Saproscincus mustelinus


Saproscincus mustelinus, commonly known as the southern weasel skink or weasel shadeskink, is a small species of skink which is endemic to Australia.

Behavior

S. mustelinus is usually nocturnal, but is most active in the evening and warm mornings.

Diet

S. mustelinus hunts and feeds on small insects and other small invertebrates.

Description

The southern weasel skink is around from snout to vent, is covered in iridescent reddish brown scales, and has several distinctive white marks behind and below the eye.

Defensive behavior

If frightened this skink has the ability to lose its tail as a defence mechanism; the tail lies on the ground twitching, distracting the predator so the skink can escape.

Habitat

The southern weasel skink tends to utilize existing vegetation and fallen timber for shelter.

Geographic range

The southern weasel skink's distribution forms a coastal strip from south Victoria to southern Queensland.

Reproduction

Females lay up to four eggs per clutch in a communal nest. The nests are normally a dugout, a burrow, which contain the eggs of numerous females. Laying normally occurs between spring and late summer.