Digestive organs.–The tongue is very variably developed, and affords good taxonomic characters. It is always furnished with many tactile, or with gustatory, corpuscles. When the tongue is very long and narrow it is generally forked, and in these cases, for instance in the Varanidae, is almost entirely used as a sensory organ. In others, especially where it is broad, it assists in catching the food, and in the Chameleons it has attained a most elaborate development (see p. [569]).
Salivary glands are restricted to labial glands. In Heloderma those of the lower jaw are transformed into poison-glands, an analogy to what prevails in the poisonous snakes. The intestinal canal is longest in the herbivorous forms; the rectum sometimes possesses a short blind sac or caecum.
The cloaca of the Sauria is somewhat modified; instead of the Coprodaeum, Urodaeum, and Proctodaeum forming three successive chambers, the urodaeum is practically reduced to its dorsal half, forming a dorsal recess between the two other chambers. The Coprodaeum is constricted into several successive chambers, and is always well shut off from the urodaeum by a strong sphincter. The urodaeum receives the urinary excretions, which are mostly chalky white and are rather consistent instead of being fluid. The right and left oviducts also open into it. The vasa deferentia open into the dorso-lateral portions of the walls of the urodaeum, but the sperma is conducted by folds of the lining of this chamber towards the bases of the copulatory organs, which, although arising from the lateral and posterior corners of the cloaca, where uro- and procto-daeum meet, are stowed away outside the cloaca. These organs are always paired. The proctodaeum or outermost cloacal chamber is shallow. Its inner opening is round and is furnished with a sphincter, but it is surrounded and covered by lips of the outer skin, which form a transverse slit. This is due to the peculiar arrangement of the copulatory organs.
Each organ consists of a tube of erectile tissue, and can be everted like the finger of a glove. To the apex of the tube is attached a long retractor muscle, which arises from the ventro-lateral surfaces of the caudal vertebrae and extends a considerable distance back. When at rest and withdrawn the organs form slight conical, longitudinal swellings on either side of the root of the tail, an external feature by which male specimens can generally be distinguished. Only one organ is inserted at one time.
The majority of Autosauri lay eggs, surrounded by a white or yellowish shell, which is either hard, for instance in Geckos, or parchment-like, e.g. in Chameleons, in Lacerta viridis and L. agilis, and in L. vivipara. Eggs with a thin and soft shell sometimes exhibit the paradoxical feature of increasing in size after they have been laid. This is explained by the growth of the embryo, which stretches the shell and does not merely live upon the white and yellow contents of the egg itself, but also takes in air and moisture. Many Lizards do not lay their eggs until they contain ripe embryos, which burst the shell shortly after deposition. Some, for instance Lacerta vivipara, Anguis fragilis, and Chamaeleo pumilus, are practically viviparous. The embryos, especially those which are enclosed in hard-shelled eggs, are provided with a sharp, calcareous "egg-tooth" on the top of the snout.
The lungs are thin-walled sacs, sometimes provided with lateral ex-sacculations, and these reach their greatest development in the Chameleons. The breathing is effected by the motion of the ribs. Inflatable sacs on the throat, or on the sides of the neck, for ornamental or sexual purposes, occur in various families. The lungs of much-elongated, snake-shaped Lizards are generally asymmetrical; the right being reduced in Amphisbaenidae; the left in other cases.
Several Autosauri, for instance the Geckos, Psammodromus, and various other Lacertidae have a weak voice.
The Fat-bodies are mysterious organs which are situated beneath the skin, and extend from the inguinal region forwards along the ventral sides of the belly. They are often of considerable dimensions; largest in the spring, in both sexes, at the time of propagation. Their colour is greyish-white or yellow, owing to the great accumulation of fat in the meshes of the connective tissue which composes the frame-work of these organs. An artery enters them, breaks up into capillaries, and these combine to form an efferent vein. After the time of propagation these organs are reduced to grey or reddish flaps, consisting mainly of very vascular connective tissue. G. W. Butler[[149]] has written a long paper on their morphology. The same author[[150]] has investigated the "sub-divisions of the body-cavity in Lizards, Crocodiles, and Birds," with reference to peritoneal diaphragmatic structures.
The geographical distribution of the Autosauri teaches few, but important lessons. We have to restrict ourselves to the principal families, leaving out those which are small and have a limited distribution; also those which, like the few Anelytropidae in Africa and in Mexico, are not natural groups.
The Geckones, which are probably the oldest of modern Autosauri, are practically cosmopolitan, being absent only in the cold and in the cooler temperate regions. They are common even in Oceanic Islands, for instance in New Zealand and in the Sandwich Islands. Although not at all aquatic, they are particularly fit to be transported accidentally on or in the trunks of floating trees, to which they cling firmly, and they can exist without food for months. I once received a little South American Gecko in perfect health from a grocer, who found it in a well-closed wooden box containing canned meat, two months after delivery of the box in Cambridge.