Egernia striolata (Peters, 1870) is a animal in the Scincidae family, order null, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Egernia striolata (Peters, 1870) (Egernia striolata (Peters, 1870))
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Egernia striolata (Peters, 1870)

Egernia striolata (Peters, 1870)

Egernia striolata, the tree-crevice skink, is a social Australian lizard that lives in tree and rock crevices.

Family
Genus
Egernia
Order
Class
Squamata

About Egernia striolata (Peters, 1870)

The tree-crevice skink, scientific name Egernia striolata (Peters, 1870), is a moderate-to-large, deep-headed species in the genus Egernia. Its base color ranges from dark black to gray-brown, with a pale dorso-lateral stripe running from the head to the base of the tail. Scattered white spots and flecks sometimes appear on its torso. Ventral body surfaces are most often lemon-yellow or pale orange, while the ventral surfaces of the limbs and tail are whitish or grey. A dark lateral band runs from the eye to the groin, and this band contains pale scales that form transverse bars. The species has white or cream labial scales, vertically narrow pupils, and white auricular lobules. It can be distinguished from the related species Egernia kintorei by having fewer labial scales and more pointed ear lobules. In E. striolata, the nasal scales are moderately separated and only rarely narrowed. Head scales have narrow brown or dark margins, and may occasionally bear white spots. This species is native to Australia. Its distribution extends across the arid zone of Western Australia, from the Pilbara and Great Sandy Desert south to Carnarvon and the Great Victoria Desert. It is not found on the coast or higher altitudes of the Great Dividing Range, nor in central and eastern Queensland, or the outer ranges of southern Northern Territory and northwestern South Australia. The tree-crevice skink is largely an arboreal (tree-dwelling) species that occupies hollow logs, cracks, and spaces behind the bark of both standing and fallen trees. In New South Wales, this species is rarely found dwelling on rocks, but this is not true across its full range; in South Australia, it frequently uses rocks, tree crevices, and exfoliating rock slabs. Individuals have also been found under the leaf skirts of Xanthorrhoea species, and may even occur in human-modified habitats such as fence poles. This species strongly prefers structurally diverse, heterogeneous environments, and is much more abundant in habitats with greater diversity of crevices and rock sizes. Immature lizards often occupy smaller rocks with fewer crevices, due to competition for more complex habitats. As a heliothermic species, tree-crevice skinks prefer elevated sites that provide access to more solar radiation; greater solar exposure improves their fitness, and lets them forage more effectively, defend their territories better, and maintain stable social groups. Sociability in E. striolata varies with the habitat the population occupies. For example, in northern New South Wales where E. striolata commonly lives in tree stumps, individuals are less often found in groups, compared to South Australian populations that are mostly rock-dwelling. Members of the genus Egernia typically have strong attachments to a fixed home site. E. striolata is highly territorial, and tends to defecate in or next to its home site to create scat piles that mark territory. Individuals can distinguish between the scat of kin and scat from unknown individuals, which likely helps in territory identification. Very large accumulated scat piles near the entrance of a home site can signal that an aggregation of individuals is present at the location. Even though these large piles may risk advertising the skinks' presence to potential predators, the piles are still consistently made, indicating they serve an important function. Other Egernia species that do not have similarly complex social interactions lack the ability to tell apart scats from different groups, which suggests large scat piles are used for social territorial marking. The mating season of E. striolata falls in September and October. This species is viviparous and has relatively simple type 1 placentas, though little research has been conducted on its full reproductive ecology. It prefers to mate monogamously, keeping a single mate for at least the full duration of a breeding season. Each litter produces 2 to 6 offspring. After giving birth, adults tend to form nuclear families with their offspring, and may live together with multiple generations of young, so aggregations commonly form consisting of a breeding pair of adults alongside juveniles and subadults of various ages. This group living provides protection for young individuals from predators and infanticide. Female E. striolata can produce offspring without having mated recently; they have even been documented producing offspring after over a year with no access to mates. This is possible because females can store sperm from males after mating, allowing them to reproduce later even under challenging ecological conditions. This sperm storage capability also gives females an advantage in situations of sexual conflict, and lets females avoid inbreeding by allowing selective control over which sperm they use to fertilize eggs. Newly born E. striolata measure 47 to 55 mm in length, and reach full adult maturity at 100 to 118 mm. Juveniles generally stay with their parents in the family unit until they are fully grown before dispersing; full maturity usually takes 2 to 3 years, though this process can take up to 5 years, and the species can live up to 10 years.

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

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Squamata Scincidae Egernia

More from Scincidae

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

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