- Barkudia insularis
Taxobox | name = Chilka Spotted Skink
image_caption = Head scalation
status = DD
status_system = iucn2.3
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Chordata
classis =Reptilia
ordo =Squamata
familia =Scincidae
genus = "Barkudia "
species = "B. insularis"
binomial = "Barkudia insularis"
binomial_authority = Annandale, 1917"Barkudia insularis" is a limbless
lizard which was described in 1917 byNelson Annandale and rediscovered in the wild in 2003. Little is known about the species but it is believed to be found only in themangrove habitats nearBarkud Island inChilka Lake ,Orissa ,India . The lizard looks like a largeearthworm and lives in the subsoil and probably feeds on smallarthropod s.The
holotype was found in loose earth near the roots of a banyan tree of "Badakuda island" of Chilika lagoon in 1917. The most recent report of the species is from 2003.Taxonomic description
"Barkudia" (Annandale, Rec. Ind. Mus. xiii, 1917 p. 20 - type species "insularis") is characterised by the palatine bones not meeting on the mid-line of the palate, which is toothless; nostril between the nasal and the rostral in an emargination of the latter; supranasals present; pre-frontals and frontoparietals absent; body elongated; no limbs;
"Barkudia insularis" has the snout depressed, obtusely pointed, projecting strongly beyond the labial margin; rostral large, emarginate laterally to receive the nasal shield; supranasals large, in contact with one antoher and with the first labial; fronto-nasal broader than long, larger than the frontal; interparietal much larger than the frontal; parietals narrow, obliquely placed, in contact with one another behind it; 3 supraoculars, the first entering the supraciliarly margin, the first two in contact with the frontal; 1 large supraciliary in the angle formed by the 3 suboculars; nasal shield comparatively large, the nostril at its anterior extremeity; 1 large loreal; a preocular; lower eyelid composed of 2 or 3 opaque scales; upper eyelid vestigial; 4 supralabials, the third below the eye; ear-opening minute; a singly azygous postmenta; body elongate with 140 ventral scales between the post-mental and pre-anal plates; 20 smooth scales round the mid body. Tip of the tail blunt and not much narrower than the base of the tail.
Light brown above, each dorsal scale with a central dot; altogether thee form 12 or 14 longitudinal lines down the back and along the tail; lower parts whitish; top of head clouded with brown. The type was dug from loose earth at the root of a banyan tree. A second was seen in the same locality by
Frederic Henry Gravely in the rainy season of 1919. It burrowed rapidly into the ground. [Smith, M. A. 1941 Fauna of British India. Reptilia and Batrachia. p. 352-353]Notes
References
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* Annandale, N. 1917 Rec.Ind. Mus. 13: 20
* Biswas, S. or Acharjyo, L.N. (1979) A Note on the Distribution of "Barkudia insularis", a Rare Limbless Lizard from Orissa J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 76: 524-525
* Das, Indraneil; Dattagupta, Basudeb 1997 Rediscovery of the holotypes of "Ophisops jerdoni" Blyth, 1853 and "Barkudia insularis" Annandale, 1917. Hamadryad 22 (1): 53-55External links
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* [http://www.chilika.com/rediscover.htm Rediscovery]
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