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Distribution

provided by ReptileDB
Continent: South-America Caribbean
Distribution: Lesser Antilles (maybe introduced, known only from one record in Antigua), Guyana, Surinam, French Guiana, Trinidad, SE Venezuela (Cojedes), Brazil (Amazonas), Peru ? Colombia (Castro,F. [pers. comm.]).
Type locality: Kartabo, Guyana. albifrons: Venezuela, Trinidad, Tobago ?, Colombia [Castro,F. (pers. comm.)] Brazil (Para, Rio Grande do Norte), Peru (Pasco: [HR 31: 186]), Argentina (Cordoba), Paraguay, Uruguay, Bolivia;
Type locality: œHabitat rarum in adjacentibus urbis Para [vicinity of Brazil, Belém (01°26'S, 48°29'W)] according to the original description and Vanzolini (1981) magnamaculata: Providencia, San Andres
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Epictia tenella

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Epictia tenella, also known as the Guyana blind snake, is a species of blind snake found on Trinidad in the Caribbean, and in South America, where it ranges from Guyana south to Brazil and northwestern Peru.[1]

It can reach a length of 170 mm (6-11/16 in) snout-to-vent. It has a medium brown dorsal surface, with a paler ventral surface and a yellow tail. Its head is dark except for a white to yellow spot covering the upper half of its rostral scale.

It is mesophilic. It burrows in damp soil and rotting vegetation, and possibly in ant and termite colonies. It feeds on ants, termites, millipedes, and eggs.

References

  • Schwartz, Albert; Henderson, Robert W. (1991), Amphibians and Reptiles of the West Indies: Descriptions, Distributions, and Natural History, University Press of Florida, pp. 621–622, ISBN 978-0-8130-1049-6

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Epictia tenella: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Epictia tenella, also known as the Guyana blind snake, is a species of blind snake found on Trinidad in the Caribbean, and in South America, where it ranges from Guyana south to Brazil and northwestern Peru.

It can reach a length of 170 mm (6-11/16 in) snout-to-vent. It has a medium brown dorsal surface, with a paler ventral surface and a yellow tail. Its head is dark except for a white to yellow spot covering the upper half of its rostral scale.

It is mesophilic. It burrows in damp soil and rotting vegetation, and possibly in ant and termite colonies. It feeds on ants, termites, millipedes, and eggs.

Epictia tenella 1847.jpg Epictia tenella 1847 - cropping.jpg Epictia tenella 35966.jpg
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