Dibamidae or blind skinks is a family of lizards characterized by their elongated cylindrical body and an apparent lack of limbs.[1] Female dibamids are entirely limbless and the males retain small flap-like hind limbs, which they use to grip their partner during mating.[1][2] They have a rigidly fused skull, lack pterygoid teeth and external ears. Their eyes are greatly reduced, and covered with a scale.[2]
They are small insectivorous lizards, with long, slender bodies, adapted for burrowing into the soil.[3] They usually lay one egg with a hard, calcified shell, rather than the leathery shells typical of many other reptile groups.[2][4]
Dibamids are burrower lizards characterized by their elongated bodies with blunt head and tail, and an apparent lack of limbs.[1][3] Relatively small, blind skinks can reach a maximum length of 250 mm (9.8 in) from head to tail[3] and the snout vent length (SVL) is variable between both genus Anelytropsis and Dibamus.[2] In Anelytropsis, the tail is longer than in Dibamus and represents between 34 and the 38% of the snout vent length which can range from 77 to 180 mm (3 to 7 in).[2] In Dibamus, the tail corresponds to 9 to 25% of the SVL that varies from 52 to 203 mm (2 to 8 in).[2]
Usually dibamids are dark colored, from brown to dark purple, with little to no variation along their body and frequently lack elaborate patterns.[2] It is common to find a color gradation from the darker back towards a lighter ventral side.[2] Scales are shiny and smooth and very similar and overlapping along with some variation in number and shape in the head and anal regions where males usually have additional scales to cover anal pores.[1][2] Scale row counts varies between both genera; Anelytropsis has 19 to 25 rows whereas Dibamus has 18 to 33.[2] In both groups osteoderms are absent.[1][2]
General characteristics of the soft tissue includes a tongue that is covered in lamellae except in the tip, heavily modified ears without external openings or middle ear cavity or eustachian tubes,[2] and highly reduced eyes that are covered by a scale and lack internal structure, particularly in Dibamus.[11]
Limbs
Dibamids are lizards with highly reduced limbs but they are not completely limbless. Males and females have rudimentary poorly developed hind limbs containing a femur, tibia and fibula in males, and distal cartilage cap. These elements are more developed on Dibamus than in Anelytropsis.[12] Female Dibamus lack the tibia and the fibula.[12]
Skull
The skull is approximately 5 – 7 mm in length[13] with reduced kinesis and a more rigid skull for burrowing.[13][14] The combination of fossorial habits and small size, contributes to the development of a skull configuration that is frequently found in other groups of burrowers and miniaturized species.[14][15][16] Among those characteristics are the closure of the supratemporal fenestra and the post-temporal fenestra, the relative large braincase, tubular or scroll-like palatines and modified jaw suspension mechanism with the quadrate articulating with the lateral wall of the braincase.[13][14][16]
Other characteristics of the skull of blind skinks include the absence of a parietal foramen,[2] a well developed secondary palate formed by three different bones, the maxillae, vomers and palatines which are expanded ventromedially to form a scroll, and the lack of palatal teeth.[13]Nasal and frontal bones are paired and contact each other in a W-shape suture with no overlap between the two bones, and several bones are lost (lacrimal, postorbital and jugal) or highly reduced (supratemporal and squamosal).[13] The main cranial differences, besides sizes, between Anelytropsis and Dibamus is the presence of epipterygoid and postfrontal in the Central American genus.[2]
The mandible of Dibamidae bears less than 10 teeth and is composed of only three bones, the dentary, the coronoid and the compound bone.[2] A remnant of the splenial bone is only present in one species of Dibamus, Dibamus novaeguineae.[12]
Classification
The family Dibamidae contains two genera, Anelytropsis and Dibamus, and the close relationship of the genera was based on two morphological characteristics that are unique to these groups, the secondary palate and the lamellae covering the tongue, and additional cranial characteristics that can be shared with other groups of lizards.[2]
The anatomical characteristics that dibamids share with other squamates contributed to the formulation of different taxonomic hypothesis.[2] Dibamids, and particularly Dibamus was considered to be part of geckos and precisely the family of legless geckos;[17]snakes, considering the organization of the skull and jaw muscles;[18] or was proposed to be closely related to a group of fossorialskinks with elongated bodies and reduced limbs.[19][16]
The relationship of Dibamidae with other Squamata (lizards and snakes) has a long history of phylogenetic studies in which the morphological characteristics are used to determine those relationships.[21] Those analyses found close relationships between Dibamidae and all other lizards with elongated bodies, limb reduction and usually, a fossorial habit like amphisbaenians, snakes or fossorial skinks.[15][22][21] In morphology based phylogenies, dibamids are sister taxa to amphisbaenians and the clade that includes amphisbaenians and Dibamidae is sister to all snakes.[21] The close relationships of this groups are the result of convergent evolution among these groups since some of the morphological traits have evolved independently in different groups.[15]
More recent phylogenies using DNA sequences of nuclear and mitochondrial genes include a large taxonomic sample of squamates and place dibamids as the sister group to all other lizards and snakes, or with Gekkota as the sister group to all other squamates.[6][23][9] Phylogenetic evidence supports dibamids being the most basal squamates, being sister to all other lizards and snakes, and indicates that they diverged during the late Triassic, around 210 million years ago.[8]
An extinct monotypic genus, Hoeckosaurus was recently proposed from the description of fossil material from the early Oligocene of the Valley of Lakes in Central Mongolia.[10]
Dibamids have a disjunct distribution with one genus living in Northern Mexico, Anelytropsis, and the other one, Dibamus, living in South East Asia.[1] Biogeographical studies suggest that the separation between Anelytropsis and Dibamus, specifically the clade with species that are distributed in continental South East Asia, occurred approximately 69 million years ago during the late Cretaceous and the migration from Asia to North America took place during the Late Paleocene or Eocene through Beringia.[20]
Biology
Blind skinks are insectivorous and feed on arthropods and earthworms.[3] Blind skinks are characterized by their fossorial or burrowing habits.[1] They can dig their own burrows, use old burrows or other openings in the ground,[1] or dwell under the leaf litter or logs.[2]
Species of the genus Dibamus are frequently found in primary and secondary forests in a wide range of altitudinal variation (from the sea level to approximately 1300 meters above sea level).[2]Anelytropsis is found in drier environments and is adapted to xeric conditions of different environments in northern Mexico.[2]
Little is known about the reproduction of this group of lizards, but the inspection of female specimens from herpetological collections indicate that dibamids lays single egg[2] with hardened shell,[1] and eggs are laid frequently, at least in Dibamus.[1]
Conservation
None of the species of Dibamidae are listed as endangered species in the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora CITES.[26]
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) include some of the species of the genus Dibamus and the single species of Anelytropsis in the red list of endangered species, most are in the category of least concern, and two species, Dibamus kondaoensis and Dibamus tiomanensis are listed as nearly threatened and endangered respectively.[27]
References
^ abcdefghijkVitt, Laurie J.; Caldwell, Janalee P. (2014). Herpetology : an introductory biology of amphibians and reptiles (4th ed.). Amsterdam. ISBN9780123869197. OCLC839312807.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Gans, Carl; Parsons, Thomas (1970). Morphology B. Academic Press. OCLC610352006.
^ abcGasc, J. P. (1968). "Contribution a l'ostéologie et a la myologie de Dibamus novaeguineae Gray (Sauria, Reptilia)". Annales des Sciences Naturelles, Zoologie. 10: 127–150.
^ abcRieppel, Olivier (1984). "Miniaturization of the lizard skull: its functional and evolutionary implications". In Ferguson, M. W. J. (ed.). The Structure, Development and Evolution of Reptiles. Symposium No. 52, The Zoological Society of London. Academic Press. pp. 503–520. ISBN978-0-12-613352-3. OCLC729488307.
^ abcLee M Y (1998). "Convergent evolution and character correlation in burrowing reptiles: towards a resolution of squamate relationships". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 65 (4): 369–453. Bibcode:1998BJLS...65..369L. doi:10.1006/bijl.1998.0256. ISSN0024-4066.
^ abcRieppel, Olivier (1984). "The cranial morphology of the fossorial lizard genus Dibamus with a consideration of its phylogenetic relationships*". Journal of Zoology. 204 (3): 289–327. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1984.tb02376.x. ISSN0952-8369.
^Underwood, Garth (1957). "On lizards of the family pygopodidae. A contribution to the morphology and phylogeny of the squamata". Journal of Morphology. 100 (2): 207–268. doi:10.1002/jmor.1051000203. ISSN0362-2525. S2CID83508772.
^Haas, Georg. 1973. Muscles of the jaws and associated structures in the Rhynchocephalia and Squamata. In: Gans, C and Parsons, T. S. Biology of the Reptilia, v.4, (.1. M.): 285-490, fig 1-169.
^Camp, Charles Lewis (1923). "Classification of the lizards. Bulletin of the AMNH ; v. 48, article 11". hdl:2246/898. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
^ abcGauthier, Jacques A.; Kearney, Maureen; Maisano, Jessica Anderson; Rieppel, Olivier; Behlke, Adam D. B. (2012). "Assembling the Squamate Tree of Life: Perspectives from the Phenotype and the Fossil Record". Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History. 53 (1): 3–309. doi:10.3374/014.053.0101. ISSN0079-032X. S2CID86355757.