Placental viviparity is known in many species of squamate reptiles. Among these, some scincids have developed an epithelio-chorial chorio-allantoic placenta which in the structure of its central ridged zone is similar to those of certain therian mammalian species. A broad range of immunoregulatory peptides, cytokines, has been identified at the maternofetal interface of several species of mammals, either with invasive or non-invasive types of placenta. Thus we began to study whether interleukin-1, which is considered to play a crucial role in mammalian pregnancy, might also be involved in the viviparity of reptilian species. Placentae of Chalcides chalcides L. were processed by immunohistochemistry and incubated in a culture medium for different times. A very strong immunoreactivity for interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) and for interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) was present in the chorial epiblast and in uterine epithelial cells, with varying degree and localization in different periods of pregnancy. IL-1 beta was also released into the medium at different amounts during incubation. In light of the mammalian data, our results suggest that the role of cytokines in pregnancy may represent a significant event in the evolution of placental viviparity.