Anguidae
Anguidae is a family of lizards within the suborder Anguimorpha of the order Squamata, comprising approximately 90 species across 10 genera and characterized by features such as a reduced supratemporal arch, osteoderms embedded in the skin, rectangular scales arranged in longitudinal rows, and often a prominent lateral skin fold along the body.[1] These lizards exhibit diverse body forms, ranging from fully limbless species like glass lizards (subfamily Anguinae) that resemble snakes to those with well-developed limbs and robust builds, such as alligator lizards (subfamily Gerrhonotinae), with total lengths varying from under 10 cm to over 1.5 m in some cases.[2] The family is divided into two main subfamilies—Anguinae (primarily Old World glass lizards and slowworms) and Gerrhonotinae (North, Central, and northern South American alligator lizards, including arboreal forms like the genus Abronia)—with the legless California legless lizards (Anniellinae) often recognized as a third subfamily; the former subfamily Diploglossinae is now classified as the separate family Diploglossidae.[1] Native predominantly to the Northern Hemisphere but extending into northern South America via Gerrhonotinae, Anguidae species inhabit a wide range of environments from xeric deserts and grasslands to tropical forests and cloud forests, where they are mostly terrestrial or semi-fossorial, though some are arboreal.[2] They are carnivorous predators, feeding on insects, small vertebrates, and occasionally plant matter in larger species, and many possess the ability to autotomize (voluntarily detach) their long, fragile tails as a defense mechanism, earning some the common name "glass lizards" due to the brittle nature of the tail.[2] Reproduction varies across the family, with species being either oviparous (egg-laying) or ovoviviparous (live-bearing), and clutch sizes typically small, reflecting their secretive lifestyles.[2] While Anguidae have no significant direct economic importance to humans, several species are popular in the pet trade, and some, like the European slowworm (Anguis fragilis), face conservation threats from habitat loss and persecution.[2] The family's evolutionary history is ancient, with fossil records of extinct subfamilies like Glyptosaurinae dating back to the late Cretaceous, highlighting their long-standing presence in squamate diversity.[2]Taxonomy
Classification
Anguidae is a family of lizards classified within the infraorder Anguimorpha of the order Squamata.[3] The family was established by the British zoologist John Edward Gray in 1825. It currently comprises 9 extant genera and 92 species.[1] Some classifications include a third subfamily, Anniellinae (comprising the genus Anniella with 6 species of legless lizards native to western North America), while others recognize it as the separate family Anniellidae. The family is divided into two main subfamilies: Anguinae and Gerrhonotinae.[4] Anguinae consists of legless, snake-like forms, including genera such as Anguis and Ophisaurus, which lack external limbs and exhibit elongated bodies adapted for fossorial or terrestrial lifestyles. In contrast, Gerrhonotinae includes limbed species, such as genera Elgaria and Abronia, often known as alligator lizards due to their robust bodies, strong limbs, and keeled scales. Historically, Anguidae included a third subfamily, Diploglossinae, encompassing smooth-scaled, tropical lizards; however, molecular phylogenetic analyses led to its elevation to the separate family Diploglossidae in 2009.[4] This revision reflects deeper evolutionary divergence within the broader Anguimorpha clade.[4]Genera and species
The family Anguidae includes 92 extant species distributed across nine genera in two recognized subfamilies, Anguinae and Gerrhonotinae, reflecting a diverse array of legless and limbed lizards primarily in the Northern Hemisphere.[1] These genera exhibit varying degrees of limb reduction and body elongation, with many species showing endemism, particularly in Mexico for the genus Abronia.[5]Subfamily Anguinae
This subfamily comprises five genera totaling 27 species, characterized by legless or reduced-limb forms with elongated bodies adapted for fossorial or terrestrial lifestyles, often featuring autotomizable tails for defense.[6]- Anguis (5 species): Native to Europe and western Asia, these slowworms are fully limbless with smooth, glossy scales and a cylindrical body, enabling snake-like burrowing; the type species Anguis fragilis is widespread in temperate grasslands and forests.[7]
- Dopasia (7 species): Restricted to eastern Asia, including China and Vietnam, members are legless glass lizards with long, fragile tails that break easily under stress, adapted to humid forest floors.[8]
- Hyalosaurus (1 species): Endemic to North Africa (Morocco and Algeria), Hyalosaurus koellikeri is a limbless lizard with a slender body and autotomic tail, inhabiting arid rocky areas.
- Ophisaurus (13 species): Distributed across North America, Europe, and Asia, these glass lizards are limbless with extremely fragile tails comprising over two-thirds of body length, used for distraction during predator evasion; a key example is Ophisaurus ventralis, the eastern glass lizard of the southeastern United States, which prefers grassy wetlands.[9][6]
- Pseudopus (1 species): Found in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia, Pseudopus apodus (European legless lizard) has vestigial hindlimbs and a robust, legless body suited to dry steppes and shrublands.[10]
Subfamily Gerrhonotinae
This New World subfamily contains four genera with 65 species, featuring limbed alligator lizards with keeled scales and varied ecologies from terrestrial to arboreal, many showing high endemism in Mesoamerican highlands.[6]- Barisia (7 species): Endemic to Mexico and Guatemala, these terrestrial lizards have short limbs and spiny tails, inhabiting pine-oak forests at mid-elevations; Barisia imbricata exemplifies the genus with its rough, keeled dorsal scales.[11]
- Gerrhonotus (9 species): Ranging from Mexico to Costa Rica, members are ground-dwelling with strong limbs and prehensile tails for climbing low vegetation; Gerrhonotus parvus, the short-nosed alligator lizard, is noted for its small size and adaptation to xeric habitats in central Mexico.[12]
- Abronia (42 species): Largely endemic to Mexico, with some extending to Guatemala and Honduras, this genus includes arboreal species with prehensile tails and adhesive toe pads for tree-dwelling in cloud forests; Abronia graminea, the Mexican arboreal alligator lizard, is critically endangered and restricted to high-altitude Sierra Madre Oriental forests, highlighting the genus's vulnerability due to habitat loss. As of 2024, the genus comprises 42 species.[5][13]
- Elgaria (7 species): Native to western North America, from Canada to Baja California, these alligator lizards have loose skin folds and long tails, favoring moist coastal and forested environments; Elgaria multicarinata, the southern alligator lizard, is common in California chaparral and exhibits defensive tail autotomy.[14]