THE REPTILES
WESTERN SKINK. Plestiodon skiltonianus Baird and Girard
Field characters.Scales
flat, thin, and not ridged or beaded, overlapping (shingled) and forming
a very smooth body covering; body and tail evenly tapered to slender tip
of tail; both pairs of legs short, scarcely longer than diameter of body
(pl. 58a). Adults: Head coppery red; body olive brown above,
bluish green on sides, pale beneath; tail pinkish red (pl. 12c).
Young: Head and body dark brown, with two sharply defined yellowish
stripes along back; under surface pale blue; tail brilliant blue (pl.
12b). Total length of adults: Head and body up to 4-1/8 inches,
tail to 6-3/8 inches.
Occurrence.Common
resident throughout western part of Yosemite section, from Lagrange and
Pleasant Valley eastward to Yosemite Valley. Forages in shaded places,
in leafy debris in thickets and under trees; has retreats under stones,
logs, boards, etc., and down rodent burrows.
Most interesting among the several species of lizards
in the Yosemite region is the Western Skink, a peculiarly smooth-bodied
reptile, notable for its brilliant coloration and for the great
difference in color pattern between young and old individuals. (See pl.
12b, c.)
The young are commonly referred to by naturalists as
"blue-tailed skinks," since the tail is bright blue. The back of the
young is dark brown, relieved by two long stripes of golden yellow. The
adults, on the other hand, show no trace of blue on the tail and seldom
any indication of striping on the body. The tail in the older animals is
salmon pink, the head coppery red, while the body is plain greenish
olive. A greater age contrast in one species could scarcely be imagined.
This sharp difference in coloration led to the description of the
"red-headed skink" of the Yosemite Valley as a distinct species,
Eumeces gilberti (Van Denburgh, 1896, pp. 350-352). The entire
absence of small (that is, young) individuals of the "red-headed" skink
and of very large "blue-tailed" skinks, the capture of several
individuals of intermediate size and coloration (green-bodied yet with
indications of striping), and the fact that in a related species of
skink inhabiting eastern North America a parallel change in coloration
is known to occur, lead now to the conclusion that the two 'forms' found
in the Yosemite region are but different phases of growth in one and the
same species. In the northwestern part of California only the
striped-backed, blue-tailed phase of the skink is known to occur.
The Western Skink is conspicuously smooth-bodied. The
head merges imperceptibly into the 'shoulder' region, and the body and
tail are evenly and finely tapered to the slender tip of the latter. The
scales everywhere are thin and lie so closely against the body that the
animal can slip through a person's fingers as if oiled. It can also slip
through the piles of dead leaves, in which it often seeks its insect
food, with the greatest ease. The legs are small and short, particularly
in the adult, where they scarcely exceed in length the greatest diameter
of the body. Locomotion is accomplished more by wriggling or squirming
movements of the body than by use of these diminutive legs. The tail of
the skink, as in most other local lizards, will break off if the animal
be handled roughly, and will wriggle interestingly for some time.
Individuals are sometimes met with in nature in which the tail has been
broken off and later partly regenerated. Such animals can be recognized
by the stubby form of the tail.
The local range of the Western Skink extends from the
westernmost rocky outcrops on the foothills near Lagrange and Pleasant
Valley eastward to Yosemite Valley. In the latter place the skink has
been found as high as 4500 feet, at Inspiration Point (Van Denburgh,
loc. cit.). A dried skin of this species was picked up at
Snelling by one of our party, but otherwise no evidence of its existence
out on the plains of the San Joaquin was forthcoming.
Skinks are in the main cover-seeking reptiles. They
do not often forage in the open; they may come out, however, toward
twilight of warm summer days. The rock fences built in many parts of the
foothill country afford admirable shelter and forage grounds for many of
these lizards, as does likewise the boulder talus along the north wall
of Yosemite Valley. In the latter place, however, the skinks live on the
ground between the rocks, in the debris consisting of accumulated
oak leaves and pine needles; they do not go out on the surfaces of the
rocks as do the swifts (Sceloporus occidentalis). Skinks are also
to be found beneath fallen tree trunks or in slight excavations (burrows
of other animals probably) under rocks lying on open ground. Logs or
rocks in pastures or on grassy hillsides quite often afford retreats for
one or two of these lizards. In the 'mother lode' district some
individuals take shelter in the heaps of shale at old prospect
holes.
Several skinks were obtained in mouse traps set on
the ground under bushes for the capture of small mammals. These
particular individuals either stumbled into the traps or else were
attracted secondarily by ants and other insects which had gathered to
feed on the bait (rolled oats). Still other individuals were obtained
when we tore open dead and rotting tree trunks lying on the ground.
Western Skinks, particularly the blue-tailed
youngsters, are able to run with considerable speed when frightened and
upon open ground. But the normal movements, especially of adults, are
rather slow and heavy. On several occasions we had chances to watch
individuals which were undisturbed and engaged in foraging. The animals
moved in a hesitating manner, proceeding this way and that, advancing
and then remaining quiet for a second or two, usually going around
rather than over small rocks and other obstacles, even if of less than
an inch in height. These particular lizards kept their heads close to or
even upon the ground, and one in the course of its meanderings was seen
to snap up small insects from time to time. One red-headed skink was
seen gliding over the surface of a black-oak log in strong sunlight, one
afternoon in June. As the animal breathed a shimmering play of light was
reflected from its smooth scales.
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