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・ Help Me! (Marcy Levy and Robin Gibb song)
・ Help Me!! (Morning Musume song)
・ Help Me, Alien Father!
・ Help Me, My Love
・ Help Me, Rhonda
・ HELOA
・ Helobata
・ Helobdella
・ Helobdella robusta
・ Helobiae
・ Helocast
・ Helochares
・ Helochares obscurus
・ Helocombus bifidus
・ Helocordulia
Heloderma
・ Heloderma charlesbogerti
・ Helodermoides
・ Helodiomyces
・ Helodium blandowii
・ Heloecius
・ Helog
・ Helogale
・ Helogenes
・ Helogenes castaneus
・ Helogenes gouldingi
・ Helogenes marmoratus
・ Helogenes uruyensis
・ Helogyne
・ Heloise


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Heloderma : ウィキペディア英語版
Heloderma

''Heloderma'', the only genus of the family Helodermatidae, consists of venomous lizards native to the southwestern United States, Mexico, and as far south as Guatemala. It includes five separate species, with two subspecies. Their closest living relatives are the anguid lizards.〔
Helodermatids (or beaded lizards) are large, stocky, slow-moving reptiles that prefer semiarid habitats.〔(Gila Monster and Mexican Beaded Lizard: Helodermatidae - Physical Characteristics )〕 Their tails are short and used as fat storage organs. They are covered with small, nonoverlapping, bead-like scales, with osteoderms on the undersides of their bodies. Both species are dark in color, with yellowish or pinkish markings.
Members of the family are venomous.〔http://herpetology.com/helobite.txt〕 Venom glands are located in their lower jaws, unlike snakes' venom glands, which are located in their upper jaws. Also, unlike snakes, helodermatids lack the musculature to inject venom. The venom is typically used only in defense, rather than in subduing prey, and the lizard must chew on its victim to work the venom into the flesh. Venom glands are believed to have evolved early in the lineage leading to the modern helodermatids, as their presence is indicated even in the 65-million-year-old fossil genus ''Paraderma''.〔〔Richard L. Cifelli, Randall L. Nydam. 1995. Primitive, helodermatid-like platynotan from the early cretaceous of Utah. Herpetologica. 51(3):286-291.〕 Venom production among lizards was long thought to be unique to this genus, but researchers studying venom production have proposed many others also produce some venom, all placed in the clade Toxicofera, which includes all snakes and 13 other families of lizards.〔.
〕 However, except for snakes, helodermatids, and possibly varanids, envenomation is not considered medically significant for humans.
Helodermatids are carnivorous, preying on rodents and other small mammals, and eating the eggs of birds and reptiles. They are oviparous, laying large clutches of eggs.〔
== Taxonomy ==
Family Helodermatidae
* Genus ''Heloderma''
*
* ''H. alvarezi'' Bogert & Martin del Campo, 1956; Chiapan beaded lizard
*
* ''H. charlesbogerti'' Campbell & Vannini, 1988; Guatemalan beaded lizard
*
* ''H. exasperatum'' Bogert & Martin Del Campo, 1956; Rio Fuerte beaded lizard
*
* ''H. horridum'' (Wiegmann, 1829); Mexican beaded lizard
*
* ''H. suspectum'' Cope, 1986; Gila monster
Members of the genus ''Heloderma'' have many extinct relatives in the Helodermatidae whose evolutionary history may be traced back to the Cretaceous period, such as ''Estesia''. The genus ''Heloderma'' has existed since the Miocene, when ''H. texana'' lived, and fragments of osteoderms from the Gila monster have been found in late Pleistocene (8,000-10,000 years ago) deposits near Las Vegas, Nevada. Because the helodermatids have remained relatively unchanged morphologically, they are occasionally regarded as living fossils. Although the beaded lizard and the Gila monster appear closely related to the monitor lizards (varanids) of Africa, Asia, and Australia, the wide geographical separation and unique features not found in the varanids indicates they are better placed in a separate family.
The type species is ''Heloderma horridum'', which was first described in 1829 by Arend Weigmann. Although he originally assigned it the generic name ''Trachyderma'', he changed it to ''Heloderma'' six months later, which means "studded skin", from the Ancient Greek words ''hêlos'' (ηλος)—the head of a nail or stud—and ''derma'' (δερμα), meaning skin.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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