Abstract

Field trips made by us 18-25 June 1970 resulted in capture of 31 skinks, Egrneces obsoletgs, and the discovery of seven natural nests wii clutches totalling 104 eggs in the vIcinity of Lawrence, Kansas. FieId work was concentrated on an area six miles southwest of Lawrence that earlser was the site of Hall's (1971) Xeld study. The sample of the population that we obtained is noteworthy in several respects, although it is small compared with the combined samples from other years that were the bases for conclusions by Fitch (1955, 1967) and Hall (1971). This most recent sample has instigated further aIlalysis ¢f data collected over a 20-year period by the auiors.

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