Ablepharus is a genus of skinks that contains the common snake-eyed skinks. Both their scientific and common names refer to the fact that their eyelids have fused to a translucent capsule; as in snakes, they thus are physically incapable of blinking. They are small lizards and prefer to live in the leaf litter of dry fields and hills. Their scales give them a very shiny, bronze appearance with a characteristically dark stripe down the sides of their bodies. They prey on small insects and other small mollusks.

Characteristics

Appearance

The scales on all Ablepharus species are shiny and bronze in appearance. Also, a very characteristic bronze stripe runs the length of the dorsal surface of the body. They have short, weak front legs, which contribute to their moving in a serpentine-like manner. In general, females are longer and weigh more than their male counterparts. Ablepharus species have thick tails relative to their body sizes and lengths.

Mannerisms and habitat

As a whole, Ablepharus skinks are generally shy creatures. They tend to bask in the sunlight during the daytime and become more active as dusk and darkness approach.

Distribution

The geographic range of the common snake-eyed skink spans from southern European countries to northern African countries; also, some species are native to southeast Asia.

  • A. budaki — Budak's snake-eyed skink

:Found in Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, and Cyprus

:Typically inhabits leaf litter, woodlands, shrubbery, and forests in humid areas

  • A. chernovi — Chernov's skink

:Found in Syria, Turkey, and Armenia

:Typically, they are found hiding under leaf litter and small stones in open areas with little shrubbery or forestation. Some may also be found on some of the gentler slopes on some mountain ranges.

  • A. darvazi — Darvaz Range skink

:Found in Tajikistan, India, Afghanistan, and Pakistan

  • A. deserti — desert lidless skink

:Found in Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan

:Generally observed in desert lands and dry slopes with several different types of angiosperms around 2,000 m above sea level

  • A. eremchenkoi

:Found in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan

  • A. grayanus — minor snake-eyed skink

:Found in Pakistan, India, Nepal, and Turkmenistan

  • A. himalayanus

:Found in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, Pakistan, India, Nepal

  • A. kitaibelii — European snake-eyed skink

:Found in southern Slovakia, Serbia, Hungary, Eastern Croatia, Albania, Greece, southern Romania, Macedonia, and Turkey

:Inhabits arid regions containing meadows, scrubland, and woodland clearings, as well as hilly areas

  • A. ladacensis

:Found in Tibet (China), North India, western Nepal, and northern Pakistan.

  • A. lindbergi — Lindberg’s snake-eyed skink (sometimes A. bivittatus lindbergi )

:Found in western Afghanistan

  • A. mahabharatus

:Found in Nepal.

  • A. nepalensis

:Found in Nepal.

  • A. pannonicus — Asian snake-eyed skink

:Found in the United Arab Emirates, eastern Georgia, Iraq, Iran, Oman, Pakistan, Syria, Jordan, Afghanistan, Caucasus, northwestern India, southwestern Tajikistan, southern Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and western Azerbaijan

  • A. rueppellii — Rüppell's snake-eyed skink

:Found in central and northern Israel, the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt, southern Lebanon, western and northern Jordan, and possible reported sightings in Syria and Jordan

:Inhabits more heavily forested areas with dense vegetation, prefer humid areas, especially the oases in Egypt

  • A. sikimmensis

:Found in Bangladesh (Rangpur), Bhutan, China (Tibet), India (Darjeeling, Sikkim) and Nepal.

  • A. tragbulensis

:Found in India and Pakistan.

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

References

Further reading

  • Lichtenstein H (1823). Verzeichniss der Doubletten des zoologischen Museums der Königl. Universität zu Berlin nebst Beschreibung vieler bisher unbekannter Arten von Säugethieren, Vögeln, Amphibien und Fischen. Berlin: T. Trautwein. x + 118 pp. + one plate. (Ablepharus, new genus, p. 103). (in German and Latin).