Field Guide to Maryland's Lizards (Order Squamata)


​Common Five-lined Skink (​Plestiodon fasciatus )


Adult five-lined skink
Photo of Adult five-lined skink by Brad Carlson Flickr CC by NC 2.0


Size:
5 - 8½ inches

Appearance:
  • Variable depending on age and sex.

  • Young have five yellow or white stripes on the head, black body and a blue tail.
  • Adult females resemble the young, minus the blue tail, and a dark brown to brownish-gray body.
  • Adult males are uniform tan or olive with orange-red jaws during the breeding season (May-July), the color fading thereafter.
  • Males may retain some faded juvenile striping.
  • Experienced herpers will differentiate between this species and the broad-headed skink by counting the number of labial scales on the upper lip between the nostril and the corner of the eye of the animals. Five-lined skinks have four scales; broad-headed skinks have five. This should only be attempted by experienced handlers, as these animals have powerful jaws that can deliver a painful bite.

Common Five-lined Skink Adult Photo by Matt Sell
Photo of Adult Common Five-lined Skink courtesy of Matt Sell

Juvenile five-lined skink
Photo of Juvenile five-lined skink by Andrew Hoffman Flickr CC by ND NC 2.0

Common Five-lined Skink Adult, photo by John White
Photo of Adult Common Five-lined Skink courtesy of John White


Habitats:

Wooded areas, usually on the ground under rocks and rotting coarse woody debris. Microhabitat is usually moist. Primarily a terrestrial skink, rather than arboreal. This is the common skink of backyards and porches.


How to Find:

On cool days look under coarse woody debris, particularly within cutover woodlots and on wood edges. They may also be found in sawdust piles in the former.

On hot sunny days look for them basking briefly on logs and stumps or in leaf piles. They readily bite when handled, but while painful, it seldom breaks the skin.

Common Five-lined Skink Habitat, Photo by Rebecca Chalmers
Photo of Habitat for Common Five-lined Skink courtesy of Rebecca Chalmers


Distribution in Maryland:

Found throughout Maryland, although more common on the Coastal Plain.

Maryland Distribution map for common five-lined skink  


For More Information: