Anilios bituberculatus (Peters, 1863) is a animal in the Typhlopidae family, order null, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Anilios bituberculatus (Peters, 1863) (Anilios bituberculatus (Peters, 1863))
🦋 Animalia

Anilios bituberculatus (Peters, 1863)

Anilios bituberculatus (Peters, 1863)

Anilios bituberculatus, the prong-snouted blind snake, is a small arid-adapted blind snake native to southern Australia.

Family
Genus
Anilios
Order
Class
Squamata

About Anilios bituberculatus (Peters, 1863)

Anilios bituberculatus is a small, thin snake with shiny scales. Its average total length is around 30 cm, reaching a maximum of 45 cm. The dorsal side is brown to black, while the ventral side is creamy white to pinkish white. Its body maintains a uniform thickness along its length, ending in a very short, conical spine. This species has 20 mid-body dorsal scale rows, 414 to 485 ventral scales, and 11 to 18 sub-caudal scales. Its nasal cleft is not visible from above; it does not divide the nasal openings and connects to the second labial scale below. The eyes appear as small dark dots positioned under the head scales. The small, curved mouth sits behind and below the snout tip, similar to the mouth of a shark. When viewed from above, the snout has three lobes and an angular profile. Due to this species' cryptic behavior, its full geographic distribution is not yet completely documented. It is adapted to arid conditions and occurs across a variety of habitats ranging from coastal areas to drier regions of southern Australia, extending from inland New South Wales to Western Australia. It has been recorded in the Australian states and territories of New South Wales, the Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, and Western Australia. Like other blind snakes, Anilios bituberculatus is most commonly discovered when dug up from termite or ant nests. It travels underground through tunnels built by these insects. Individuals may also be seen moving across the ground surface at night, particularly after rain and/or during warm weather. When disturbed, this snake can emit a strong, foul odor from its well-developed anal glands. Anilios bituberculatus, also called the prong-snouted blind snake, is oviparous. Female snakes produce clutches ranging from two to nine eggs, with an average clutch size of six eggs. Newly hatched young are independent and fend for themselves. Males possess solid eversible awned hemipenes that can retract into the tail in a helical pattern, as well as retrocloacal sacs.

Photo: (c) Owen Lishmund, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Owen Lishmund · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Squamata Typhlopidae Anilios

More from Typhlopidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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