It's finally time for Skinktober!
What's that? No, I'm pretty sure it was never called anything else.
seen from Colombia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Uruguay
seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
It's finally time for Skinktober!
What's that? No, I'm pretty sure it was never called anything else.
Western Skink (Plestiodon skiltonianus), juvenile, family Scincidae, California, USA
photograph by Tim Spuckler
species with funny binomials discovered this year
Zig (genus de novo) zag (a Malagasy legless skink related to Paracontias), March 2026. Zig is the first new genus of Malagasy skinks discovered since the 19th century, so this is quite notable! New species discoveries are common, new genus discoveries are much rarer. Some new Scincidae genera have been named recently in the form of splits from other (wastebasket taxon) genera, however, discovering a completely unknown highly divergent lineage like this is a rarity. Zig zag is a special little boop noodle.
Solenostomus snuffleupagus (sp. nov), May 2026 (literally, study was released a week ago), a new species of ghost pipefish, named for its fuzzy appearance bearing resemblance to Mr. Snuffleupagus from Sesame Street (pictured above). The genus Solenostomus contains six other species of ghost pipefishes. However S. snuffleupagus is so highly divergent in appearance, that when it was spotted in 2001 it was immediately known to be strange. It took 25 years of searching the Great Barrier Reef to officially find & scientifically describe this bizarre fish.
S. paradoxus, the type species of Solenostomus.
S. leptosoma, another species, to make clear the typical appearance of a ghost pipefish and why S. snuffleupagus is distinctive.
Though not all species were sequenced, genome sequencing suggests that S. snuffleupagus is the most evolutionary divergent of all Solenostomus (Maroubra, a syngnathid true pipefish, is used as the outgroup).
For context, what Solenostomus is:
Solenostomus is a monotypic genus (the only genus in its family) in the family Solenostomidae. They comprise the sister taxon to the Syngnathidae (the true pipefishes, seadragons, and kin, which contains the famous seahorse Hippocampus). Unfortunately, in Solenostomus, males do not get pregnant (the only thing that would have made S. snuffleupagus even more incredible), but they are closely related to the true pipefishes (all of which exhibit male pregnancy).
Those are two incredible discoveries within just the span of two months, here's to more wonderful scientific names!
Undyne is super good at food puzzles!
please just watch this is need other people to see it
Skink girl comm from Twitter Had so much fun working on this one :D
an actual mistake I've made
Eastern Blue-Tongued Skink for a $15 Ko-fi supporter
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