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Posted by Ehsan.m.soltani on December 30, 2000 at 23:22:12:
In Reply to: Re: Iguana Iguana Rhinocephalus posted by Adam Britton on January 09, 1998 at 18:47:49:
: : Recently, while viewing my pictures of Chankanaab, Mexico, I noticed that there were a couple of horns on the snouts of several of the larger iguanas. Through research of pre-80's liturature, I was informed that this could be a seperate subspecies known as Iguana Iguana Rhinocephalus ( the last word may be spelt wrong). Any input for me?
: There are only two species in the Iguana genus - Iguana iguana and Iguana delicatissima. All the previously proposed subspecies of Iguana iguana have been grouped under the same species, and until some more work is done on the genetics of different populations, this is the way it'll remain.
*******that is so wrong you can check this at cites.org there is a green iguana subspecies named Iguan(genus),iguan(species),rhinolopha(subspecies) iguana delicatissima is not the same species as the green iguan (iguana.iguana,iguan the original iguana then comes the green iguana subspecies iguana iguana rhinolophathe differens is that i,i,i and i,i,r can make babys this babys can allso make babys if i,d and i,i,i make babys the babys become sterile they kant make any mor babys thats the differens by the way i breed i,i,i and i,i,r and i,d so i think i now what im thalking about !!!!!!!
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