“…In any case, more robust testing of the hypotheses of the ancestral sex determination and on the evolution of sex-determining mechanisms in amniotes is largely precluded by our very limited knowledge about the homology of sex chromosomes and sex-determining genes among particular groups. The homology of sex chromosomes can be inferred from the knowledge of the gene content of sex chromosomes; however, it has been identified in only a few amniote lineages such as viviparous mammals (see, for example, Kohn et al, 2004) and monotremes (see, for example, Rens et al, 2007), birds (see, for example, Zhou et al, 2014), several turtle species (see, for example, Kawagoshi et al, 2012Kawagoshi et al, , 2014, advanced snakes (Matsubara et al, 2006;Vicoso et al, 2013;Rovatsos et al, 2015), iguanas (see, for example, Alföldi et al, 2011;Rovatsos et al, 2014a-c), a gecko (Kawai et al, 2009) and recently also a lacertid lizard (Srikulnath et al, 2014).…”