“…In fact, tail regeneration activates numerous genes of development (Hutchins et al, 2014; Vitulo et al, 2017a, 2017b), forms a blastema rich in hyaluronic acid and water, large tissues such segmented muscle, a long axial skeleton, long nerves and vessels, large scales, and large adipomeres with numerous fat cells. A long list of past publications on the microscopic events of tail regeneration in different species of lizards is reported in Bellairs and Bryant (1985) and in Alibardi (1995, 2010, 2014a, 2017a), and additional information can be found in other recent papers (Chung, 2016; Fisher et al, 2012; Gilbert & Vickaryous, 2018; Gilbert, Payne, & Vickaryous, 2013; Lozito & Tuan, 2015, 2016a, 2016b; Nain, 2016). The cells contributing to the formation of the regenerative blastema and the new spinal cord appears from local dedifferentiation and also from putative stem cells present in various tissues of the tail stump (Alibardi, 2015a, 2016b, 2017e; Londono, Wenzhong, Wang, Tuan, & Lozito, 2017).…”