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The tree-crevice skink or tree skink (Egernia striolata) is a species of skink, a lizard in the family Scincidae. The species is endemic to Australia and is found in the states of Victoria, the Northern Territory, Queensland, New South Wales and South Australia. [2] E. striolata tend to live in crevices and cracks in hollow logs or rocks.
Toggle Lizards subsection. ... Genus Norops (21 species, including blue-eyed anole, Carpenter's anole, [5] green tree anole, ground anole, ... (black forest racer)
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The anole is a small to medium-sized lizard, with a slender body. The head is long and pointed with ridges between the eyes and nostrils, and smaller ones on the top of the head. The toes have adhesive pads to facilitate climbing. Green anoles use jumping for their primary means of locomotion. [5]
Banded tree anole (A. transversalis) Anolis toldo Fong & Garrido, 2000 – gray-banded green anole; Anolis tolimensis (Werner, 1916) Anolis townsendi (Stejneger, 1900) – Townsend's anole, Cocos Island anole; Anolis trachyderma (Cope, 1876) – common forest anole, roughskin anole; Anolis transversalis (Duméril, 1851) – banded tree anole ...
Saint Vincent's bush anole, Trinidad anole: Regional endemic. Widely distributed from sea level to 900 m. Iguana iguana: Green iguana, common iguana: Microteiids (Gymnophthalmidae) Species Common name(s) Notes Image Gymnophthalmus underwoodi: Underwood's spectacled tegu: Skinks Species Common name(s) Notes Image Mabuya mabouya [2] Regional endemic.
Egernia is a genus of skinks (family Scincidae) that occurs in Australia.These skinks are ecologically diverse omnivores that inhabit a wide range of habitats.However, in the loose delimitation (which incorporates about 30 species) the genus is not monophyletic but an evolutionary grade, as has long been suspected due to its lack of characteristic apomorphies.
Trunk-crown anole are usually predominantly green and have relatively large sub-digital toe-pads and short stout legs to aid in arboreal locomotion. These anoles eat small arboreal insects, smaller lizards, and some species have been observed to consume fruits and nectar; they have triangular, flattened heads, possibly to aid in nectar consumption.