Amphisbaena fuliginosa, also known as the black-and-white worm lizard, speckled worm lizard or spotted worm lizard,[2] is a species of amphisbaenian in the genus Amphisbaena. The ecology of A. fuliginosa is poorly known due to its fossorial habits.[3] However, this species can be easily distinguished from others because of its characteristic white and black mosaic pattern that covers both the dorsal and ventral side.[3]
^"Amphisbaena fuliginosa Linnaeus, 1758". Reptile-reptarium.cz. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
^M. Wrobel (2004). "Amphisbaena fuliginosa". Elsevier's Dictionary of Reptiles: in Latin, English, German, French and Italian. London: Elsevier. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-444-51499-8.
^ abPaulo Nogueira-Costa; Flávia Vieira de Oliveira Aguiar; Guilherme Ramos da Silva; Mariana Campelo Afonso; José Thiago Barbosa Baldine & Marcos Ferreira Venâncio (2013). "Reptilia, Squamata, Amphisbaenidae, Amphisbaena fuliginosa wiedi Vanzolini, 1951: distribution extension". CheckList. 9 (1): 167–168. doi:10.15560/9.1.167.
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Amphisbaenafuliginosa, also known as the black-and-white worm lizard, speckled worm lizard or spotted worm lizard, is a species of amphisbaenian in the...
Lepidoblepharis xanthostigma". "Catálogo de la biodiversidad de Colombia - Amphisbaenafuliginosa". "New records of Diploglossus monotropis (Kuhl, 1820) (Squamata:...
South America. There are two species of legless lizards, Amphisbaena alba and A. fuliginosa, known as 'two headed' snakes on Trinidad. They spend much...