Category
page 1Fauna of the Rio Grande valleys

Cane toad
Species of amphibian
Mexican burrowing toad
species of amphibian

Abert's squirrel
species of mammal

Green kingfisher
species of bird

Southern Yellow Bat
species of mammal

Mexican spiny pocket mouse
species of mammal

Desert pocket gopher
species of rodent

Texas pocket gopher
species of mammal

Oryzomys couesi
species of mammal

Texas cichlid
species of fish

Big bend slider
species of turtle

Rio Grande Leopard Frog
species of amphibian

Smilisca baudinii
species of amphibian

Sceloporus grammicus
species of reptile

Eupackardia calleta
Eupackardia is a monotypic moth genus in the family Saturniidae erected by Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell in 1912. Its only species, Eupackardia calleta, the calleta silkmoth, was described by John O. Westwood in 1853. It is found in Mexico, Guatemala, as well as in the states such as; Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.

Ictalurus lupus
species of fish

Pseudemys gorzugi
Rio Grande cooter

Green toad
species of amphibian

Leptodactylus fragilis
species of amphibian

Devil's River minnow
species of fish
Salado Shiner
species of fish

Siproeta stelenes
species of butterfly

Drymobius margaritiferus
species of reptile

Rio Grande silvery minnow
species of fish

Holbrookia propinqua
species of reptile
Gerrhonotus infernalis
species of reptile

Spotted chorus frog
species of amphibian
Eleutherodactylus cystignathoides
species of amphibian

Parevander xanthomelas
species of beetle

Reticulated collared lizard
species of reptile
Chihuahua Shiner
species of fish
Ficimia streckeri
species of reptile
Eleutherodactylus guttilatus
species of amphibian
Phocides polybius
species of insect
Phaloesia
Phaloesia is a monotypic of tiger moth genus in the family Erebidae. Its only species is Phaloesia saucia, the saucy beauty moth. The genus and species were first described by Francis Walker in 1854. It is found from the lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas in the United States to Venezuela.
Lasaia sula
species of insect
Aztlanolagus
Aztlanolagus is an extinct monotypic genus of rabbit that lived during the Quaternary in what is now the Southern to Southwestern United States and northern Mexico. Aztlanolagus agilis is currently the only recognized species, though differences among recovered fossils suggest that there may have been other species. The generic name refers to Aztlán, the legendary place of origin of the Nahua peoples as recorded in the mythological accounts of the Aztecs and other Nahua groups. By some traditions, this legendary locale is placed in the border regions of the Southwestern United States and adjac