Amphisbaena alba

Amphisbaena alba

Red worm lizard, White worm lizard, White-bellied worm lizard

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SPECIES
Amphisbaena alba

Amphisbaena alba, also known as the red worm lizard or less commonly as the white or white-bellied worm lizard, is a species of amphisbaenian in the reptilian order Squamata. Despite the large geographic range that this species covers, little is known about its ecology due to its secretive habits. A. alba has a diverse diet ranging from plant material to small vertebrates (such as mice). Numerically, beetles, ants, and spiders compose the majority of their diet; however, ants, insect larvae, beetles, crickets, grasshoppers, and termites are ingested to satisfy a larger volume. The females are somewhat larger than the males, and can reach over 80 cm, which is quite large for an amphisbaenian. They are known to bury themselves in leafcutter ant nests and hide in the ants garbage dump areas to avoid irritating the ants into attacking, and to bury themselves to avoid predation in general.

Distribution

Geography

It occurs in South America from eastern Venezuela and the island of Trinidad through the entire Amazon Basin to northern Argentina. Amphisbaena alba has the largest geographic range of all the amphisbaenians.

Amphisbaena alba habitat map
Amphisbaena alba habitat map

Habits and Lifestyle

Lifestyle
Seasonal behavior

Diet and Nutrition

Mating Habits

Reproduction for this species occurs in the dry season of its geographical area. Some evidence suggests that this species exploits the living space of the leaf-cutting ant and may even use the nests of these ants to deposit its eggs. A. alba lays the greatest number of eggs at a time (8–16) in comparison to other amphisbaenians, which is possibly due to its large body size. There is no sexual dimorphism in regard to snout-vent length, meristic, or morphometric characters for A. alba most likely due to functional constraints related to their burrowing nature.

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The ultrastructure of epididymal spermatozoa has been studied for A. alba. Mature spermatozoa are filiform and are characterized by features such as a depression in the transverse section of the acrosome, a moderately long midpiece, columnar mitochondria, an elongated nucleus, and a fibrous sheath in the midpiece.

Epidermal glands are located in the cloacal region of A. alba and are most likely used for reproduction and marking territory. The openings of the glands are plugged with a solid, holocrine secretion that is removed when it moves through tunnels and leaves a secretion trail.

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Population

References

1. Amphisbaena alba Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphisbaena_alba
2. Amphisbaena alba on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/176224/1436233

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