Chalcides
Bedriaga's Skink (Chalcides bedriagai)
Endemic to the Iberian Peninsula, although only patchily present in the west and almost entirely absent from the north. The species occurs in a relatively-cosmopolitan range of habitats, including coastal sand-dunes, agricultural pasture, rocky hillsides exposed to sunlight and more sheltered upland brook valleys, generally with plenty of access to hiding places such as rocks, logs and leaf litter, and is highly diurnal but reclusive.
Three subspecies are recognised:
C. b. bedriagai - occurs in northern and central Spain.
C. b. cobosi - occurs in southern Portugal and southern Spain.
C. b. pistaciae - occurs in the mountains of Portugal and northwest Spain.
Photo by
@KEEPER (subspecies unclear)
Italian Three-toed Skink (Chalcides chalcides)
Within Europe, the range of this species extends throughout Italy south of the Po floodplain, and also into Sardinia, Elba and Sicily; beyond here the species extends into northeast Algeria, Tunisia and western Libya. The species occurs in a relatively-cosmopolitan range of habitats, including sunny hillsides, overgrown sand dunes, humid brook valleys and even saltmarshes, but may inhabit any suitable densely-vegetated habitat allowing it to seek shelter.
Two subspecies are recognised:
C. c. chalcides - occurs throughout mainland Italy.
C. c. vittatus - occurs in Sardinia, Elba and Sicily; also extends into North Africa.
No photographs of this taxon are present within the Zoochat gallery.
Ocellated Skink (Chalcides ocellatus)
Within Europe, the range of this species extends patchily and in a highly-fragmented distribution throughout the islands of the Mediterranean, with populations also occurring in southwest Italy and southeast Greece; beyond here, the species is widespread throughout North Africa, the Middle East and the Arabian Peninsula. The European range of this species has been supplemented by numerous historical introductions. The species is largely diurnal but may be more crespuscular during the hottest portions of the summer, and inhabits a wide range of habitats from coastal sand-dunes and Mediterranean maquis, to agricultural land and associated dry-stone walls.
This species exhibits a high level of genetic and morphological diversity across its range, and as such the precise number of subspecies is unclear and a matter of some dispute. However, two subspecies are generally accepted to occur within Europe as follows:
C. o. ocellatus - occurs in Greece, Cyprus and associated islands in the Aegean Sea.
C. o. tiligugu - occurs in Sardinia, Sicily and Malta.
Photo by
@nikola (C. o. ocellatus)
Photo by
@Newzooboy (C. o. tiligugu)
Gran Canaria Skink (Chalcides sexlineatus)
Endemic to Gran Canaria and the offshore islet of Gando, where it inhabits a wide range of habitats including temperate forest and grassland, Mediterranean shrub, agricultural pasture, sand dunes and rocky hillsides.
Two subspecies are recognised as follows:
C. s. sexlineatus - Endemic to Gran Canaria
C. s. bistriatus - Endemic to Gando
Photo by
@vogelcommando (C. s. sexlineatus)
East Canary Skink (Chalcides simonyi)
Endemic to Fuerteventura, Lanzarote and Lobos in the eastern Canary Islands, where it occurs in agricultural fields and pasture, orchards and Mediterranean shrubland, and also into areas of human habitation. Classified as Endangered by the IUCN due to habitat loss and increasing rates of fragmentation between remaining populations.
Monotypic; no photographs of this taxon are present within the Zoochat gallery.
Western Three-toed Skink (Chalcides striatus)
This species extends throughout much of the Iberian Peninsula - largely absent from the southeast and south-central regions of the peninsula - and into Mediterranean France and the extreme northwest of Italy in western Liguria. A tiny disjunct population occurs on the Atlantic coastline of west-central France. The species occurs in a relatively-cosmopolitan range of habitats, including sunny hillsides, overgrown sand dunes, humid brook valleys and even saltmarshes, but may inhabit any suitable densely-vegetated habitat.
Monotypic; no photographs of this taxon are present within the Zoochat gallery.
West Canary Skink (Chalcides viridanus)
Endemic to Tenerife, La Gomera and El Hierro in the western Canary Islands, along with the offshore islets of Roque de Anaga de Fuera and Roque de Garachico. The species occupies a cosmopolitan range of arid and humid habitats throughout this area, including agricultural land, woodland, rocky and sandy areas, Mediterranean and temperate shrubland, and areas of human habitation.
Two subspecies are recognised as follows:
C. v. viridianus - Endemic to Tenerife, El Hierro, Roque de Garachico and Roque de Agna de Fuera
C. v. coeruleopunctatus - Endemic to La Gomera
Photo by
@TeaLovingDave (subspecies unclear)