Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Spotting

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

1 Comment

AshleyT
AshleyT 9 years ago

Hi there, and welcome to Project Noah! If you are not sure about the identity of your organism, please leave the common and scientific names blank and tick the "Help me ID this species" box. This is not a salamander at all, very different from a salamander in fact. Salamanders are amphibians, and this is a skink which are reptiles. Your animal is covered in scales, which is something a salamander would never have. Take a look at photos of a two-lined salamander and you will see how incredibly different your animal is from that species.

The scientific name box should only have scientific names put in it, not common names like you currently have here. Your photo does not allow anyone to tell species identification, but it is in the genus Plestiodon (this is a scientific name and belongs in the scientific name box). This is an adult female of one of 3 species: broadhead skink (Plestiodon laticeps), southeastern five-lined skink (Plestiodon inexpectatus), and five-lined skink (Plestiodon fasciatus). Please update your information accordingly, thanks!

Yinjia Li
Spotted by
Yinjia Li

Virginia, USA

Spotted on Apr 20, 2015
Submitted on Apr 21, 2015

Nearby Spottings

long leg spider worms trout sheep moth
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team