Fig. 146.–Cyclodus gigas. × ¼.
Of Mabuia with about forty species, in the whole of Africa, Southern Asia, and in Tropical America, we mention only M. (Euprepes) vittata, on account of its partly semi-aquatic life, a very rare condition among Scincidae. This creature, about 7 inches long when full grown, frequents damp localities in Tunis and Algeria, where the French call it "Poisson de sable." It often sits on the floating leaves of Nymphaea alba, and dives into the water in order to escape. Its proper element is, however, the sand, and for the night it retires under stones. The general colour is olive brown with a lighter vertebral band and two narrow whitish lines on each side, sometimes edged with black. The under parts are yellowish or greenish white.
Chalcides s. Seps s. Gongylus, of the Mediterranean countries also occurs in South-Western Asia. The lower eyelid has a transparent disc. The body is much elongated, and is covered with smooth shiny scales. The limbs are very short, or reduced to mere vestiges.
Ch. ocellatus, of the Southern Mediterranean countries, occurring also in Malta and Sardinia, reaches about 10 inches in length. The snout is conical, the ear-opening a small slit or hole. The limbs have five fingers and toes. The under parts are uniform silvery white, but the colour of the upper parts is very variable, mostly olive brown with black spots and irregular cross-bars, or with dark and light spots; sometimes uniform bronzy brown with a light upper and a black lateral band. This Skink seems to have no fixed abode, but digs itself into the sand wherever it wants to hide. The skin is not shed in flakes, but, as in most Skinks, it peels off by a process of gradual desquamation. Fischer's specimens paired towards the end of December. The gestation lasted 56 days, when nine young were born, which measured about 75 mm. or 3 inches; when three weeks old they had increased to nearly double this length.
Ch. lineatus, of Spain and Portugal, and of the South of France, like Ch. tridactylus of Italy and North-West Africa, has only three fingers and toes. The fore-limbs are only about one quarter of an inch in length in large specimens of 10 inches total length; the hind-limbs are a little longer. The general colour is bronzy olive or brown above, in the former species with nine or eleven darker longitudinal streaks; uniform, and with an even number of streaks in the latter species. Ch. bedriagae, of Spain and Portugal, has mostly five fingers and toes, and the limbs are relatively longer in this smaller species; but it is a question if these and other species of this genus are not to a great extent simply individual variations, since the reduction of the limbs and toes seems to be a very recent feature. Ch. guentheri, of Palestine, otherwise in every respect like Ch. tridactylus, but reaching a length of more than 14 inches, has the limbs reduced to tiny conical stumps without a trace of separate digits.
I have caught Seps accidentally under stones or pieces of bark in sandy districts. On the western coast of Galicia and Portugal, close to the sea, they frequent the gorse-bushes, on which they can be seen basking, provided they are approached stealthily. They disappear on the slightest alarm, almost swimming, as it were, with great agility through the prickly cover, and then hiding and wriggling through the loose sand between the roots.
The following five "families" are composed of degraded forms of various descent. Most of them lead a burrowing, subterranean life, in adaptation to which the body has become snake-shaped or worm-like. The fore-limbs are entirely absent, except in Chirotes; the hind-limbs are absent, or reduced to small flaps; the girdles are reduced correspondingly. The skull is devoid of postorbital, postfronto-squamosal, supratemporal, and jugal arches. The quadrate bone is mostly immovable. The eyes and ears are concealed, except in the Pygopodidae.
Fam. 14. Anelytropidae.–An artificial assembly of a few degraded Scincoids. The worm-shaped, limbless body is devoid of osteoderms. The tongue is short, slightly nicked anteriorly, and covered with imbricating papillae. Columellae cranii are present. Anelytropsis papillosus in Mexico. Typhlosaurus and Feylinia in South and West Africa.
Fam. 15. Dibamidae, consisting of the genus Dibamus, with D. novae-guineae, in New Guinea, the Moluccas, Celebes, and the Nicobar Islands. The tongue is arrow-shaped, undivided in front, covered with curved papillae. Columellae cranii are absent. The vermiform body is covered with cycloid imbricating scales without osteoderms. The limbs and even their arches are absent, but in the males the hind-limbs are represented by a pair of flaps. Total length of the animal about 6 inches.
Fam. 16. Aniellidae.–The genus Aniella comprises a few small worm- or snake-shaped species in California, which seem to be degraded forms of Anguidae. The eyes and ears are concealed, limbs are entirely absent, the body and tail are covered with soft, imbricating, more or less hexagonal scales. The tongue is villose, smooth, and bifid anteriorly. The teeth are relatively large, few in numbers, recurved, with short swollen bases. The skull, by reduction, approaches the Ophidian type; there is no columella cranii, the postorbital arch is ligamentous, the premaxillary is single, the nasals and frontals remain separate, the pre- and post-orbitals are in contact with each other, excluding the frontal from the orbit.