“…Males of most lizard species are equipped with a series of epidermal glands located in the dermis of the inner thighs, which secrete waxy substances through pore‐bearing scales (Figure ), or ‘epidermal (femoral) pores’ (Mayerl, Baeckens, & Van Damme, ). The lipophilic compounds within the epidermal gland secretions are generally considered to be the leading source of chemical signals involved in lizard communication, and mediate behaviour in a variety of contexts (reviewed by Martín & López, ; Mayerl et al., ; but see Alberts, Phillips, & Werner, ), such as territory demarcation and assessment (Aragón, López, & Martín, ; Font, Barbosa, Sampedro, & Carazo, ; Leu, Jackson, Roddick, & Bull, ; Martín & López, ; Martins, Ord, Slaven, Wright, & Housworth, ), male rival assessment (Carazo, Font, & Desfilis, ; Hews, Date, Hara, & Castellano, ; Khannoon et al., ; López & Martín, ), female choice (Carazo, Font, & Desfilis, ; Gabirot, López, & Martín, ; Kopena, López, & Martín, ; Kopena et al., ; Martín & López, , ), assessment of female reproductive status (Cooper & Pèrez‐Mellado, ; Thomas, ), individual recognition (Alberts, ; Alberts & Werner, ; Gabirot, Castilla, López, & Martín, , ), sex identification (Cooper & Steele, ; Cooper & Trauth, ; Khannoon, Breithaupt, El‐Gendy, & Hardege, ) and species recognition (Barbosa, Font, Desfilis, & Carretero, ; Gabirot et al., ; Labra, ). Lizards passively mark or deposit these gland secretions into the environment while moving through their habitat, or they exhibit active marking behaviour to leave scent‐marks on the substrate of their choice (de Villiers, Flemming, Mouton, & Le, ; Mason & Parker, ).…”