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Small Three Toed Skink

Chalcides minutus Caputo 1993

Distribution

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Continent: Africa
Distribution: NE Morocco
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Peter Uetz
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Chalcides minutus

provided by wikipedia EN

Chalcides minutus, or the small three-toed skink, is a species of skink found in Morocco and western Algeria. Its numbers are declining, but it is locally common. It is most often found in damp, sunny forests or grasslands with thick vegetation, but it can also be found in relatively dry areas, and its population is most likely decreasing. It is threatened by overgrazing and habitat destruction due to encroaching agricultural interests. Females of the species give birth to live young through ovoviviparity. Recent molecular studies have revealed that C. minutus could be a composite of species with individuals from the type locality forming long independent lineage and the remaining most closely related to Chalcides mertensi. [1][2]

References

  1. ^ Carranza, S.; Arnold, E. N.; Geniez, Ph; Roca, J.; Mateo, J. A. (March 2008). "Radiation, multiple dispersal and parallelism in the skinks, Chalcides and Sphenops (Squamata: Scincidae), with comments on Scincus and Scincopus and the age of the Sahara Desert". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 46 (3): 1071–1094. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2007.11.018. ISSN 1055-7903. PMID 18276164.
  2. ^ Montero-Mendieta, S.; Ferrer, J.; Ait Hammou, M.; Dahmani, W.; Sanuy, D.; Camarasa, S. (2017-01-30). "Another record or a new taxon? A candidate species of Chalcides Laurenti, 1768, in North Africa (Squamata: Sauria: Scincidae)". Herpetozoa. 29: 155–161.
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Chalcides minutus: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Chalcides minutus, or the small three-toed skink, is a species of skink found in Morocco and western Algeria. Its numbers are declining, but it is locally common. It is most often found in damp, sunny forests or grasslands with thick vegetation, but it can also be found in relatively dry areas, and its population is most likely decreasing. It is threatened by overgrazing and habitat destruction due to encroaching agricultural interests. Females of the species give birth to live young through ovoviviparity. Recent molecular studies have revealed that C. minutus could be a composite of species with individuals from the type locality forming long independent lineage and the remaining most closely related to Chalcides mertensi.

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