Western Hooded Scaly-foot (Pygopus nigriceps), family Pygopodidae, Western Australia
Legless lizard.
photograph by Artur Tomaszek

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Western Hooded Scaly-foot (Pygopus nigriceps), family Pygopodidae, Western Australia
Legless lizard.
photograph by Artur Tomaszek

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A common scaly-foot (Pygopus lepidopodus) in Australia's Wheatbelt. Though it looks snake-like, Pygopus are actually legless geckos.
by Jordan Vos
Common Scaly-foot Lizard (Pygopus lepidopodus), family Pygopodidae, South Australia
Legless lizard.
photograph by Jack Bilby
Western Hooded Scaly-foot (Pygopus nigriceps), family Pygopodidae, Francois Peron National Park, Western Australia
Legless lizard.
photograph by Mick Fullerton
Common Scaly-foot Lizard (Pygopus lepidopodus), family Pygopodidae, Denmark, Western Australia
Legless lizard.
photograph by Ross McGibbon

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Eastern Hooded Scaly-foot Lizard (Pygopus schraderi), family Pygopodidae, Rufus, NSW, Australia
This legless lizard is in a groups called the "flapfooted lizards". They are geckos, one of 7 families of gecko.
photograph by Mick Fullerton Wildlife
Common Scalyfoot (Pygopus lepidopodus) by Chris Hay Via Flickr: A sub-adult Common Scalyfoot, Pygopus lepidopodus, observed foraging on the forest floor. Lamington National Park, S.E. Qld.
Butt-Footed, Scaly Footed? Wait, that’s a Lizard?
There is a family of squamates known as the pygopodidae, known commonly as legless lizards, flap footed lizards or snake-lizards. The species pictured above is a pygopus lepidopodus and lives exclusively in Australia and New Guinea. The binomial name is descriptive: pygopus comes from the Ancient Greek words πυγή (pyge) meaning rump or butt and πούς (pous) meaning foot; lepidopodus is a combination of λεπις (lepis) meaning a fish scale and again pous meaning foot. As squamates (from the Latin word squama meaning scales), the pygopus falls somewhere between snakes and lizards-I mean that in a general-wait, what is it-kind of way and not a taxonomic description-they have no forelimbs and only very small or vestigial rear limbs (the butt-foot). Unlike snakes, however, the pygopodidae can both vocalize with a high pitch squeak, they can also hear a huge range much beyond that of most snakes and lizards.
Photo courtesy of eyeweed under a Creative Commons 3.0 license.