“…In lizards, there is general support for OCLTT and/or HMTL hypotheses; numerous studies have demonstrated that exposure to hypoxic air causes lizards to select lower body temperatures and exhibit gaping and panting (to reduce body temperature via evaporative cooling) at lower temperatures than when breathing normoxic gas (Branco, Gargaglioni, & Barros, 2006; DuBois, Shea, Claunch, & Taylor, 2017; Petersen, Gleeson, & Scholnick, 2003; Shea et al, 2016). Additionally, adult lizards treated with severely hypoxic gas showed reduced CTmax (DuBois et al, 2017; Shea et al, 2016), and lizard embryos treated with hypoxic gas exhibited reduced survival (Smith, Telemeco, Angilletta, & VandenBrooks, 2015), but oxygen does not appear to limit thermal tolerance under mildly hypoxic or normoxic conditions (Camacho, Vandenbrooks, Riley, Telemeco, & Angilletta, 2018). There is less empirical support for upper thermal limit hypotheses under normoxic conditions, and much remains to be tested before CTmax is well‐understood in lizards.…”