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Encyclopedia > Eumeces inexpectatus
Southeastern five-lined Skink
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Sauria
Family: Scincidae
Genus: Eumeces
Species: inexpectatus
Binomial name
Eumeces inexpectatus
Taylor 1932

The Southeastern five-lined Skink (Eumeces inexpectatus) is a common skink in the southeastern United States. Its scientific name E. inexpectatus ("the unexpected") is possibly a reference to the unexpected discovery of this species.


As their name suggests, Southeastern five-lined Skinks have five characteristic narrow stripes along their bodies that become lighter with age. 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 Five-lined Skink (Eumeces fasciatus), is slightly smaller than the southeastern five-lined skink and has broader stripes. However, it is difficult to discriminate between these two species on the basis of physical appearance.


Young Southeastern five-lined Skinks have a bright blue or purplish tail, especially towards the tip. Also, stripes become a bright reddish orange towards the head. Juvenile coloration may persist into adulthood, giving the head of the animal an altogether orange-brown appearance.


Southeastern five-lined Skinks are common inhabitants of wooded areas of the southeastern United States. They are commonly found on small islands off the southeastern coast even in the absence of fresh water and vegetation. They are diurnal ground-dwelling animals. Like other Eumeces, they feed primarily on insects, preferring larger prey such as grasshoppers.


Southeastern five-lined Skinks are oviparous; the clutch size varies from 6 to 12, with the number of eggs diminishing with higher latitudes. The female broods the eggs and protects them from predators, including other skinks. The hatchlings appear about one month after the eggs have been laid in early summer.


External link

  • Southeastern five-lined Skink (http://www.csc.noaa.gov/acebasin/specgal/skinkso.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Article about "Eumeces" in the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004 (0 words)
Eumeces are delicate animals whose tail breaks off easily, and herpetologists and other enthusiasts should handle them with great care, if at all.
Eumeces marginatus — Ryukyu five-lined Skink; Okinawa and Amami Islands
Finally, there is Eumeces gaigeae, the "Variable Skink" in North America: researchers seem to be unclear about this skink, it is sometimes listed as a separate species, and sometimes as a subspecies of Eumeces multivirgatus, either as Eumeces multivirgatus gaigeae or as Eumeces multivirgatus epipleurotus.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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