Typhlacontias brevipes

Typhlacontias brevipes

Fitzsimon's burrowing skink

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SPECIES
Typhlacontias brevipes

Typhlacontias brevipes, also known as the FitzSimon's burrowing skink or short blind dart skink, is a skink species endemic to the Namib Desert (Namibia). It was described by Vivian FitzSimons in 1938.

Animal name origin

The species name is derived from the Latin words brevis, -e = short and pes, pedis = foot.

Appearance

These slender skinks have small eyes with no eyelids and no external ear openings. The hindlimb rudiments are visible on either side of cloaca. The body coloration varies from light buff to sulphur yellow. Vague stripes, formed by the scales, can occur along the back and upper flanks. The tail is blue-grey. They can reach a snout–vent length of 113 mm (4.4 in).

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Females are viviparous and give birth to up to three young.

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Geography

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Habits and Lifestyle

Typhlacontias brevipes typically occur on the leeward side of dunes in the roots of grass tufts found in semi-stable sand. They are active at night and in the cooler hours of the day when they forage for small insects like ants, termites, antlions, and beetles.

Lifestyle
Seasonal behavior

References

1. Typhlacontias brevipes Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhlacontias_brevipes
2. Typhlacontias brevipes on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/44979509/44979514

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