Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Other common names for P. fasciatus include blue-tailed skink (for juveniles) and red-headed skink (for adults). It is technically appropriate to call it the American five-lined skink to distinguish it from the African skink Trachylepis quinquetaeniata (otherwise known as five-lined mabuya) or the eastern red-headed skink to distinguish it from its western relative Plestiodon skiltonianus ...
English: An American Five-lined Skink (Eumeces fasciatus) on a row of bricks. Photo taken with an Olympus E-5 in Caldwell County, NC, USA . Cropping and post-processing performed with Adobe Lightroom .
Blue-tailed skink may refer to: Cryptoblepharus egeriae, a lizard native to Australia's Christmas Island; Plestiodon elegans, the five-striped blue-tailed skink, a lizard found in East-Asia; Plestiodon fasciatus, the five-lined skink of North America; Trachylepis margaritifera, the rainbow mabuya of Africa
The African five-lined skink (Trachylepis quinquetaeniata, formerly Mabuya quinquetaeniata), or rainbow mabuya, is a north-central African species of skink lizard.. T. margaritifera is another closely related skink species that is also called the "rainbow skink" (although it occurs primarily in Eastern Africa); T. margaritifera, overall, possesses more colourful, "rainbow"-like scales (as ...
The middle stripe tends to be narrower than the others, and the dark areas between stripes are black in young skinks but become brown with age. A similar lizard, the common five-lined skink (Plestiodon fasciatus), is slightly smaller than the southeastern five-lined skink and has broader stripes. However, it is difficult to discriminate between ...
Plestiodon okadae, Okada's five-lined skink (Japan) Plestiodon parviauriculatus, northern pygmy skink (Mexico) Plestiodon parvulus, southern pygmy skink (Mexico) Plestiodon popei (Asia) Plestiodon quadrilineatus, four-lined Asian skink; Plestiodon septentrionalis, prairie skink - includes Eumeces obtusirostris; Plestiodon skiltonianus, western ...
The conspicuous coloring of species of Plestiodon is a survival trait: it attracts a predator's attention to the tail of the animal, which will break off when grabbed. A skink thus often manages to escape and hide under some rock, log, or fallen leaves while the predator still contemplates the wildly thrashing severed tail.
The name five-lined skink can refer to different species of skinks: Plestiodon fasciatus , the five-lined skink or eastern red-headed skink of North America Trachylepis quinquetaeniata , the five-lined mabuya of Africa