We deliver worldwide

Get your package anywhere!

Free shipping

On orders over $100 USD / €85 EURO / £75 GBP

Happiness guaranteed

30 day money back guarantee

100% Secure payments

Visa, Mastercard, Amex, PayPal, Google Pay, Apple Pay, Shop Pay, Discover, Maestro & more

We deliver worldwide

Get your package anywhere!

Free shipping

On orders over $100 USD / €85 EURO / £75 GBP

Happiness guaranteed

30 day money back guarantee

100% Secure payments

Visa, Mastercard, Amex, PayPal, Google Pay, Apple Pay, Shop Pay, Discover, Maestro & more

Welcome to BugsDirect Ltd. Leading Suppliers of Worldwide Entomology Specimens (Retail/Wholesale)

Eutropis multifasciata Lizard Skull | A1 Quality | Dry-Preserved SKULL

A1 Quality Lizard Skull Specimen

Eutropis multifasciata (Many-lined Sun Skink) – A museum-quality lizard skull specimen in A1 condition, expertly dry-preserved and unmounted, ideal for natural history collectors, herpetologists, educators, and artists.

Specimen Details

  • Scientific name: Eutropis multifasciata
  • Common name: Many-lined Sun Skink / Common Sun Skink / East Indian Brown Mabuya
  • Family: Scincidae (skinks)
  • Quality grade: A1 – Premium condition with excellent preservation
  • Condition: Dry-preserved skull, unmounted, ready for display or study
  • Ideal for: Natural history collections, herpetological study, comparative anatomy, educational displays, cabinet of curiosities, specimen art

About This Specimen

Eutropis multifasciata is one of the largest and most widespread skinks in Southeast Asia — distributed from India and southern China through the Malay Peninsula, the Indonesian archipelago, and the Philippines, where it is a familiar, sun-basking inhabitant of forest edge, gardens, and open ground. The specific epithet multifasciata means ‘many-banded’, referring to the species’ characteristic lateral striping. A robust, diurnal omnivore, it feeds on invertebrates, small vertebrates, and fruit, and is notable for its viviparous reproduction — giving birth to live young rather than laying eggs, an unusual trait among lizards that reflects a significant evolutionary shift in reproductive strategy. The scincid skull is a robust and well-ossified example of lizard cranial osteology — distinctly different from the agamid skull in its pleurodont dentition — teeth set in shallow sockets along the inner jaw margin — a broad, heavily reinforced temporal region, and a compact, powerfully built overall structure adapted for processing hard-bodied prey — all clearly preserved in this specimen. A precise, scientifically instructive, and comparatively valuable addition to any serious natural history collection or herpetological study.

Perfect for herpetologists, naturalists, natural history collectors, educators, artists, and interior designers seeking authentic specimens with genuine scientific and aesthetic value.

£24.99 GBP

| /