. 53 (5): 735–757...
-
Dibamus somsaki, also
known commonly as Somsak's
blind lizard and Somsak's
dibamid lizard, is a
species of
legless lizard in the
family Dibamidae. The species...
- bourreti, also
known commonly as Bourret's
blind skink, the white-tailed
dibamid, or the white-tailed worm-like lizard, is a
species of
legless lizard in...
-
relative of
modern groups of
squamates such as gekkotans, amphisbaenians,
dibamids, and snakes. AMNH FR 21444 was more
fully described in a 2006
study that...