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12-Emoia genus 

Pacific Blue-Tailed Skink ᵸ؋ ᵸ؋ ᵸ؋ ᵸ؋ Ƣݔҩᾫ٨ӷ quaoar

 -  The Christmas Island forest skink (Emoia nativitatis) :

Emoia is a genus of skinks in the subfamily Lygosominae. It belongs to a group of genera mainly from the southwestern Pacific-Australian region. The group also includes the genus Leiolopisma.[

 

These small skinks are commonly known as emoias.

Emoia

Pacific bluetail skink
(Emoia caeruleocauda)

Scientific classification

Kingdom:Animalia

Phylum:Chordata

Class:Reptilia

Order:Squamata

Family:Scincidae

Subfamily:Lygosominae

Genus:Emoia
Gray, 1845

Species

About 75, see text

Synonyms

Species :

  • Emoia adspersa (Steindachner, 1870) – dark-sided emoia, dark-sided skink, dateline emoia

  • Emoia aenea

  • Emoia ahli

  • Emoia aneityumensis

  • Emoia arnoensis W.C. Brown & Marshall, 1953 – Arno skink

  • Emoia atrocostata (Lesson, 1826) – littoral skink

  • Emoia aurulenta

  • Emoia battersbyi (Procter, 1923)

  • Emoia bismarckensis

  • Emoia boettgeri (Sternfeld, 1920) – Boettger's skink

  • Emoia bogerti

  • Emoia brongersmai

  • Emoia caeruleocauda (De Vis, 1892) – Pacific bluetail skink, Marianas blue-tailed skink

  • Emoia callisticta

  • Emoia campbelli

  • Emoia coggeri

  • Emoia concolor

  • Emoia cyanogaster (Lesson, 1826) – blue-bellied skink

  • Emoia cyanura (Lesson, 1826) – azure-tailed emoia, copper-tailed emoia

  • Emoia cyclops

  • Emoia digul

  • Emoia erronan

  • Emoia flavigularis

  • Emoia guttata

  • Emoia impar (F. Werner, 1898) – copper striped blue-tailed skink[2]

  • Emoia irianensis

  • Emoia isolata

  • Emoia jakati (Kopstein, 1926) – Jakati emoia, Kopstein's skink

  • Emoia jamur

  • Emoia kitcheneri

  • Emoia klossi

  • Emoia kordoana

  • Emoia kuekenthali

  • Emoia laobaoense

  • Emoia lawesi (Günther, 1874) – Lawes' skink

  • Emoia longicauda (Macleay, 1877)

  • Emoia loveridgei

  • Emoia loyaltiensis

  • Emoia maculata

  • Emoia maxima

  • Emoia mivarti (Boulenger, 1887) – Mivart's skink

  • Emoia mokosariniveikau

  • Emoia montana

  • Emoia nativitatis

  • Emoia nigra (Jacquinot & Guichenot, 1853) – black skink

  • Emoia nigromarginata

  • Emoia obscura

  • Emoia oribata

  • Emoia pallidiceps

  • Emoia paniai

  • Emoia parkeri

  • Emoia physicae

  • Emoia physicina

  • Emoia ponapea Kiester, 1982 – Ponape Forest skink

  • Emoia popei

  • Emoia pseudocyanura

  • Emoia pseudopallidiceps

  • Emoia reimschisseli

  • Emoia rennellensis

  • Emoia ruficauda

  • Emoia rufilabialis

  • Emoia samoensis (A.H.A. Duméril inA.M.C. Duméril & A.H.A. Duméril, 1851) – Samoan skink

  • Emoia sanfordi

  • Emoia schmidti

  • Emoia similis

  • Emoia slevini W.C. Brown & Falanruw, 1972 – Slevin's skink,[3] Marianas emoia

  • Emoia sorex

  • Emoia submetallica

  • Emoia taumakoensis

  • Emoia tetrataenia

  • Emoia tongana

  • Emoia tropidolepis

  • Emoia trossula

  • Emoia veracunda

Examples :

 

This species still new and not available yet in the market 

-  Emoia nigra Pacific black skink :

From Wikipedia :

 

Emoia nigra is a species of lizards of the family of Scincidae 

 

Distribution 

 

This species is found in the Bismarck Archipelago , the Solomon , to Vanuatu , in Tonga , with Samoa and Fiji 

For the external links , refrences  click here to read the full wikipedia article 

 -  Emoia caeruleocauda, commonly known as the Pacific bluetail skink :

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Emoia caeruleocauda, commonly known as the Pacific bluetail skink, is a species of lizard in the family Scincidae

Conservation status

 

 

 


Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)[1]

Scientific classification

Kingdom:Animalia

Phylum:Chordata

Class:Reptilia

Order:Squamata

Suborder:Sauria

Family:Scincidae

Subfamily:Eugongylinae[2]

Genus:Emoia

Species:E. caeruleocauda

Binomial name

Emoia caeruleocauda
(De Vis, 1892)

Synonyms

  • Mocoa caeruleocaudaDe Vis, 1892

  • Lygosoma cyanurum werneriT. Vogt, 1912

  • Lygosoma werneri trivialeSchüz, 1929

  • Emoia triviale — Schmidt, 1932

  • Lygosoma werneri — Angel, 1935

  • Emoia werneri — Parker, 1936

  • Emoia caeruleocauda— Greer, 1974[2]

Geographic range

 

E. caeruleocauda is found widespread from Southern Indonesia through New Guinea and the Solomon Islands northward into the Marianas, Carolines, and Marshall Islands, New Hebrides, Micronesia, Fiji Islands, Solomons Vanuatu, Torba Province (Banks and Torres groups), Santo, Malo, Aore, Pentecost, Malakula, Ambrym, Tongoa, Efate, Erromango, Aniwa, Tanna, Futuna, and Anatom; New Caledonia (Loyalty Islands, but not on the mainland), Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Indonesia (Moluccas, Sulawesi, Irian Jaya), Malaysia (Sabah), Admirality Islands, Hiu Island.

For the external links , refrences  click here to read the full wikipedia article 

Video:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

The Christmas Island forest skink (Emoia nativitatis), also known as the Christmas Island whiptail skink, is a species of skink endemic to Australia's Christmas Island.[2] Although listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List[1] and under the EPBC Act,[3] it is considered by many to be extinct.[4][5] The last known forest skink, a captive individual named Gump, died on 31 May 2014.

1900 monograph of three Christmas Island reptiles, with the forest skink at centre.

Christmas Island forest skink

Conservation status:

 

 

 


Critically endangered (EPBC Act)

Scientific classification:

Kingdom:Animalia

Phylum:Chordata

Subphylum:Vertebrata

Class:Reptilia

Order:Squamata

Suborder:Sauria

Infraorder:Scincomorpha

Family:Scincidae

Subfamily:Lygosominae

Genus:Emoia

Species:E. nativitatis

Binomial name:

Emoia nativitatis
(Boulenger, 1887)

Synonyms :

Lygosoma nativitatis Boulenger, 1887[1]

Description

 

The Emoia skinks, of which the Christmas Island forest skink is the most ancestral member, are a large group with marked radiation on islands in the Pacific.[6] The forest skink is about 20 cm long, thickset, ground-dwelling, and active during the day.[6] Its body is a chocolate-brown colour and unpatterned.[6] The species was found in forest clearings, usually in leaf litter.

 

Discovery :

 

The Christmas Island forest skink was described by George Albert Boulenger in 1887 based on a single tailless specimen.[7] Subsequently, eight specimens were collected by naturalist Joseph Jackson Lister

 

Decline and possible extinction :

 

The Christmas Island forest skink was common and widespread on Christmas Island during most of the twentieth century. It was considered abundant in 1979.[8] As recently at 1998, herpetologist Hal Cogger observed more than 80 forest skinks basking and foraging around a single fallen tree.[6] However, populations plummeted during the 1990s and 2000s by up to 98%.[1] In 2003, the species was limited to fragmented pockets in remote parts of the island, and a targeted survey in 2008 found the species at only a single site.

 

The cause of the species' rapid decline is still unknown,[6] although possibilities include predation by yellow crazy ants, giant centipedes, wolf snakes, and cats;[6][9] competition with five introduced reptile species; poisoning from insecticides; and disease.

 

In the late 2000s, Christmas Island researchers tried to capture forest skinks for a captive breeding program, but only three females were ever found.[10] On 3 January 2014, the species was added to the EPBC Act List of Threatened Fauna.[3] The last surviving captive female was nicknamed Gump, and she died on 31 May 2014.

 

Following Gump's death, herpetologists John Woinarski and Hal Cogger wrote that: "For the Forest Skink, the trajectory of decline and the fruitlessness of dedicated searches provide reasonable grounds to presume extinction, although this conclusion may take some years to be officially recognised."[4] If true, this would represent Australia's first reptile extinction since European colonisation.[

For the external links , refrences  click here to read the full wikipedia article 

13-  Eremiascincus genus : 

Eremiascincus is a genus of skinks endemic to Australia, Indonesia and East Timor.

Eremiascincus  

Eremiascincus richardsonii

Scientific classification

Kingdom:Animalia

Phylum:Chordata

Subphylum:Vertebrata

Class:Reptilia

Order:Squamata

Suborder:Lacertilia or
Sauria

Infraorder:Scincomorpha

Family:Scincidae

Genus:Eremiascincus
Greer, 1979[1]

Species

14 sp., see text

Synonyms

Glaphyromorphus
Wells & Wellington, 1984

Species :

 

The genus contains the following 14 valid species, listed alphabetically by specific name.

  • Eremiascincus antoniorum (M.A. Smith, 1927)

  • Eremiascincus brongersmai (Storr, 1972) – brown-sided bar-lipped skink

  • Eremiascincus butlerorum (Aplin, How & Boeadi, 1993)

  • Eremiascincus douglasi (Storr, 1967) – orange-sided bar-lipped skink

  • Eremiascincus emigrans (Lidth de Jeude, 1895)

  • Eremiascincus fasciolatus (Günther, 1867) – narrow-banded sand-swimmer

  • Eremiascincus intermedius (Sternfeld, 1919)

  • Eremiascincus isolepis (Boulenger, 1887) – northern bar-lipped skink

  • Eremiascincus musivus Mecke, Doughty & Donnellan, 2009 – mosaic desert skink

  • Eremiascincus pallidus (Günther, 1875)

  • Eremiascincus pardalis (Macleay, 1877) – lowlands bar-lipped skink

  • Eremiascincus phantasmus Mecke, Doughty & Donnellan, 2013

  • Eremiascincus richardsonii (Gray, 1845) – broad-banded sand-swimmer

  • Eremiascincus timorensis (Greer, 1990)

Nota bene: A binomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species was originally described in a genus other than Eremiascincus.

Videos :

Examples :

 

This species still new and not available yet in the market 

For the external links , refrences  click here to read the full wikipedia article 

BWI richardsonii

Amazing Broad-banded Sand Swimmers Eating. Awesome reptiles! Incredibles skinks

Broadbanded Sand Swimmers

Western narrow-banded skink (Eremiascincus pallidus)

14- Eroticoscincus genus : 

Eroticoscincus is a genus of skinks from Queensland, Australia. It is monotypic, the sole species being Eroticoscincus graciloides.

 

 

-  Eroticoscincus graciloides.

15- Eulamprus genus :

Eulamprus, the water skinks, are a genus of skinks in the subfamily Lygosominae. The genus Eulamprus belongs to a clade in the Sphenomorphus group that contains other genera such as Ctenotus and Anomalopus. Even closer related to Eulamprus than these two genera, seems to be Gnypetoscincus queenslandiae (the prickly skink).

Eulamprus

Eulamprus quoyii (golden water skink)

Scientific classification

Kingdom:Animalia

Phylum:Chordata

Subphylum:Vertebrata

Class:Reptilia (paraphyletic)

Order:Squamata

Suborder:Sauria

Infraorder:Scincomorpha

Family:Scincidae

Subfamily:Lygosominae

Genus:Eulamprus
Fitzinger, 1843

Species

Species :

 

  • Eulamprus amplus Covacevich & McDonald, 1980 – lemon-barred forest-skink

  • Eulamprus brachyosoma (Lönnberg and Andersson, 1915) – northern barsided skink

  • Eulamprus frerei Greer, 1992 – stout barsided skink

  • Eulamprus heatwolei Wells & Wellington, 1983 – warm-temperate water-skink

  • Eulamprus kosciuskoi Kinghorn, 1932 – alpine meadow-skink, alpine water skink

  • Eulamprus leuraensis Wells & Wellington, 1983 – Blue Mountains water skink, Blue Mountain swamp-skink

  • Eulamprus luteilateralis Covacevich & McDonald, 1980 – orange-speckled forest-skink

  • Eulamprus martini Wells & Wellington, 1983 – dark barsided skink

  • Eulamprus murrayi (Boulenger, 1887) – blue-speckled forest-skink

  • Eulamprus quoyii Quoy & Gaimard, 1824 – golden water skink, eastern water-skink, eastern water skink

  • Eulamprus sokosoma Greer, 1992 – stout barsided skink

  • Eulamprus tenuis (Gray, 1831) bar-sided forest-skink, barred-sided skink

  • Eulamprus tigrinus (De Vis, 1888) – yellow-blotched forest-skink, rainforest water-skink

  • Eulamprus tryoni (Longman, 1918) – Border Ranges blue-spectacled skink, forest skink, Tryon's skink

  • Eulamprus tympanum (Lönnberg and Andersson, 1915) – southern water skink, cool-temperate water-skink, highland water skink

Hinulia elegans, described by Gray in 1838, is an unidentified lygosomine that may be Eulamprus tenuis.[3]

For the external links , refrences  click here to read the full wikipedia article 

Examples :

 

This species still new and not available yet in the market 

-  The southern water skink (Eulamprus tympanum)  :

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

The southern water skink (Eulamprus tympanum) is a medium-sized (maximum snout-vent length c. 100 mm) species of skink that is endemic to Australia. These skinks are found in New South Wales, South Australia, Victoria as well as on Tasmania's Rodondo Island in the Bass Strait. They are viviparous, mating in spring, and giving birth to live young in mid to late summer.[1][2]

Southern water skink

Scientific classification:

Kingdom:Animalia

Phylum:Chordata

Class:Reptilia

Order:Squamata

Family:Scincidae

Genus:Eulamprus

Species:E. tympanum

Binomial name:

Eulamprus tympanum
(Lönnberg and Andersson,1915)

Synonyms :

Sphenomorphus tympanum

Description :

 

The southern water skink is a medium-sized skink with a snout-to-vent length of up to 85 mm (3.3 in). The head and body are mainly olive-brown, with darker speckles. The flanks are olive-brown with pale speckling. It does not have markings underneath the chin nor a pale stripe on the cheeks.

 

Distribution and habitat

 

This species is native to southeastern Australia. It is found in the states of New South Wales, Victoria, the eastern part of Southern Australia and Tasmania, where it only occurs on Rodondo Island. Its habitat is in the vicinity of fresh water and its altitudinal range extends from sea level to near the top of Mount Kosciuszko.

Ecology :

 

The skink usually lives near small creeks, hunting for small prey such as invertebrates, tadpoles, small frogs and other small skinks.[4] Its metabolic rate increases after feeding to about 2.4 times its pre-feeding level, and remains elevated for up to 48 hours. This is probably typical for an active lizard that feeds relatively frequently and is greater than that found in an ambush predatory species.[5]

 

Reproduction is viviparous, producing live young in mid to late summer.[6] It has been found that the female can select the sex of her offspring by regulating her temperature; she does this by increasing or decreasing the time she spends basking in the sunshine, though what cues are involved in her decision making process are not fully understood.[6]When adult males are scarce, the litters contain more male offspring and when they are plentiful, more female offspring are produced. [7]

For the external links , refrences  click here to read the full wikipedia article 

Video:

Southern Water Skinks (Eulamprus tympanum)

Southern Water Skink (Eulamprus tympanum)

Please select or follow below : 

 

SKINKS 

Skinks as a pet   1   ,   2 

 

SKINKS SPECIES :  Blue - tongued skinks :  Part   1  -   2   -   3     -   4   -  5   -   6  -    7

 

                                 Pink - tongued skinks  

 

                                 Red Eye Crocodile Skinks 

 

                                 Fire Skinks 

 

                                 Blue tail skinks 

 

                                  Five - Lined Skinks :  Part   1     -    2  

 

                                  Other Skinks   :   ASIAN  &  AFRICAN  skinks  : Part 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9                                                                                                                            10  11   12  13  14  15    

 

                                  Other Skinks  American  Part :   1   -   2   -  3

 

 

                                  Other  Skinks Australian  Part :   1    2     3     4     5     6     7      8     9    10                                                                                               11     12    13     14   

Please select or follow below : 

 

SKINKS 

Skinks as a pet   1   ,   2 

 

SKINKS SPECIES :  Blue - tongued skinks :  Part   1  -   2   -   3     -   4   -  5   -   6  -    7

 

                                 Pink - tongued skinks  

 

                                 Red Eye Crocodile Skinks 

 

                                 Fire Skinks 

 

                                 Blue tail skinks 

 

                                  Five - Lined Skinks :  Part   1     -    2  

 

                                  Other Skinks   :   ASIAN  &  AFRICAN  skinks  : Part 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9                                                                                                                            10  11   12  13  14  15    

 

                                  Other Skinks  American  Part :   1   -   2   -  3

 

 

                                  Other  Skinks Australian  Part :   1    2     3     4     5     6     7      8     9    10                                                                                               11     12    13     14   

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