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Skinks include the three-toed skink Chalcides chalcides of southern Europe and northwest Africa, up to 40 cm/16 in long, of which half is tail, and the stump-tailed skink Tiliqua rugosa of Australia, which stores fat in its triangular tail, looks the same at either end, and feeds on fruit as well as small animals. A new skink genus was identified in the rainforest of the Philippine Islands and described in 1997. There are two species of moist forest skink Parvoscinus. They lack external ear openings and females have only one oviduct and lay a single egg.
Red stands for the warmth of the sun and of the population. Black represents fortitude and wealth. White symbolizes purity, hope, and the waves. Effective date: 31 August 1962.
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