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Acontias

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Acontias
Acontias percivali.jpeg
Acontias percivali
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Scincidae
Subfamily: Acontinae
Genus: Acontias
Cuvier, 1817
Species

See text.

Acontias is a genus of limbless skinks, the lance skinks, (family Scincidae) in the African subfamily Acontinae.[1] Most are small animals, but the largest member of the genus is Acontias plumbeus at approximately 40 cm (16 in) snout-vent length.[1] All members of this genus are live-bearing sandswimmers, with fused eyelids. A recent review [2] moved species that were formerly placed in the genera Typhlosaurus, Acontophiops, and Microacontias into this genus, as together these form a single branch in the tree of life. This new concept of Acontias is a sister lineage to Typhlosaurus, and these two genera are the only genera within the subfamily Acontinae.[2]

Species

These 25 species are recognized:[3]

  • Acontias albigularis Conradie, Busschau, & Edwards, 2018 – white-throated legless skink
  • Acontias aurantiacus (W. Peters, 1854) – golden blind legless skink
  • Acontias bicolor (Hewitt, 1929)
  • Acontias breviceps Essex, 1925 – shorthead lance skink
  • Acontias cregoi (Boulenger, 1903) – Cregoe's legless skink
  • Acontias fitzsimonsi (Broadley, 1968) – Fitzsimons's legless skink
  • Acontias gariepensis (V. FitzSimons, 1941) – Mier Kalahari legless skink
  • Acontias gracilicauda Essex, 1925 – thin-tailed legless skink, slendertail lance skink
  • Acontias grayi Boulenger, 1887 – Gray's dwarf legless skink
  • Acontias jappi (Broadley, 1968) – Japp’s burrowing skink
  • Acontias kgalagadi (Lamb, Biswas & Bauer, 2010) – Kalahari burrowing skink, Kgalagadi legless skink
  • Acontias lineatus W. Peters, 1879 – striped dwarf legless skink, lined lance skink
  • Acontias litoralis Broadley & Greer, 1969 – coastal dwarf legless skink
  • Acontias meleagris (Linnaeus, 1758) – Cape legless skink, golden sand skink; spotted slow skink; thick-tailed blindworm, erdslang, Linnaeus's lance skink
  • Acontias namaquensis Hewitt, 1938 – Namaqua legless skink, Namaqua lance skink
  • Acontias occidentalis V. FitzSimons, 1941 – western burrowing skink, savanna legless skink
  • Acontias orientalis Hewitt, 1938 – eastern striped blindworm, Eastern Cape legless skink
  • Acontias parietalis (Broadley, 1990) – Maputaland legless skink
  • Acontias percivali Loveridge, 1935 – Percival's lance skink, Teita limbless skink
  • Acontias plumbeus Bianconi, 1849 – giant legless skink, giant lance skink
  • Acontias richardi (Jacobsen, 1987) – Richard’s legless skink
  • Acontias rieppeli (Lamb, Biswas & Bauer, 2010) – Woodbush legless skink
  • Acontias schmitzi Wagner, Broadley & Bauer, 2012
  • Acontias tristis F. Werner, 1910 – Namaqualand dwarf legless skink
  • Acontias wakkerstroomensis Conradie, Busschau, & Edwards, 2018 – Wakkerstroom legless skink

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

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b Branch 2004.
  2. ^ a b Lamb, Trip; Sayantan Biswas; Aaron M. Bauer (2010). "A phylogenetic reassessment of African fossorial skinks in the subfamily Acontinae (Squamata: Scincidae): evidence for parallelism and polyphyly". Zootaxa. 2657: 33–46.
  3. ^ "Acontias ". The Reptile Database. www.reptile-database.org.

Further reading

  • Boulenger GA (1887). Catalogue of the Lizards in the British Museum (Natural History). Second Edition. Volume III. ... Scincidæ ... London: Trustees of the British Museum (Natural History). (Taylor and Francis, printers). xii + 575 pp. + Plates I-XL. (Genus Acontias, p. 424).
  • Branch, Bill (2004). Field Guide to Snakes and other Reptiles of Southern Africa. Third Revised Edition, Second impression. Sanibel Island, Florida: Ralph Curtis Books. 399 pp. ISBN 0-88359-042-5. (Genus Acontias, p. 132).
  • Cuvier G (1817). Le règne animale distribué d'après son organisation, pour servir de base a l'histoire naturelle des animaux et d'introduction a l'anatomie comparée. Tome II, contenant les reptiles, les poissons, les mollusques et les annélides. Paris: Déterville. xviii + 532 pp. (Acontias, new subgenus, p. 60). (in French).
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