“…Currently, this genus is represented in Mongolia by six described species: Eremias argus Peters, 1869, widely distributed in most of the eastern half of the country with a few isolated populations in western-central areas (Munkhbayar 1981, Reading et al 1999, Terbish et al 2006 and represented by two subspecies: E. a. argus along the eastern areas, and E. a. barbouri Schmidt, 1925, for the western populations (Ananjeva et al 1997); Eremias arguta (Pallas, 1773), represented in Mongolia by E. a. potanini Bedriaga, 1912, highly localized in the Dzungarian Govi Desert (Ananjeva et al 1997, Terbish et al 2006; Eremias multiocellata Günther, 1872, widely distributed in Mongolia, was formerly represented by E. m. multiocellata Günther, 1872, E. m. bannikowi Szczerbak, 1973, E. m. kozlowi Bedriaga, 1907and E. m. tsaganbogdensis Munkhabayar & Borkin, 2010, however, its taxonomic status is complex: (1) Eremias m. tsaganbogdensis, that inhabits the Tsagan Bogde Uul Mountains in southern Mongolia (Munkhbayar & Borkin 2010), is more closely related to E. przewalskii than to E. multiocellata s. str., but further studies are needed to solve its taxonomic status (Orlova et al 2017), (2) E. m. bannikowi is a junior synomym of E. m. multiocellata (Orlova et al 2017), (3) the validity of the taxonomic status of E. E. przewalski m. kozlowi remains unknown as no specimen from the type locality has been studied within a molecular phylogenetic framework (Orlova et al 2017), and finally (4) the nominotypic subspecies comprises two mitochondrial clades in Mongolia: one corresponding to E. m. multiocellata , distributed over southern and north-western regions, and the other clade (named as "sand form B" by Orlova et al 2017) distributed over the eastern region (Szcerbak 1973, 1974, Orlova et al 2017; Eremias przewalskii (Strauch, 1878), is represented in Mongolia by two non-reciprocally monophyletic clades: one including the most widespread lineage across central and north-western region, corresponding to the nominal subspecies and its junior synonym E. p. tuvensis Szcerbak, 1974, and the other clade, closely related to two undescribed lineages, corresponding to another taxonomic unit distributed over southern Mongolia (Ananjeva et al 1997, Rogovin et al 2001, Terbish et al 2006…”