Posts Tagged ‘Cylindrical Bodies’

Fossorial

Friday, December 2nd, 2011


To this group belong most of the limbless lizards. The creatures discussed here are those that live underground all or most of the time. Typically these lizards are specialized by having cylindrical bodies, pointed snouts, reduced eyes, and the external ear absent. The nostril is usually set horizontally, as opposed to facing upward in most lizards. The head shields are usually enlarged.

Those families whose members are fossorial are the Dibamidae, Anniellidae, some Scincidae, and some Pygopodidae. The earless monitor, Lanthanotus, may be fossorial or at least semifossorial. The genus Dibamus contains six diminutive species found in Southeast Asia. The largest may be eight inches long and the body is very thin as well.

 

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Family Scinidae – Skinks

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011


There are approximately a thousand different species of skink worldwide – throughout North, Central and South America and in Africa, Europe, Eastern Europe, Asia, Indo-Malaysia and the Australian archipelago, as well as on many oceanic islands throughout the world. They are a highly successful and diversified group of lizards. They occupy every conceivable habitat and climate, including near salt water and fresh water; they are even found as high as the tree line of the Himalayan mountains. They are primarily ground dwellers and burrowers, although some are at least semiarboreal and a few are semiaquatic as well. Most ground-dwelling or terrestrial skinks are semifossorial. They range in size from 1 inch to as long as 15 inches or more in body length, longer if you count the tail. They are noted for their flat, shiny scales and cylindrical bodies.

One of the largest and most popular skinks kept as pets is the Blue-tongued Skink (Tilaquia sp.), some species of which are heavy bodied and measure 1 1/2 feet or more in length when fully grown, including their tail.

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Fossorial

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009


To this group belongs most of the limbless lizards. These creatures are those that live underground all or most of the time. Typically these lizards are specialized by having cylindrical bodies, pointed snouts, reduced eyes and the external ear absent. The nostril is usually set horizontally as opposed to facing upwards in most lizards. The head shields are usually enlarged.

Fossorial Mammals – One example is the mole: Note the slender scapula designed for squeezing through small spaces and tunnels. An example of a semi-fossorial mammal is the armadillo (Dasypus novemcinctus). In this model, the shell has been removed, …

Kermits kin – As this species is fossorial, the tympanum is hidden. Males reach a length of 6.3 cm or 2.5 in and females a length of 6.8 cm or2.7 in. Turtle Frog (Myobatrachus gouldii) Image Source This weird and odd-looking creature is called Turtle …

Subterranean herpetofauna show a decline after 34 years in Ndumu … – We relate reductions in subterranean herpetofaunal densities to an increased density of the Reserve’s ungulate grazers, suggesting a link between reduction in leaf-litter and soil macrofauna prey of the fossorial reptiles. …

Those families whose members are fossorial are the Dibamidae, Anniellidae , some Scincidae , and some Pygopodidae, The earless monitor Lanthanotus , may be fossorial or at least semifossorial. The genus Dibamus contains six diminuitive species found in Southeast Asia. The largest may be eight inches long. The body is very thin and the lizards of this group , remain rare in collections because of their secretive habits. Also in this group in the Mexican Anelytropsis papillosus , a lizard which has only been collected about ten times. It is found in the desert, as opposed to the forests of Asia, and is probably wholly fossorial.

Ugological

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