Four-lined Skink

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Four-lined Skink
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Scincidae
Genus: Eumeces
Species: E. tetragrammus
Binomial name
Eumeces tetragrammus
Baird, 1859

The Four-lined Skink (Eumeces tetragrammus) is a medium-sized member of the Eumeces skinks, a kind of lizard.

[edit] Taxonomy

There are several subspecies:

  • Long-lined Skink (E.t. tetragrammus Baird (1859)
  • Short-lined Skink (E.t. brevilineatus Cope (1880)

Some herpetologists also consider the Mountain Skink (Eumeces callicephalus) a subspecies of the Eumeces tetragrammus under the name E.t. callicephalus. Others, however, prefer to treat the Mountain Skink as a distinct species because its range is geographically distinct and there are morphological differences.

[edit] Description

The two suspecies can be distinguished by their color and their stripes. The Long-lined Skink is gray to light brown in color and has light stripes from the eyes extending to beyond its forelegs, whereas the Short-lined Skink is darker in color and has stripes that end before the forelegs.

Juveniles of both subspecies have — like many Eumeces — a blue tail; this color fades with age.

Adults reach a maximum SVL (Snout-Vent-Length) of some 7.5 cm (about 3 inches), and a TL (total length) of about 18 cm (7 in).

[edit] Range and Habitat

Eumeces tetragrammus occurs in northern Mexico and along the Mexican Gulf coast and in western and central Texas.

Both subspecies live in lightly wooded areas, with the Short-lined Skink having a preference for rocky areas, whereas the Long-lined Skink is also found in grasslands.

[edit] Reproduction

The female lays about 5 to 12 eggs once a year, which she broods. Males develop orange (Short-Lined Skink) to red (Long-lined Skink) coloration of the head during the breeding season.

[edit] External links

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