|
Northern Mole Skink Range Map
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Northern Mole Skink Juvenile
Want to Contribute a photo of a Juvenile Northern Mole Skink?
Email Us
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Northern Mole Skink (Plestiodon egregius similis)
Description: A race of P. egregius having a reddish orange, reddish brown, or orange tail, dorsolateral light stripes that neither widen nor diverge, 21 or fewer scale rows at midbody (usually), 6 supralabial scales on each side, and one in which the hatchlings have easily discernible markings on the dorsum
Habitat: Habitats include coastal dunes, sand pine scrub, longleaf pine-turkey oak woods, and xeric hammocks. This lizard is mostly fossorial; often under surface litter, also in pocket gopher burrows and mounds, burrowing beetle mounds; it occurs in greatest numbers where soil is sandy or gravelly and dry. It also occurs under rocks and tidal wrack on beaches. Eggs are laid in a cavity dug in sandy soil, several inches to 6 feet below the surface.
Range: (N Florida, Alamabama, S Georgia). Type locality: NW outskirts of Augusta, Richmond County, Georgia.
Found in these States:
AL |
FL |
GA
Diet: Eats crickets, spiders, and other small arthropods.
Reproduction: Mole skinks reach sexual maturity after one year. They mate in winter; the female lays three to seven eggs in spring in a shallow nest cavity less than 12 inches below the surface. The eggs incubate for 31 to 51 days, during which time the female tends the nest.
Status: Listed as Least Concern because overall the extent of occurrence, area of occupancy, number of subpopulations, and population size are fairly large and probably have not declined at a rate that would qualify the species for any of the threatened categories.
»» Kingdom: Animalia - Animals
»» Phylum: Chordata - Chordates
»» Subphylum: Vertebrata - Vertebrates
»» Class: Reptilia - Reptiles
»» Order: Squamata - Lizards
»» Family: Scincidae - Skinks
»» Genus: Plestiodon
»» Species: Plestiodon egregius -Mole Skink
»» Subspecies: Plestiodon egregius similis - Northern Mole Skink
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Plestiodon egregius", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0. Content may have been omitted from the original, but no content has been changed or extended.
|
|