| Click | Citation |
1
|
1724
| Davis, G. 1998. Florida's red-tailed skinks. Reptile Hobbyist 3(6):52–56. |
2
|
2492
| Franz, R., R. E. Ashton, and W. W. Timmerman. 1995. Behavior and movements of certain small sandhill amphibians and reptiles in response to drift fences. Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission, Nongame Wildlife Program Project Report, Tallahassee, Florida, USA. 92pp. |
3
|
9180
| Greene, H. W., E. J. Zimmerer, W. M. Palmer, and M. F. Benard. 2010. Diet specialization by the scarlet kingsnake, Lampropeltis elapsoides (Colubridae). IRCF Reptiles & Amphibians 17:18–21. |
4
|
3968
| Matter, J. M. 1999. Lizards out-of-phase: natural history and reproductive cyclicity in a fossorial skink, Eumeces egregius. Page 159 (abstract) in Proceedings of the Joint Meeting of the 79th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, 15th Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, 47th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, and the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, 24–30 June 1999, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania, USA. |
5
|
4459
| Mount, R. H. 1961. The natural history of the red-tailed skink, Eumeces egregius Baird. Dissertation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 86pp. |
6
|
4460
| Mount, R. H. 1963. The natural history of the red-tailed skink, Eumeces egregius Baird. American Midland Naturalist 70:356–385. |
7
|
4630
| Neill, W. T. 1974. Reptiles and amphibians in the service of man. Pegasus: Division of The Bobbs-Merrill Company, New York, New York, USA. 248pp. |
8
|
5474
| Smith, C. R. 1982. Food resource partitioning of fossorial Florida reptiles. Pages 173–178 in N. J. Scott, editor. Herpetological communities. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Wildlife Research Report No. 13. |
9
|
5764
| Telford, S. R., Jr. 1959. A study of the sand skink Neoseps reynoldsi Stejneger. Copeia 1959:110–119. |
10
|
6256
| Witz, B. W., D. S. Wilson, and M. D. Palmer. 1991. Distribution of Gopherus polyphemus and its vertebrate symbionts in three burrow categories. American Midland Naturalist 126:152–158. |