Abstract

Even if the common lizardLacerta vivipara and endemicLacerta andreanskyi from Moroccan Grand Atlas have the same mother species, the two species are definitely not closely related in present-day nature, whereL. vivipara stands at variance from all other lacertids in terms of cytogenetics. The use of replication banding, C-bands and R-bands has allowed for the identification of all chromosome pairs and two sex chromosomes inL. andreanskyi. Its karyotype is typical of Lacertidae. The W chromosome, characterized by late replication, is nevertheless of a type previously unknown in the family. The comparison of Z and W chromosomes by different methods of chromosome banding indicates little homology between them, if any. The replication study has shown that there is no dosage compensation for the Z chromosome in (homogametic) males. That genetic inactivation precedes chromosomal mutations in non-vivipara lacertid evolution of the odd sex chromosome is suggested.

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