“…Inglis (1968) revised Parathelandros Diesing, 1861, retaining the genus for para sites of Australian amphibians and erecting Skrjabinodon as a new genus for parasites of reptiles (Bursey & Goldberg, 1999). There are several reptile family members infected by different Skrjabinodon species were recorded by various researchers: Gekkonidae (Moravec & Baruš, 1990;Bursey & Goldberg, 1999;Hering-Hagenbeck et al, 2002;Matsuo & Oku, 2002;Jones, 2013;Bursey & Brooks, 2010), Agamidae (Rezazadeh et al, 2012), Corytophanidae (Bursey & Brooks, 2010), Iguanidae (Bundy et al, 1987;Bursey & Brooks, 2010;Bursey & Goldberg, 2007), Phrynosomatidae (Bursey & Brooks, 2010), Polychrotidae (Bursey & Brooks, 2010), Gymnophthalmidae (Bursey & Goldberg, 2011b), Lacertidae (Roca & Ferragut, 1989;Hornero & Roca, 1992;Vicente et al, 2000;Yıldırım-han et al, 2011), Anguidae , Teiidae (Bursey & Brooks, 2010), and Scincidae (Vicente et al, 2000;Hering-Hagenbeck et al, 2002;Vicente et al, 2002;Rocha et al, 2003;Bursey et al, 2008;Incedogan et al, 2014). In this study, we observed for the fi rst time Skrjabinodon sp.…”