Caecilia - Species

Species

Binomial Name and Author Common Name
Caecilia abitaguae Dunn, 1942 Abitagua Caecilian
Caecilia albiventris Daudin, 1803 Whitebelly Caecilian
Caecilia antioquiaensis Taylor, 1968 Antioquia Caecilian
Caecilia armata Dunn, 1942 Armored Caecilian
Caecilia attenuata Taylor, 1968 Santa Rosa Caecilian
Caecilia bokermanni Taylor, 1968 Bokermann's Caecilian
Caecilia caribea Dunn, 1942 Pensilvania Caecilian
Caecilia corpulenta Taylor, 1968 Solid Caecilian
Caecilia crassisquama Taylor, 1968 Normandia Caecilian
Caecilia degenerata Dunn, 1942 Garagoa Caecilian
Caecilia disossea Taylor, 1968 Rio Santiago Caecilian
Caecilia dunni Hershkovitz, 1938 Dunn's Caecilian
Caecilia flavopunctata Roze & Solano, 1963 Yellow-spotted Caecilian
Caecilia gracilis Shaw, 1802 Wormlike Caecilia, Slender Caecilian, Surinam Caecilian
Caecilia guntheri Dunn, 1942 Gunther's Caecilian
Caecilia inca Taylor, 1973 Fundo Sinchona Caecilian
Caecilia isthmica Cope, 1877
Caecilia leucocephala Taylor, 1968 White-headed Caecilian
Caecilia marcusi Wake, 1985 Villa Tunari Caecilian
Caecilia mertensi Taylor, 1973 Mertens' Caecilian
Caecilia nigricans Boulenger, 1902 Rio Lita Caecilian
Caecilia occidentalis Taylor, 1968 Cauca Caecilian
Caecilia orientalis Taylor, 1968 La Bonita Caecilian
Caecilia pachynema Günther, 1859 Intac Caecilian
Caecilia perdita Taylor, 1968 Andagoya Caecilian
Caecilia pressula Taylor, 1968 Marudi Mountains Caecilian
Caecilia subdermalis Taylor, 1968 Moscopan Caecilian
Caecilia subnigricans Dunn, 1942 Magdalena Valley Caecilian
Caecilia subterminalis Taylor, 1968 Taylor's Ecuador Caecilian
Caecilia tentaculata Linnaeus, 1758 Bearded Caecilia, White-bellied Caecilian, Linnaeus' Caecilian
Caecilia tenuissima Taylor, 1973 Guayaquil Caecilian
Caecilia thompsoni Boulenger, 1902 Thompson's Caecilian
Caecilia volcani Taylor, 1969 Cocle Caecilian

Read more about this topic:  Caecilia

Famous quotes containing the word species:

    There are minds so impatient of inferiority that their gratitude is a species of revenge, and they return benefits, not because recompense is a pleasure, but because obligation is a pain.
    Samuel Johnson (1709–1784)

    Let us guard against saying that death is opposed to life. The living is merely a species of the dead, and a very rare species.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    If we consider the superiority of the human species, the size of its brain, its powers of thinking, language and organization, we can say this: were there the slightest possibility that another rival or superior species might appear, on earth or elsewhere, man would use every means at his disposal to destroy it.
    Jean Baudrillard (b. 1929)