Ophisaurus compressus Cope, 1900 is a animal in the Anguidae family, order null, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Ophisaurus compressus Cope, 1900 (Ophisaurus compressus Cope, 1900)
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Ophisaurus compressus Cope, 1900

Ophisaurus compressus Cope, 1900

Ophisaurus compressus, the Island glass lizard, is an oviparous legless lizard found in the southeastern US coastal area.

Family
Genus
Ophisaurus
Order
Class
Squamata

About Ophisaurus compressus Cope, 1900

Ophisaurus compressus (Island glass lizard) reaches an adult length of 15 to 24 inches. It can be distinguished from other species in the Ophisaurus genus by two key features: a single dark stripe running along each side of the body just above the lateral groove, and a single dark middorsal stripe that may sometimes appear broken rather than solid. It also has many light vertical bars along the side of the neck, which are more prominent and more numerous than the corresponding bars on the Eastern Glass Lizard, Ophisaurus ventralis. This species is geographically distributed across Florida, southeastern Georgia, and southeastern South Carolina. Within this range, Island glass lizards inhabit coastal sandy scrub areas and adjacent pine flatwood habitats. Ophisaurus compressus is an oviparous species.

Photo: (c) J.D. Willson, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by J.D. Willson · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Squamata Anguidae Ophisaurus

More from Anguidae

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

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