Skinks


Skinks (Scincidae) are one of five groups of lizards found in the area - the others are dragons, legless-lizards, geckos and monitors.

Generally skinks have smooth scales (in some species scales may be somewhat iridescent), often lack necks, and legs may be relatively small, reduced or lacking. Several genera have fewer than five toes (digits) on each foot. As a general rule, the longer the digits, the more arboreal the species is likely to be. In species with reduced limbs, their locomotion resembles that of snakes.

Most species of skinks have long, tapering tails, which can be shed if predators grab onto them and which can generally be regenerated, though imperfectly. Species with stumpy tails have no special regenerative abilities.

Skinks are generally carnivorous and in particular insectivorous. Typical prey includes flies, crickets, grasshoppers, beetles and caterpillar and for some species may include earthworms, millipedes, snails, slugs, isopods. other lizards, and small rodents. Skinks use their tongues to sniff the air and track their prey. They can chase down prey until they corner it or manage to land a bite and then swallow it whole.

Most spend their time underground where they are mostly safe from predators, and a common characteristic is digging and burrowing. Often they dig out tunnels for easy navigation.

Currently there are about 1500 species of skink worldwide, and in Australia about 33 genera and 320 species. However taxonomic research is constantly revising the classification of species.

There is some agreement that skinks consist of three broad branches (clads): Egernia Group (including local genera Cyclodomorphus, Egernia, Liopholis and Tiliqua), Eugongylus Group (including Acritoscincus, Carlia, Menetia, Morethia, Niveoscincus, Nannoscincus, Pseudemoia and Saproscincus), and Sphenomorphus Group (Ctenotus, Eulamprus and Hemiergis).


Skinks

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Discussion

wombey wrote:
2 hrs ago
Hard to pick without seeing the pale leading edge to the ear opening. Based on the image and locality I think it more likely to be heatwolei but happy to stand corrected.

Eulamprus heatwolei
wombey wrote:
26 Oct 2025
This also looks like the following record, presumably from the same area. I would have to go with heatwolei here as well

Eulamprus tympanum
wombey wrote:
26 Oct 2025
There appears to be no anterior white on the ear opening and it looks like heatwolei

Eulamprus heatwolei
wombey wrote:
26 Oct 2025
The yellow stripe above the eye is missing so I would be inclined to go with heatwolei. It certainly looks like one to me.

Eulamprus sp. (genus)
LeahColebrook wrote:
26 Oct 2025
@PatrickCampbell2 thanks, I’ve added another photo. Unfortunately it’s a screen shot from a video as I didn’t think to take more pics at the time.

Eulamprus sp. (genus)
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