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"snout" Definitions
  1. the long nose and area around the mouth of some types of animal, such as a pig compare muzzle
  2. (informal, humorous) a person’s nose
  3. a part of something that sticks out at the front

1000 Sentences With "snout"

How to use snout in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "snout" and check conjugation/comparative form for "snout". Mastering all the usages of "snout" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The two often sit snout-to-snout, opening their mouths and exchanging funny noises in a secret canine language only they understand.
Calling it a "non-partisan race," Ripa and Strahan placed the two baby pigs on an Astroturf field for the snout-to-snout matchup.
A shark's snout is usually the best area to strike.
She shrieks, unthinking, and pulls its snout from her breast.
A flatter face to accommodate a mouse's snout wasn't working.
Bill's face, vaguely lizardlike with an elongated snout, is among them.
He stroked under the rhino's chin, then over his broad snout.
Latin name: Blunt, rounded snout, cigar-shaped body, relatively small fins.
Hannah pointed with her snout to an old Nokia phone inside.
For comfort, the muzzle should fit closely to your dog's snout.
Pick up the muzzle with the opening facing your dog's snout.
Just look at the face -- specifically, the snout and the brow.
It is like finding a sheep with a snout like a wolf.
Still, maybe Peppa's ears should go on before her snout next time.
The snout is completely toothless and beak-like, unusual even among drepanosaurs.
Traditional dog muzzles are designed to fit snugly around a dog's snout.
If you had a large snout, this would happen to you too.
I had to wear a snout and ears and it was hilarious.
Snout shocker Ever wonder why so many Egyptian statues have broken noses?
"Crocs use their hypersensitive snouts in predation (detecting water ripples), social behavior (snout-to-snout rubbing), assessing nest temperature (arguably the most important in terms of long-term survival of a species), and safely carrying hatchlings," Carr told Gizmodo.
A dog ran up to me and nuzzled his snout at my knees.
The photo shows Cuoco planting a big kiss on the brown horse's snout.
Its name, Inermorostrum xenops, means "defenseless snout"—a reference to its toothless constitution.
They're also offering a cash reward for the safe return of the snout.
Buckle the strapsPick up the muzzle with the opening facing your dog's snout.
A photo of the animal showed a large, deep gash in its snout.
Andrew had a short narrow snout, whereas his parents had wide, square snouts.
Scanners and software take in the bristles, the snout, the eyes and ears.
With meat dishes, El Sayed cooks "from snout to tail," leaving nothing to waste.
Shadow was brought to Cottonwood Animal Hospital to be treated for severe snout disfigurement.
The trapper smacked the gator's snout, tapping it as it squirmed away from him.
When we return, I may daub his snout with Certified Organic Button Nose Butter.
Attack the sensitive snout, and gouge the eyes, and definitely do not play dead.
Lacking teeth, seahorses use their snout to suck in plankton and other tiny prey.
The thing nuzzling his ear turned out to be the snout of Lemberger's gun.
Ideally, employees hope to see the baby's front hooves, knees, snout and neck first.
A savvy bear might hide its snout to blend in with snow when hunting. 2.
It's smaller and slimmer than your average housecat, with tiny paws and a pointed snout.
Picasso will have dental surgery to correct a painful condition caused by his misaligned snout.
Drogon plants himself in front of Jon, and allows Jon to stroke his snout. Cute!
In other ways, Sarmientosaurus was unlike other titanosaurs, with a broad snout and fatter teeth.
When it hatches, a baby alien with a big snout emerges, and grows very quickly.
Video and photo evidence also shows this week's snout-shake is hardly an isolated incident.
Some dog owners said they also shake their own pooch's snout in the same way.
The snout of the remaining glacier hung above us, blue-grey and laced with crevasses.
And there's people at the bar, so I go in the bathroom, and I put cocaine on a key, and I go to do the coke, but I have a pig snout, so I can't get the coke through a pig snout, you know?
Ketron also gave a special shout out to Shannon, a cute pup with a cleft snout.
The bovine leader gets a treat from a bucket in which she eagerly buries her snout.
Nora doesn't just step into her kiddie pool of ice cubes, she dives in snout first.
Rafiki shows his respect by placing his hand above the lion's snout, in between his eyes. 
Removed Ewinever Breathable Safety Muzzle, Dean & Tyler Freedom Muzzle, and Canine Friendly Short Snout Dog Muzzle.
Paramount's first take gave Sonic wide nostrils and a nose that blended in with his snout.
They carried placards, megaphones, homemade signs, and wore the odd pig snout or full pig mask.
Furthermore, the details they have from being a plane, like the nose/'snout,' tail, wings, etc.
Its snout was unusually short and deep, a feature that suggests it had a powerful bite.
Arms turn to hooves, his back begins to arch as his nose adjusts into a snout.
It bulldozed two villages in the 1640s; at times its snout moved two metres a day.
The opening of Chhota Shigri's snout was five feet high, large enough for us to enter.
One dog snout smashes against the other dog snout, wet nose against wet nose, mouths still filled with the foreign strands of gluten that their canine stomachs will barely know how to process, and our child brains exploded with the sheer, unadulterated romance of it all.
We've never been that close to a donkey's snout before, but it sure is an interesting view.
It weighed about a ton and was 8 feet long (2-1/2 meters) snout to rump.
But dogs don't really use straws, so Maya just dunked her whole snout in her water bowl.
Not only is the size of your dog's snout taken into account but their temperament as well.
It hangs rigid in the air, moon-shaped mouth agape and whiskers quivering on its pointed snout.
Sometimes I'll drive past a truck and see a pig snout or tail protrude from the bars.
The center of the action is a woman who caresses the hulking beast of a horse's snout.
A pristine snout or severed feet missing their corresponding body is a telltale sign of cat predation.
And the part about Dani's snout being duct-taped was also a story, the Sheriff's Office said.
Some conservationists worry the fake horn will end up functioning like an ad for genuine snout protrusions.
Known for its silver-colored body and long snout, it was last spotted by researchers in 2003.
It also had a short snout and a horn jutting up from the top of its head.
Yet, since Azam's last visit, two years earlier, Chhota Shigri's snout had receded more than sixty feet.
The facial structure was sculpted precisely with this pup in mind, replicating its exact nose and snout.
His snout was suited to forests, but his parents would be grazing the ground in open areas.
The snout horn of the triceratops in "Jurassic Park" (pictured above) is far too big, Persons said.
Scotty had cranial abnormalities, including bumps and ridges down its snout, which suggests it had armored skin.
Common names include linearleaf snapdragon, weasel's snout, lesser snapdragon or calf's snout.
The holotype, a mature male, measures in snout–vent length, and the paratypes, three mature females, SVL. Body is elongate. Head is dorsally convex. Snout is truncate in lateral aspect, snout angle category 5 (angle of snout ~ 97°).
The holotype, an adult female, measures in snout–vent length. Males measure in snout–urostyle length. The snout is high and blunt. The canthus rostralis is distinct.
From snout to vent . Modern sources give snout–vent length for males and for females.
Eyes large. Snout broad. Anterior nostril closer to snout. Posterior nostril, anteriorly surrounded by dermal flap.
The holotype, an adult male, measures in snout–urostyle length. Three adult female paratypes measure in snout–urostyle length. The snout is acuminate. The tympanum is very distinct and almost circular.
Males measure in snout–vent length, whereas females can reach in snout–vent length. The snout is long and blunt. The tympanum is distinct and large. The hind limbs are long.
Unlike in the modern sperm whale, the premaxillae reached the sides of the snout. The upper jaw was thick, especially midway through the snout. The snout was asymmetrical, with the right maxilla in the upper jaw becoming slightly convex towards the back of the snout, and the left maxilla becoming slightly concave towards the back of the snout. The vomer reached the tip of the snout, and was slightly concave, decreasing in thickness from the back to the front.
Males measure in snout–vent length and have shagreen dorsal skin with low warts. Snout is truncate.
Male Nymphargus pluvialis measure in snout–vent length. Snout is truncate. Dorsal skin has warts and spinules.
Three adult females in the type series measure in snout–vent length. Males can reach in snout–vent length. The snout is relatively short and blunt. The tympanum is distinct; supratympanic fold is present.
Eichstaettisaurus was a relatively small animal. E. schroederi had a snout- vent length (measured from the tip of the snout to the opening of the cloaca) of , while E. gouldi had a snout-vent length of .
Adult males of Nymphargus siren measure in snout–vent length. Snout is truncate and dorsal skin is shagreen with spinules.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The eyelids have a row of enlarged, pointed tubercles. The snout is truncate.
Phrynobatrachus hylaios is a small frog with a maximum snout–vent length of in snout–vent length. The body is slender. The snout is moderately pointed.The tympanum is poorly visible, measuring about half of the eye diameter.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The body is relatively stocky. The snout is round. The tympanum is distinct.
The premaxilla, the front snout bone, forms a flattened snout, occupying 32% of the snout length. The premaxilla bears eleven teeth. The jugal bone is rod-shaped and its ascending branch occupies only a tenth of the bar behind the eye socket, not reaching the orbit. The neck is extremely elongated, representing half of the snout-sacrum length.
The holotype, an adult female, measured in snout to vent length and in snout to urostyle tip length. The male paratype measured in snout to urostyle tip length. The maximum reported female snout–vent length is and clutch size 60 eggs. The top of the head is flat, as typical for species of the formerly recognized genus Stephopuedes.
The holotype is an adult male measuring in snout–vent length the paratype is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The head is longer than it is broad. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–urostyle length. The snout is short. The tympanum is distinct. The limbs are slender.
Craugastor raniformis is a relatively large frog with a rather pointed snout. Adult females are much larger (snout–vent length ) than males ().
Snout has eight lines under the name of Tom Snout, and two lines as The Wall. He is the Wall for Act V-Scene 1. Tom Snout was originally set to play NDL father, but the need for a wall was greater, so he discharged The Wall. Snout is often portrayed as a reluctant actor and very frightened, but the other mechanicals (except Nick Bottom and Peter Quince) are usually much more frightened than Tom Snout).
The juveniles are 16– 105 mm long from their snout to vent. Adults are 40–107 mm long from their snout to vent.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stocky. The snout is obtuse. The tympanum is distinct.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The body relatively slender. The head is long with rounded snout. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout bluntly is rounded. The eyes are moderately large. The tympanum is small.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. Both fingers and toes are webbed. The tympanum is visible.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is hidden. The toes have moderate webbing.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The habitus is robust. The head is wider than long. The snout is rounded.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is weakly distinct.
Snout to vent length 12–13.4 mm. Body stout in shape. Head is laterally convex. In lateral and dorsal view snout oval shaped.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is stocky. The snout is slightly pointed. The tympanum is inconspicuous.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is moderately slim. The snout is blunt. The tympanum is distinct.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is moderately slender. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is distinct.
The holotype, a male presumed to be adult, measures in snout–vent length, whereas adult females measure in snout–vent length. The eyes are small, although relatively large compared to other Barygenys species. The snout is pointed. The tympanum is only faintly visible.
Two males in the type series measured about in snout–vent length and eight females in snout–vent length. The habitus is relatively robust. The head is relatively broad. The snout is broadly rounded but more truncate in males than in females.
Male Pseudophilautus stictomerus measure about in snout-vent length of and females . They have an elongated body with an obtusely pointed snout. The dorsum is dark brown. There is a narrow yellow stripe on mid-dorsum from tip of snout to vent.
Adult males measure in snout–urostyle length. The body is slender and the legs are long. The snout is truncate. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is visible. Males have a hypertrophied third finger.
The Dominican snout (Libytheana fulvescens) is a species of snout butterfly that is endemic to Dominica, an island nation in the Caribbean Lesser Antilles.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is short and round. The eyes are relatively large. The tympanum is visible.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is moderately wide. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is obscure.
The holotype, an adult male, measured in snout–vent length. The unsexed paratypes measured SVL. The snout is blunt. The tympanum is not visible.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is relatively narrow. The snout is truncate. The eyes are relatively large.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct. Males have a subgular vocal sac.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded in profile. The tympanum is visible. Supratympanic fold is present.
The type specimen measures in snout–vent length. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is not visible. The finger tips are feebly dilated.
Three adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length. The body is stocky. The snout is short. The tympanum is visible.
Barygenys cheesmanae grows to in snout–vent length. It has a globose body, a narrow head with pointed snout, and very short hind limbs. The snout bears three conspicuous vertical ridges. The tympanum is present but indistinct; a weakly developed supratympanic fold is present.
Males in the type series measure in snout–vent length. No females were collected but a photographed individual presumed to be female measured in snout–vent length. The overall appearance of this species is moderately slender. The head is narrow with obtusely pointed snout.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is slender. The snout is rounded and protruding. The tympanum is distinct.
Silvascincus tryoni is viviparous. A female measuring in snout–vent length and in total length gave birth to five young measuring in snout–vent length.
The holotype measures in snout–vent length. The head is wider than it is long. The eyes are relatively small. The snout is obtusely pointed.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length; females are unknown. The overall appearance is slender. The snout is moderate, bluntly round. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult females measure and a single adult male in snout–vent length. A newly metamorphosed juvenile measured . The snout is rounded. The tympanum is visible.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view. No tympanum is visible. Skin of the dorsum is nearly smooth.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is hidden. The toes have relatively well-developed webbing.
A "representative" adult male measures in snout–urostyle length. The snout is rounded. There is no externally visible tympanum. The body is long and slender.
Adult males measure and adult females about in snout–vent length. The body is moderately slender. The snout is sharply pointed. The canthus is sharp.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The head is broad and the snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult females reach in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stocky. The snout is rounded. The head is slightly wider than it is long.
Nick Bottom (left), Francis Flute (right), and Tom Snout (background) playing Pyramus, Thisbe, and Wall in a 1978 Riverside Shakespeare Company production Tom Snout is a tinker, and one of the Mechanicals of Athens. In the play-within-a-play, Tom Snout plays the wall which separates Pyramus' and Thisbe's gardens. In Pyramus and Thisbe, the two lovers whisper to each other through Snout's fingers (representing a chink in the wall). Snout has eight lines under the name of Tom Snout, and two lines as The Wall.
Adult males of C. alfredschmidti reach at least and females in snout–vent length. Tail length varies from 74 % to 85% of the snout–vent length.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stocky. The head is wider than the body. The snout is rounded.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate in lateral profile. The fingers are slender. Hind limbs are relatively long and slender.
Six adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length. The body is ovoid in shape. The snout is short. No tympanum is present.
Afrogecko species are moderately sized geckos measuring in snout–vent length. They have a fairly large head and long snout, cylindrical body, and round, tapering tail.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is visible and round. Maxillary and premaxillary teeth are present.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short. The tympanum is distinct and relatively large. The canthus rostralis is distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is broadly rounded. The tympanum is relatively large. The fingers and toes bear discs.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is moderately slender with triangular head. The snout is pointed. The tympanum is distinct.
506 p. It has an elongated body and a stretched and spatulate snout. The snout is a criterion for recognizing the sex of the fish, since females have a longer and finer snout than males. This sexual dimorphism reflects a different diet between the two sexes.
Males in the type series measure on average and females in snout–vent length. With a maximum snout-vent length of , it is the largest of the Arthroleptis species. The body is stoutly built. The head is slightly broader than long, with snout rounded in dorsal view.
Males from Thailand measure in snout–vent length; males from the Cardamon Mountains (Cambodia) measure in snout–vent length. The female paratype measures in snout–vent length. The dorsum is brown with some darker markings; the venter is whitish to yellowish white. The tympanum is large.
Bufo bankorensis is a large toad that can reach , even in snout–vent length. Females are larger than males. The snout is short. Dorsolateral ridge is absent.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is moderately slender. The snout is truncate. Neither tympanum nor cranial crests are present.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate. The head is slightly wider than the body. The tympanum is small but distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout rounded but approaching truncate in dorsal view. The eyes are prominent. The tympanum is small.
The type series consists of two adult males measuring in snout–vent length. The body is ovoid in shape. The snout is short. No tympanum is present.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is slightly wider than it is long. The snout bluntly rounded. The tympanum is brown.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is vertical in profile. The parotoid glands are large and ovoid. Dorsal ground colour is greyish green.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. Males have a weakly spatulate snout. The tympanum is distinct. The toes lack fringes and fleshy ridges.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is moderately pointed. The tympanum is small but distinct. The digits are enlarged to discs.
The Carabobo Mushroomtongue has a snout–vent length of 5.5cm and it is robust with a large and truncated snout, short limbs, and webbed fingers and toes.
The head of the common carder bee is of medium length and the snout is long compared to other species of bumblebee. The snout of the queen ranges between 13 and 15 mm (0.51 to 0.59 in) in length. The snout of workers range from 12 to 13 mm (0.47 and 0.51 in) in length. The snout of drones range from 10 to 11 mm (0.39 to 0.43 in) in length.
The function of the hooked snout in Proterosuchus is not fully known. The most likely use was in sexual or social signaling, similar to the hooked snout of male salmon. As the snout does not appear to have been sexually dimorphic, it may be an example of mutual sexual selection. The snout may have been used in a specialized method of predation, as it exhibits high resistance to dorsoventral bending.
The snout of Moschorhinus is characteristically short and broad. The blunt tip of the snout features a ridge running down the midline to the frontal bone. The lower jaw is much broader than that of any other therocephalian. The upper snout projects a bit beyond the incisors in juveniles.
Females can grow to in snout–vent length, males are considerable smaller. In a sample of 32 males and 6 females representing several populations, adult males measured and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is protruding in vertical view. Males have larger tympanum compared to females.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The habitus is stocky with relatively large and broad head. The snout is sharply pointed. The tympanum is distinct.
Dendrophryniscus proboscideus are relatively large among the Dendrophryniscus, measuring in snout–vent length. The body is slender and warty. The snout is protruding. The males have nuptial pads.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short and truncated. The tympanum is distinct. The finger and toe tips bear small discs.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate. The head is slightly wider than it is long. The tympanum is small but visible.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body and head are broad and flat. The eyes are large and protruding. The snout is short.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The tympanum is conspicuous and unpigmented. The snout is relatively short and broad. Fingers and toes are without webbing.
Adult females measure up to in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stocky. The head is small, slightly wider than it is long. The snout is truncate.
The holotype, an adult male, measures in snout–vent length. It has a squat body and a large, broad head. The snout is rounded. Colouration is pale green.
Adult males can grow to and adult females to in snout–vent length. The body is slender. The snout is truncate and short. The tympanum is faintly visible.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is nearly as broad as the body. The snout is truncate. The eyes are relatively large.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is wider than it is long. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct only anteriorly.
Assara is a genus of small moths belonging to the snout moth family (Pyralidae). They are part of the tribe Phycitini within the huge snout moth subfamily Phycitinae.
One paratype, held at the Bogor Zoology Museum, measures about in snout–vent length. Another paratype at the Museum of Comparative Zoology measures about in snout–vent length.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is moderately broad and depressed. The eyes are moderately large. The snout is broadly rounded.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is broadly rounded. The tympanum is distinct. The finger discs are larger than the toe discs.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded and non-acuminate. The tympanum is distinct. Dorsal skin is smooth to finely tuberculate.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The appearance is stocky. The head is broader than it is long. The snout is rounded to elliptical.
The holotype is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The body is elongate. The snout is truncate in lateral profile. The tympanum is visible and oblique.
Aphantophryne minuta was described based on a single adult female, the holotype, measuring in snout–vent length. It is very similar to Aphantophryne sabini but much smaller (mature A. sabini females measure in snout–vent length). The snout is short and rounded. The tympanum is small and only partially visible.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The snout is pointed in dorsal view and rounded in profile. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–urostyle length. The head is triangular with a rounded snout. The tympanum is distinct. The parotoid glands are moderately well defined.
Males measure in snout–vent length. The snout bears a conspicuous dermal spike. The tympanum is small but prominent. Fingers are long, extensively webbed, and with large terminal discs.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stout. The head is as wide as the body or narrower. The snout is rounded.
Adult females measure in snout–vent length; males reach smaller sizes than females. The overall appearance is stocky with short limbs. The snout is obtuse. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, about in snout–vent length. The snout is blunt. The canthus rostralis is rounded. The tympanum is hidden.
The only known specimen, the holotype, is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate. The tympanum is partly distinct. The eyes are moderately large.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, about in snout–vent length. The body is moderately slender. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is concealed.
The holotype is a female measuring in snout–vent length. The head is rather large and broad, with blunt snout. The body is slender. The dorsum is uniform brown.
Where Metriorhynchus mated, whether on land or at sea, is currently unknown. The name Metriorhynchus means "Moderate snout", and is derived from the Greek Metrio- ("moderate") and -rhynchos ("snout").
Adult males measure about and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is distinct. The fingers have well-developed discs and basal webbing.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is broadly rounded. The tympanum is distinct. The fingers have no webbing whereas the toes are webbed.
The snout of Colobops is very short, with the portion of the skull in front of the eyes occupying only a quarter of the total length of the skull. This portion of the snout is also reinforced by overlapping bones. For example, the nasal bones (on the upper side of the snout) droop down to internally brace the maxillae (bones of the side of the snout). This feature is also known in rhynchosaurs and rhynchocephalians.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on two specimens only, in snout–urostyle length. The snout is short. The eyes are prominent. The tympanum and tympanic annulus are present.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The head is broad and depressed, and the snout is broadly rounded. The tympanum is indistinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is hidden and indistinct while the supratympanic fold is distinct.
Adult males measure (based on two specimens only) and females (based on four specimens) in snout–vent length. The body is relatively robust. Skin is smooth. The snout is rounded.
Adult males measure about and adult females about in snout–vent length. The snout has rounded, protruding tip. The head and the body are dorsally flattened. The tympanum is absent.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is projecting and acuminate. No tympanum is present. The forearms are robust in males but slender in females.
It is pale yellowish or brownish with a pale snout. It has an unusual club-like tip of the snout, which separates it from other members of the genus Glaucostegus.
Adult males grow to usually no more than whereas adult female can approach in snout–vent length. The snout is acutely pointed. The tympanum is hidden. The toes are webbed.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The habitus is relatively slender. The snout is moderate, slightly pointed in profile. The tympanum is round and fairly conspicuous.
Males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stout. The snout is short, rounded in dorsal view and truncate in profile. The tympanum is indistinct.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen only, in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is rotund. The head is small. The snout is slightly pointed.
Maximum snout–vent length is . The snout is slightly prominent and obtusely pointed. The tympanum is distinct and about half the diameter of the eye. The canthus rostralis is angular.
The type series consists of females and juveniles; males are unknown. Adult females reach in snout–vent length. The head is narrow and short. The snout is short and rounded.
A relatively large Phrynopus, P. juninensis males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded in lateral view. No tympanum is present. The toes have no webbing.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. Eyes are extremely large with yellow iris. Snout is truncated. The skin on the back is smooth and belly is slightly granular.
Cornufer parkeri is a small frog: adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is slender. The eyes are large. The snout is pointed- rounded.
Length: 45–50 mm, maximum 53 mm Body Internarial distance greater than snout-nostril distance. Above Dark grey-brown to chocolate brown or green. A broad creamy to orange-brown vertebral band from snout to vent, bordered by elongated blackish spots. Snout without prominent pale triangle, not paler than rest of body.
Snout Spout was voted No.5 in The 14 Least Masterful Masters of the Universe by Io9. Snout Spout was voted No.3 of 8 Crazy Masters of the Universe Figures.
The types measure in snout–vent length; the smaller one is a sub-adult and both are unsexed. The snout is rounded. No tympanum is visible. The parotoid glands are oval.
Arthroleptis lameerei is a small, stocky species that can grow to in snout–vent length. The snout is truncated. The tympanum is distinct. The fingers are moderately long and simply obtuse.
The syntype(s) measured in snout–vent length. The head is rather large, as long as broad. The snout is obtusely pointed with a feeble canthus rostralis. The eyes are large.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. It is similar in overall appearance to Sclerophrys regularis. The snout is obtusely rounded. The tympanum is distinct and vertically oval.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is triangular and slightly wider than it is long. The snout is acuminate, sometimes bulbous. The tympanum is absent.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The head is wider than it is long. The snout is truncate and the eyes are protruding.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short and rounded. The tympanum is absent. The finger and toe tips are rounded; toes have lateral fringes.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The habitus is relatively stocky. The snout is short, broadly rounded or truncated in profile. The eyes conspicuously large and protruding.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is almost semicircular from above and rounded in profile. No tympanum is externally visible. The supratympanic fold is weak.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is vertical in profile. The parotoid glands are large and elongated to elliptical in shape. Dorsal ground colour is greyish green.
Adult males measure in snout–urostyle length; females are unknown. The snout is long and pointed (7–9% of the body length). The eyes are relatively large. The tympanum is small.
Male Tropidophis pilsbryi pilsbryi grow to a snout–vent length of and females to . Tropidophis pilsbryi galacelidus can get bigger, with a snout–vent length of in males but in females.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is broad and truncate in dorsal view. The eyes are moderately large. The tympanum is distinct and rather large.
Tip of snout largely naked. Lateral margin of snout covered with plates forming a rigid armor with short odontodes. Opercle supporting odontodes. A narrow unplated area bordering posterodorsal margin of opercle.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length, although different authors report somewhat different ranges. The body is rather stocky. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is visible.
Adult females measure in snout–vent length. The snout is slightly rounded and the eyes are prominent. The tympanum is visible. The fingers have no webbing but the toes are webbed.
Based on three adult males and two adult females, males measure and females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is slender. The eyes are very large. The snout is rounded.
Male Conraua robusta grow to a snout–vent length of and females to . The body is long and compact. The snout is short and rounded. The head is broad and flat.
The species was described based on a single adult female,. the holotype, measuring in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is robust. The head is broad and the snout is blunt.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate. The tympanum is partly concealed and indistinct. The fingers have vestigial webbing whereas the toes are moderately webbed.
The specific name is derived from Latin curvus, "bent", and rostrum, "snout", a reference to the distinctive bend to the left which was claimed to be present in all fossils of the snout. A later study indicates that "there is no genuine sideways bend" of the snout, "but a slight dorsal curvature". The same study emended the specific name to curvirostris as the feminine curvirostra had been incorrect. The holotype, F. A. 112, consists of a fragmented snout.
Miniature, Standard and Giant. A Schnauzer (, plural Schnauzer, lit. translation "snouter") is a dog breed type that originated in Germany from the 14th to 16th centuries. The term comes from the German word for "snout" and means colloquially "moustache",Schnauzer at Merriam-Webster Dictionary or "whiskered snout", because of the dog's distinctively bearded snout.
The head is broad, triangular and quite distinct from the neck. The tip of the snout is slightly but distinctly upturned. The rostral scale is generally higher than it is wide, touching 2 to 3 scales on the upper side of the snout. Dorsally, the snout is flat with distinct and slightly raised sharp margins.
Adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length. In a population in Taitung County, adult males measured and adult females in snout–vent length; mean male and female body mass were 8 and 15 grams, respectively. The snout is short and roundish. The tympanum is nearly circular; supratympanic fold is present.
Sibinia transversa is a species in the family Curculionidae ("snout and bark beetles"), in the suborder Polyphaga ("water, rove, scarab, long-horned, leaf and snout beetles"). It is found in North America.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is slender. The snout is pointed in dorsal view. No tympanum is visible, but the supratympanic crest is well developed.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct. The outer fingers have some basal webbing, whereas the toes are almost fully webbed.
Adult females measure in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is robust. The head is longer than it is wide and the snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct, elliptical in shape.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is acuminate. The tympanic membrane is absent. The fingers have no lateral fringes nor webbing whereas the toes are webbed.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust with well-developed arms and legs. The snout is strongly truncated in dorsal profile. No tympanum is present.
The only known specimen (holotype) is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The snout is truncate in dorsal view and rounded laterally. No tympanum is present.
The holotype is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The head is broad with a blunt snout. The tympanum is distinct. The canthus rostralis is obtusely angular and strongly curved.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. Newly metamorphosed froglets measure about . The snout is tapering. Dorsal asperities are usually strongly developed, while the chest and belly are without asperities.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is sub-elliptical when seen above and rounded-acute in profile. The canthus rostralis is rounded. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The head is as long as it is wide. The snout is subovoid in dorsal view and rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct.
Oreophryne celebensis reach in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded and short. The tympanum is at best scarcely visible. The fingers have large discs whereas the toe discs are much smaller.
Choerophryne darlingtoni grows to a maximum snout–vent length of . The snout is blunt, similar in length to the eye. The fifth toe is longer than the third. Coloration is highly variable.
The type series consists of two adult males measuring in snout–vent length. The head is as broad as it is wide and relatively flat. The snout is rounded. Tympanum is absent.
Pristimantis delicatus is a small frog; one female measured in snout–vent length. The body is elongate. The snout is moderately elongate and rounded in profile. The tympanum is small but distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust and stout. The snout is short but has a pointed tip in dorsal view. The eyes are large.
Adult males measure in snout–urostyle length; females are unknown. The snout is comparatively short (18–21% of the body length) and pointed. The eyes are relatively large. The tympanum is small.
Adult males in the type series measure and the sole female in snout–vent length. The body is obese. The head tapers evenly to the smoothly pointed snout. The eyes are small.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, in snout–vent length. The head is longer than it is broad. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is conspicuous.
Adult males measure and adult females about in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stocky. There is a strong, wide, white-edged, horizontal infra- anal dermal projection. The snout is pointed.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is broadly rounded and short. There is a small conical tubercle in middle of upper eyelid. The tympanum is distinct.
Females can reach in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stout with short legs. The snout is short. The tympanum is indistinct and measures about 3/4 of the eye diameter.
The longnose sawshark aka the common sawshark (Pristiophorus cirratus) is one of 9 species within the family Pristiophoridae. It has unique physical characteristics which include a long, thin, and flattened snout. Midway down the snout, nasal barbels protrude on both sides of the snout. Near the barbels, the longnose sawshark possesses a pair of ampullae of Lorenzini.
T. platyodon had a very long snout which was slightly curved on its dorsal side. The snout of T. trigadon was also elongate but ventrally curved. The snout of T. acutirostris was slender with a more pointed tip. Temnodontosaurus had many pointed conical teeth that were set in a continuous grooves, rather than having individual sockets.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on just one specimen, in snout–vent length. The snout is pointed in dorsal view and acuminate in lateral view; in males, the snout tip has a well-developed, shovel-like fleshy ridge. The tympanum and supratympanic fold are present. The finger tips are rounded but not expanded, without webbing or fringing.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on just one specimen, in snout–vent length. The snout is pointed in dorsal view and acuminate in lateral view; in males, the snout tip has a weakly to well- developed fleshy ridge. The tympanum and supratympanic fold are present. The finger tips are rounded but not expanded, without webbing or fringing.
The snout is about ⅜ the length of the head. The mouth is small and extends to half the length of the snout. The upper part of the snout and the area of the head above the brain are semi transparent. Small teeth are present in the mouth on the lower jaw and the head of the vomer.
Link Meanie of the Meanies) on guitar to release an album, Meuscram – Featuring the Sounds of Link Meanie & Ross Snout (October 1995) via Au Go Go Records. Snout broke up in November 2002.
Phrynoidis juxtasper are large toads: males grow to and females to in snout–vent length. Habitus is stocky, but the limbs are relatively long. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure at least and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is flat and broad. The tympanum is small (especially in females) but visible. Supratympanic and dorsolater folds are present.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view. The tympanum is prominent. The fingers and the toes bear discs; the toes are moderately webbed.
Adult males in the type series measure and the single female in snout–urostyle length. The snout is short and tapered. The fingers and toes bear relatively large discs. Skin has some warts.
The holotype is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The head is wider than it is long; the snout is long and rounded. The tympanum is prominent.
Pristimantis cosnipatae is a robust-bodied small frog. Adult males measure in snout–vent length. Head is longer than it is wide and the snout is long and narrow. The tympanum is prominent.
The type series consists of four unsexed individuals measuring in length. They were not examined in live condition. In 2014, two females measuring in snout–vent length were collected. The snout is rounded.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is slender. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct and rounded but dorsally obscured by the thick supra-tympanic fold.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is slightly wider than it is long. The snout is sharply truncate in lateral view. The fingers and toes are webbed.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is relatively robust. The head is moderately triangular and slightly wider than in it is long. The snout is relatively pointed.
Adult males measure , subadult males , and subadult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is not very distinct whereas the supratymapnic fold is prominent. Adult males have enlarged forelimbs.
Cornufer guppyi are large frogs: females can be as large as in snout–vent length and weigh . Females up to may still not be mature. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is round.
The holotype, an adult female, measures in snout–vent length. The snout is relatively flat and dorsoventrally compressed. The tympanum is visible; the supratympanic fold is weakly developed. The canthus rostralis is distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is stout with triangular head; the snout is pointed. The tympanum is distinct. The fingers are unwebbed and have small discs.
Five adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length; no females were collected. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is indistinct. The fingers and toes have discs but no webbing.
The size of the snout flaps are also highly variable.
An additional diagnostic feature is its rounded, plainly coloured snout.
The male snout–vent length is and the female is .
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length.
Male Leptobrachium buchardi measure and female in snout–vent length.
Male frogs measure and females frogs in snout–vent length.
Tail is laterally compressed and shorter than snout–vent length.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length and in total length. Adult females measure in snout–vent length and in total length. The body is stout. The fingers and the toes have slight webbing.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is slightly compressed and the head is large. The snout is rounded. Tympanum is totally absent, but the supratympanic fold is distinct.
The occiput is high, but the skull narrows toward the snout. The snout is pointed and projects past the jaw. In dorsal view, the skull is roughly triangular. The ventral temporal margin is emarginated.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on two specimens only, in snout–vent length. The snout is acuminate. The tympanic membrane is absent. The fingers have no webbing whereas the toes are webbed.
Males measure and females (based on a single specimen) about in snout–vent length. The snout is obtuse in profile. The parotoid glands are globose and pearl-shaped in shape. The dorsum is granulose.
This frog is about the size of a fingernail: males measure and females about in snout–vent length. The snout is truncated. The tympanum is partially hidden under skin. Dorsal skin is slightly granular.
The male holotype measures about in snout–vent length and two female paratypes about . The snout is rounded in lateral view. Dorsal skin is shagreen with spinules. The hands and feet are moderately webbed.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subelliptical to elliptical from above and rounded in profile. The upper eye is covered with large tubercles. The tympanum is distinct.
The type series consists of three adult females, a male, and a juvenile. The male measures and the females in snout–vent length. The snout is long and rounded. The tympanum has prominent annulus.
The holotype, an adult male, measured in snout–vent length. The snout is distinctly shovel-shaped. Dorsum is spotted. Skin is glandular and finely warty above, with best developed warts on sides of body.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short and rounded. The tympanum is distinct. Skin of the dorsum has large flat warts; those on the flanks are smaller.
Males measure and females, based on just three specimens, in snout–vent length. The head is wide with a short, rounded snout. The eyes are large and prominent. The fingers and toes are unwebbed.
The holotype, an adult male, measures in snout–vent length. The head is slightly wider than the body and slightly wider than it is long. The snout is subacuminate. The canthus rostralis is evident.
The type series consists of two adult males measuring in snout–vent length. No other specimens are known. The snout is truncate. The tympanum is very indistinct and there is a weak supratympanic fold.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate or round in lateral view. The texture of dorsal skin is shagreen and includes spinules and white warts. The toes have some webbing.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and protruding in lateral profile and has a pointed tip. The canthus rostralis is sharp. The tympanum is prominent.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is slender. The head is slightly longer than it is wide. The snout is obtuse in lateral view and slightly tapering in dorsal view.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The head is narrow in the dorsal view, and the snout is pointed; the eyes are large. The body is relatively slender. Skin is tuberculate.
Adult measure in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate. The tympanic ring is indistinct and the supratympanic fold is not well-developed. The fingers have no discs while the toes bear expanded discs.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded to broadly round-pointed. The tympanum is distinct and moderately large. The fingers tips are dilated into moderate, depressed discs.
This species is only known from the holotype, which is an adult male measuring about in snout–vent length. The body is moderately stout. The snout is somewhat blunt. The eyes are large (diameter ).
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded in dorsal view. The tympanum is small and indistinct. The fingers are one-third webbed whereas the toes are fully webbed.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The body is moderately robust. The head is slightly wider than long and as wide as the body; the snout is short. The eyes are large.
The holotype is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The tail length is . The snout is broadly rounded and the eyes are protuberant. The head is just slightly wider than the neck.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is bluntly rounded in dorsal view and truncate in profile. The parotoid gland is diffuse. The fingers and toes bear small discs.
Pseudophilautus stellatus reaches a snout–vent length of (two males and one female of intermediate size). The head is concave above. The snout is rounded. The interorbital space and the internarial space are concave.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on only two specimens, in snout–vent length. The body is stout. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is visible and the supratympanic fold is prominent.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is moderately stout with triangular head. The snout is obtusely pointed in dorsal view but rounded in profile. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stocky. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is present but completely hidden by skin; the supratympanic fold is weakly curved.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is pointed. The canthus rostralis is angular, and the canthal ridges are sharp. The tympanum is visible and the supratympanic fold is distinct.
P. carinata lay eggs. Females probably mature between 47.5 and 51.0 cm snout-vent length, and males between 29.0 and 31.0 cm snout-vent length. Juveniles are born at sizes between 16 and 18 cm.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length; no females were included in the type series. The body is relatively slender. The snout is truncate. The tympanum is moderately large, obscured dorsally by the supratympanic fold.
The toes are partially webbed. The dorsum is grey-pink or reddish-brown. The snout is paler and bordered by dark bar between the eyes. A brown stripe runs from the snout to the shoulder.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is acuminate. The tympanic membrane, annulus, and stapes are absent. The fingers have lateral fringes but no webbing whereas the toes are webbed.
Astylosternus batesi was described based on a single specimen (holotype) that measures in snout–vent length. The head is large, much broader than it is long. The snout is broadly rounded. The eyes are large.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short and obtuse. The tympanum is undifferentiated but is sometimes visible in preserved specimens. The fingers and toes bear well-developed discs.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is robust. The head is wider than it is long and the snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct, elliptical in shape.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body shape is lean and hydrodynamic. The head is large, broad, and depressed. The snout is subovoid in dorsal view and prominently pointed laterally.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The hands and feet are partly webbed. Both the finger and toe tips have discs, those on the fingers are relatively large.
Males measure in snout–vent length. They have a truncate snout and shagreen dorsum with spinules. Centrolene notosticta is one of the few Centroleninae species in which females place egg clutches on undersides of leaves.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is longer than it is wide. The snout is truncate in dorsal view and rounded in profile. The tympanum is small but distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is almost as wide as the body. The snout is long, subacuminate in dorsal view and round in profile. The tympanum is visible.
Males can grow to and females to in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is squat, and the head is notably narrower than the rotund body. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is poorly visible.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is nearly ovoid in dorsal view and anteriorly inclined in lateral view. The tympanum is partly concealed. The canthus rostralis is acute but not prominent.
Adult males in the type series (two individuals) measure about in snout–vent length (SVL). In a larger series, adult males measure and adult females SVL. The snout is rounded. The canthus rostralis is sharp.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate. The tympanum is small, recessed, and smooth, whereas the tympanic annulus is granular. The forelimbs are slender; fingers are without webbing.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is narrower than the body. The snout is short, rounded in dorsal view and rounded to truncate in lateral view. Tympanum is absent.
Males grow to and females to in snout–vent length. The snout is moderately short and acutely rounded. The tympanum is barely discernible. The fingers have large discs and are up to one-third webbed.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on two specimens only, in snout–vent length. The body is slender. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct with prominent annulus; the supratympanic fold is evident.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is longer than it is wide. The snout is sub- elliptical in dorsal view and rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct.
Males can reach a maximum snout–vent length of and females , depending on the source. The tympanum is round and typically visible. The snout is narrowed, rounded, and somewhat prominent. The toes are moderately webbed.
Adult males can grow to and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short. The tympanum is distinct and about one-half of the eye width. The fingers and toes have distinct discs.
Chiropterotriton cracens is a small, slender salamander. Adults measure in snout–vent length. The tail is long, maximally 1.5 times the snout-vent length. Limbs are well developed; hind legs are slightly longer than forelegs.
The holotype is an adult male measuring in snout–vent length. The body is stout. The snout is bluntly angled dorsally and rounded in profile. The tympanum is visible, and the supratympanic fold is prominent.
The holotype measures in snout–vent length and is at least a sub-adult. The snout is relatively long and sloping forwards, round, and truncate in profile. The tympanum is distinct. The limbs are slender.
Males of Pristimantis minimus grow to a mean size of in snout–vent length (range: ). Females are somewhat larger, in snout–vent length. Dorsum is smooth to slightly shagreen. Finger and toe pads are expanded.
Adults of R. ocellata have a snout-to- vent length of .
Jocara marchiana is a species of snout moth found in Guatemala.
A conspicuous black stripe occurs from the snout to the eye.
Its forearm length is approximately . Its snout is long and narrow.
Adult males of C. molligodai measure in snout–vent length (SVL).
The snout is dusky in color. The maximum known length is .
Cnemaspis kottiyoorensis holotype, an adult female, measures in snout–vent length.
The hardnose shark is slender, with a long snout and elongated rear tips on the dorsal fins. The hardnose shark is a slim-bodied species with a long, narrow, and pointed snout. Unlike in other Carcharhinus species, its rostral (snout) cartilages are highly calcified, hence the name "hardnose". The circular eyes are rather large and equipped with protective nictitating membranes.
Microhyla kodial is a very small species with a snout to vent length of about 16.9-17.4mm in male and 18.0 to 20.4mm in female. Its snout is rounded in ventral and dorsal view, the canthus rostralis is indistinct and the snout protrudes beyond mouth in ventral view. Vertebral stripes are absent along with the absence of superciliary tubercles. Dorsal view.
C. tarzan is approximately in total length, in snout-vent length (SVL), with anteriorly fused rostral crests to form a "spade-like" snout that projects 1 millimeter beyond its snout tip. The chameleon has green to light yellow coloration and has a dark transversal band when it is stressed. This species has a very low casque in comparison to other chameleons.
Pogona minor minor lizards are large, 38 cm in length (15 cm from snout to vent), P. m. minima is slightly smaller, at 11cm snout to vent, and P. m. mitchelli has a snout to vent length of 16cm. All bearded dragons have a chameleon-like colour, either blending into their environments or presenting brighter displays during interaction with others.
The Sierra Juarez brook frog is a small species with a snout–vent length length of . The male has a rounded snout when seen from above and a squarish snout when seen from the side. The nostrils are protuberant, the eyes have golden irises and the tympani are oval. The limbs are fairly robust and the toes are partially webbed.
The pelvic fin is reduced to a ventral protrusion. They also typically have a large block spot by their peduncular spines, and the caudal fin is orange. In general, males tend to be larger and lack a concave snout, and also lose the lines on his snout as he matures. Females and juveniles are smaller and have a concave snout.
The length of its lower jaw is , while its skull is long. Its snout is reduced; the skull roof slopes steeply towards the tip of its snout. The ratio between the length of its snout to the length of its jaw is lower than that in T. platyodon. The skull and lower jaw are deep dorsoventrally, making the head appear robust.
It has a large and robust skull with a long, narrow snout. The angle of the slope from snout to braincase increases constantly, with no depression between the two. Its upper canines are long and slender.
The holotype, an adult female, measures in snout–vent length. The body is relatively robust. The head is as wide as it is long. The snout is bluntly truncate in dorsal view but rounded in profile.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The species has a robust appearance. The snout is rounded with a small apical apophysis in dorsal view and sub- acuminate in lateral profile. The coloration is variable.
Pelophryne misera are small, stout toads. Males measure and females in snout–vent length. Colouration is dark brown, with blackish markings on the head, back, and flanks. The snout is blunt and has truncated vertical profile.
The type series includes six adult females measuring in snout–vent length. No males were collected. The head is narrower than the body but broader than it is long. The snout is truncate in dorsal view.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is moderately slender. The head is longer than it is wide. The snout is obtusely pointed in dorsal view and round in profile.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subovoid in dorsal view and rounded in profile. The canthus rostralis is rounded and concave. A fleshy fold is present between the eyes.
Adult males in the type series measure and the sole adult female in snout–vent length. The head is almost triangular, longer than it is broad. The snout is long and protruding. The eyes are small.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and sloping in lateral profile. The canthus rostralis is sharp and slightly concave. The tympanum is concealed by skin.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust and stout. The snout is short and broadly rounded. The eyes are large; there are two well-developed bulbous, bony postocular swellings.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. Despite its small size, it has a robust appearance. The head is rather wide, and wider than the body. The snout is blunt in dorsal view.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is relatively long and pointed, especially in adults. The fingers and toes are unwebbed but bear discs with terminal grooves. Dorsal skin is pustulose.
Phrynobatrachus ukingensis is a small species; males grow to and females to in snout–vent length. The snout is moderate. The tympanum is hidden. The finger and toe tips are dilated into small but distinct discs.
Phrynobatrachus gastoni is a medium-sized Phrynobatrachus that measures about in snout–vent length (the size of the holotype, an adult female). The overall appearance is stout. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is visible.
Males grow to a snout–vent length of and females to . The body is elongated and the snout is moderately pointed, rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is relatively large. The legs are slender and long.
The type series consists of two adult males measuring in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is slender, with the head wider than the body. The snout is short and almost truncate. The tympanum is distinct.
Males typically measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is obtusely pointed and projecting beyond the jaw. The tympanum is visible. The fingers and the toes bear round discs; the toes are fully webbed.
The holotype is a female, in poor condition of preservation. It measures in snout–vent length. The body is robust and the snout is rounded. The fingers are one-third and the toes four-fifths webbed.
Sarcohyla celata is a moderately-sized frog. Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length (although the largest specimen was a male, females are larger on average). The snout is blunt. The tympanum is evident.
Males can reach and females in snout–vent length. The snout is conspicuously acute. The tympanum is distinct. The dorsum is usually brownish or grayish, and most individuals have an hour-glass pattern in their back.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length, whereas adult females measure . The overall appearance is moderately slender. The head is longer than it is wide. The snout is obtusely pointed in dorsal view and rounded laterally.
They are differentiated from Ancistrus by the presence of plates along the edge of the snout (Ancistrus lack these plates) and by maximally having translucent tentacles on the snout that have odontodes associated with them (in Ancistrus there are larger tentacles without associated odontodes coloured the same as the head). The snout of nuptial males are almost square, rather than rounded as in females and juveniles. Adult males of most species (except L. tentaculatus) have whiskerlike odontodes at anterolateral corner of snout; in L. tentaculatus, males have tentacles instead of whiskerlike odontodes along anterior margin of snout. Also, nuptial males with tentacles longer than their associated odontodes on the pectoral-fin spine.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is wide and the snout is rounded to mucronate in dorsal view and rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct. The body is robust.
Hyperolius concolor is a medium to large-sized member of its genus, with males measuring and females about in snout–vent length. The snout is long and pointed. The pupil is horizontal. There are two colour phases.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is tapering. The gular disc is large and usually has small asperities. There are also minute asperities on the head; otherwise, the body has no asperities.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length; two juveniles measured . The body is moderately robust. The head is slightly longer than it is wide. The snout is short and bluntly rounded in dorsal view, rounded in profile.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The body is robust and the head is wider than long. The snout is rounded in dorsal view and acuminate-rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct and large.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is wider than the body. The snout is rounded. The canthus rostralis and supra-tympanic fold are prominent, the latter obscuring upper edge of tympanum.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is slightly wider than it is long. The snout bluntly rounded in dorsal view and truncate (or nearly so) in profile. The tympanum is brown.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is prominent, projecting far beyond the anterior limit of the mandible. Its tip is often slightly uptilted. The head is wider than it is long.
The type series includes one adult male measuring and two adult females measuring in snout–vent length. Four juveniles ranged in SVL. The head is relatively wide and the snout is short. The canthus rostralis is rounded.
Callulops robustus are moderately large frogs: males grow to a snout–vent length of and females to . Snout is long. Adults are reddish-brown or grey brown above. Chin, chest, and under limbs are dark purple brown.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, about in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stocky. The snout is obtusely pointed, rounded or truncate in profile. The tympanum is obscured by skin.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and round in lateral profile. The tympanum is hidden beneath skin. The finger tips bear discs but no lateral fringes.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded or vertically sloping in profile. The toes have no webbing nor fringes. The dorsum is smooth or granular, usually having regular dorsal ridges.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and rounded in lateral profile. The tympanum rounded and prominent. The fingers bear narrow lateral keels and round terminal discs.
The female holotype measures in snout–vent length (SVL). Two adult males measure SVL. The snout is short and rounded. The tympanic membrane is absent but the tympanic annulus is visible beneath skin, partly covered by supratympanic.
Rodrigues & Kellner treated Camposipterus as a group or clade. No synapomorphies could be established but a unique combination of themselves not unique traits was present. In side view the snout is rounded. The snout bears no crest.
There is a unique combination of traits: the snout bears a crest; the front part of the snout is rounded; the front part of the lower jaws is rounded; the margins of the front tooth sockets diverge.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–urostyle length. The body is robust. The snout is relatively more pointed than in other Petropedetes. The tympanum is very small and indistinct whereas the supratympanic fold is distinct.
The holotype is of unspecified sex and measures in snout–vent length. The snout is narrowly rounded seen from above but vertical in profile. The eyes are relatively large. The head is slightly narrower than the body.
Nanorana mokokchungensis is a robust-bodied and relatively large frog, reaching in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded and flattened. The eyes are large. The supra-tympanic fold is glandular, while the tympanum itself is absent.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is robust. The head is about as wide as it is long and the snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct, elliptical in shape.
The type series consists of three adult males measuring in snout–vent length. The body is stout. The snout is bluntly angled dorsally and rounded in profile. The tympanum is visible and the supratympanic fold is prominent.
Insalebria is a genus of snout moths described by Filipjev in 1924.
Aglyptodactylus are medium-sized frogs as adults, measuring in snout–vent length.
From snout to vent 2.2 inches ; tail 3.75. Penganga Valley, S.E. Berar.
The nostrils were large and positioned towards the tip of the snout.
Chloropaschia adesia is a species of snout moth in the genus Chloropaschia.
The snout was even broader than those of the "duck-billed" hadrosaurs.
The sharp snout is straight and not pointed upwards as with Dsungaripterus.
The maximum recorded snout-to-vent length (SVL) for A. margaritae is .
The snout is generally striped with one or more thin white lines.
Medium-sized, up to in minimum 60 mm from snout to anus.
The tip of the snout is pale. The annular grooves are whitish.
The maximum recorded snout-to-vent length (SVL) for C. elizae is .
The player must collect ant larva using the snout of an aardvark.
Male Leptobrachium hendricksoni grow to snout-vent length of and females to .
Andinobates virolinensis are small frogs, measuring up to in snout–vent length.
Visible on its snout are tiny pores which lead to electroreceptor cells.
The maximum snout-to-vent length of an adult is less than .
Stereocyclops parkeri measure about in snout–vent length. The appearance is cryptic.
Pima flavidorsella is a species of snout moth. It lives in Mozambique.
Nemotelus uliginosus, the barred snout, is a Palearctic species of soldier fly.
Nemotelus pantherinus, the fen snout, is a European species of soldier fly.
Nemotelus notatus, the flecked snout, is a European species of soldier fly.
The maximum recorded snout-to-vent length (SVL) for T. rustamowi is .
He is the Wall for Act V-Scene 1. Tom Snout was originally set to play Pyramus's father, but the need for a wall was greater, so he discharged The Wall. Snout is often portrayed as a reluctant actor and very frightened, but the other mechanicals (except Bottom and Quince) are usually much more frightened than Tom Snout. Snout's name, like that of the other mechanicals, is metonymical and derives from his craft: "Snout" means a nozzle or a spout, a feature of the kettles a tinker often mends.
In Hescheleria (and potentially Nectosaurus and Paralonectes), the premaxillae are abruptly downturned at the end of the snout, nearly forming a right angle with the rest of the jaw. In these forms, the end of the snout is a toothy hook separated from the rest of the jaw by a space called a diastema. Thalattosauroids also have heterodont dentition, with pointed piercing teeth at the front of the snout and low crushing teeth further back. The exception to this rule is Gunakadeit, which has a straight snout and many slender teeth.
The type series consists of two males measuring about and six females measuring in snout–vent length; it is a relatively large species among the Wolterstorffina. One juvenile measured . The head is flat above. The snout is short.
The snout is pointed with a low rounded tip. The premaxilla, the bone forming the front of the snout, carries five teeth. The maxilla behind it, is deep with a very short front branch. It carries seven teeth.
The name of this species was derived from the Latin words ' (meaning "short") and ' (meaning "beak" or "snout"). This is in reference to the very short snout of this species relative to other species in the genus Chromis.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is broadly rounded in dorsal view. The tympanum is visible, albeit slightly covered by the supratympanic fold. The fingers have narrow lateral fringes and terminal discs.
Adult males measure about in snout–vent length. An adult female, first described as a distinct species, Theloderma chuyangsinense, measures in snout–vent length. The body is relatively slender. The head is slightly longer than it is wide.
Males growth to about snout–vent length. Females are larger, at up to , possibly even , in snout–vent length. The dorsal color is cream colored or very light brown to reddish brown. The belly is a darker shade.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate in lateral view. Both fingers and toes have webbing and there are adhesive discs on the tips of the digits. The dorsal skin is shagreen.
The genus name consists of the orycto suffix, which means burrow, and the rhynchus prefix, meaning snout; the full genus name means burrowed snout. The epithet honours David Baird, for his work on Triassic tetrapods from Nova Scotia.
The type series consists of three adult females, all measuring about in snout–vent length. The head is narrower than the body. The snout is short, oval in dorsal view and protruding in lateral view. Tympanum is absent.
The holotype is an immature female measuring in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded in dorsal outline and obtuse (sloping) in lateral view. The tympanum is indistinct. The dorsum is covered with widely spaced moderate-sized tubercles.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is elongated, truncated in dorsal view and straight, slightly projecting laterally. The tympanum is large but obscured dorsally. Fingers II–IV have greatly enlarged, truncated discs.
Physalaemus ephippifer grow to in snout–vent length. The body is slightly elongated with a pointed snout. The tympanum is barely visible. The back is typically smooth but has warts in some specimens; there are few longitudinal ridges.
Only females and juveniles of this species are known. Adult females measure in snout–vent length—the maximum size is very large for the genus. The head is narrow and relatively short. The snout is short and rounded.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and sloping in lateral profile. The canthus rostralis is sharp and slightly concave. The tympanum is visible and the supratympanic fold is prominent.
The holotype, an adult female, measured in snout–vent length; an adult male measured in snout–vent length. The tympanum is visible. The dorsum and head are brown and have small, irregular markings. The dorsal skin is smooth.
Based on the type series consisting of 14 adult males and a female, males measure and females about in snout–vent length. The snout is gently angulate. The eyes are moderately large. The tympanum is distinct and large.
Phrynobatrachus irangi is a large species within its genus: adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stout. The snout is protruding but rounded. The tympanum is visible and oval in shape.
Nanorana liebigii are relatively large frogs: adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is stocky. The head is wider than it is long, and the snout is rounded. The tympanum is faintly visible.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length (SVL). The tail is robust and about two thirds of SVL. The body is robust and the snout is relatively short and truncate. The limbs are slender and moderately long.
Five adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length; the range in a larger sample is . The body is stout. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is round; the supra-tympanic ridge is weakly developed.
Adult males from the Garamba National Park measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is moderately stocky in females but slender in males. The limbs are long and slender. The snout is long and pointed.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The type series does not include adult females; the largest, still immature female was . The head is longer than it is broad; the snout is moderately pointed. The tympanum is conspicuous.
Cardamyla didymalis is a species of snout moth in the genus Cardamyla. It was described by Francis Walker in 1859 and is known from Australia. The snout moth is about 40 mm. Adults are generally black and white.
Yunganastes are robust-bodied and moderate to medium- sized frogs. Males can reach and females in snout–vent length. The limbs are moderately long. The head is as wide or wider than the body; the snout is short.
Adult males in the type series (three specimens) measure in snout–vent length and in total length. Adult females in the type series (two specimens only) measure in snout–vent length and in total length; at the time of description, it was the largest member of its genus. The eyes are reduced, possibly not functional in image forming. The head is elongated with a short, truncated snout.
Males go through numerous morphological changes at maturation including, an increase in body depth, hump height, and snout length. Snout size also increases in females, but hump height and adipose fin length do not increase. This could mean that longer snout sizes are sexually selected, but hump height and adipose fin length are not. Females develop large gonads that are about 25% of the body mass.
Identifying snakes by scalation and other details. Wildsideholidays The outer nasal (near the snout) is called the prenasal while the inner nasal (near the eye) is called the postnasal. Along the top of the snout connecting the nasals on both sides of the head are scales called internasals. Between the two prenasals is a scale at the tip of the snout called the rostral scale.
They are characterized by the presence of a conical, "pig-like" snout and "tiger-stripe" pattern of numerous dark, vertical bars on a yellowish background. The curious snout development is an apparent adaptation to stone-flipping behavior, in which the snout is used to flip over rocks during feeding. Unlike many other darter species, logperches show little sexual dimorphism in coloration.Near T.J. and M.F. Benard. 2004.
Nine unsexed individuals in the type series measure in snout–urostyle length. Examination of six of these revealed one female and five males. For snout–vent length, their size range is . Choerophryne brunhildae shares the general appearance of other former Albericus species: brown dorsum with lighter or darker irregular mottling, warty dorsal skin, and short and road head with blunt snout and relatively large eyes.
Male Phrynobatrachus sulfureogularis grow to a snout–urostyle length of and females to ; the holotype (a female) is reported to measure in snout–vent length. The snout is pointed or more rounded, but always distinctly overhanging the lower jaw. The tympanum is distinct, about three-quarters of the eye diameter; the supratympanic fold is weak. The fingers have no webbing, whereas the toes are two-thirds webbed.
S. rankini may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of . The length of the tail is about two-thirds the SVL. Dorsally, S. rankini is pale gray, darker on the snout and lips. Ventrally, it is grayish white.
It differs from the desert long-eared bat due to its smaller auditory bullae, longer snout, and less-curved baculum. From snout to tail, individuals are long. Its ears are long and wide. The tragus is long and wide.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. However, Tapia and colleagues report two smaller adult females, measuring SVL. Atelopus longirostris has a slender body with long limbs. The snout is pronounced and has a comparatively sharp point.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded in dorsal view and rounded, slightly inclined posteroventrally in lateral profile. The canthus rostralis is distinct. The tympanum is large, oval to round in shape.
Gracixalus nonggangensis is a medium-sized species compared to others in its genus. Adult males measure in snout–vent length and females . The snout is rounded, slightly protruding. The head is as wide or wider than it is long.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length; the size of females is unknown. The overall appearance is stocky. The head is triangular, wider than it is long. The snout is obtusely pointed in dorsal view and truncate in profile.
Males measure in snout–vent length; females are unknown. Snout is acuminate and tympanum is distinct. Dorsum bears numerous scattered small warts; those in the paratoid areas are more prominent. Dorsal ground color is green, from bright to olive.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The body robust with short and thick legs. The snout is acuminate. The dorsum and flanks are bright yellowish-green to blackish-green, and the venter is yellow to orange.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is slender and the head is much longer than it is wide. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and acuminate in profile. The tympanum is distinct.
Pelophryne linanitensis is a mid-sized species within its genus: adult males measure in snout–vent length; females are unknown. The head is wider than it is long. The snout is vertical in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct.
Pelophryne murudensis is a comparatively large species within its genus: adult males measure in snout–vent length; females are unknown. The head is wider than it is long. The snout is oblique in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is truncated in both dorsal and lateral views. The dorsum and dorsal portions of thighs are light olive-brown with dark blotches. There are dark stripes in the thighs.
Males measure and females, based on a single specimen, in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The head bears canthal, supraorbital, supratympanic, and parietal crests, and the snout is acutely pointed. Parotoid glands are triangular and barely evident.
The type series consists of two adult males and two adult females. The males measure and the females in snout–vent length. The snout is ovoid in dorsal view and truncate in profile. The canthus rostralis is well-defined.
The type series consists of three juveniles measuring , an adult male measuring , and two adult females measuring in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate. The tympanum is visible. The fingers and toes have no webbing and lack discs.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is robust and ovoid. The head is much narrower than the body; the snout is rounded. All but the first finger are fringed; no webbing is present.
The type series consists of two adult males measuring and an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is stocky. The head is somewhat wider than it is long. The snout is rounded but slightly protruding.
Based on the type series consisting of five adult males, Leptobrachella palmata measure in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is moderately slender. The snout is obtusely pointed in dorsal view and rounded in profile. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, in snout–vent length. The head is wider than it is long. The snout is short. The tympanum is visible but partly obscured by the prominent supratympanic fold.
Male Pristimantis danae grow to a snout–vent length of and females to . Body is moderately robust, with head slightly longer than it is wide. The snout is rounded in dorsal view and in profile. The tympanum is prominent.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The head is triangular and longer than it is wide. The snout is sub-elliptical in dorsal view and acuminate laterally. The tympanum is concealed and the supratympanic fold is weakly developed.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length (based on 2 males and 3 females only). The dorsolateral skin is granular. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and protruding in profile. The canthus rostralis is evident and straight.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body and the limbs are robust. The snout is nearly truncate in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct, and the supratympanic fold is thick, obscuring its posterodorsal edge.
Based on the type series consisting of two adult males and a female, males measure about and females about in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The eyes are moderately large. The tympanum is indistinct and rather small.
Aphantophryne nana are small, moderately slender-bodied frogs. Adult females in the type series measure in snout–vent length; no males were collected. The head is broader than it is long. The snout is short and bluntly round–pointed.
Adult females grow to at least in snout–vent length. The body is stout. The head is moderately narrow but broader than it is long. The snout is pointed and projecting, with slightly warty point; skin is smooth elsewhere.
The type series consists of three specimens: an adult female (the holotype), an adult male, and a juvenile. The adult specimens measure, respectively, in snout–vent length. The head is as wide as the body. The snout is truncate.
Nyctixalus pictus grows to about in snout–vent length; males are slightly smaller than females. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is distinct. The limbs are long and the finger and toe tips are dilated into large discs.
The holotype is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The body is stout with a flat head. The snout is bluntly angled dorsally and rounded in profile. No tympanum is visible, but the supratympanic fold is distinct.
Synaphe is a genus of snout moths described by Jacob Hübner in 1825.
Interjectio is a genus of snout moths described by Carl Heinrich in 1956.
Olybria is a genus of snout moths erected by Carl Heinrich in 1956.
Scenedra is a genus of snout moths described by Edward Meyrick in 1884.
Titanoceros malefica is a species of snout moth. It is found in India.
Titanoceros mirandalis is a species of snout moth. It is found in China.
Ambesa dentifera is a species of snout moth that is endemic to California.
Titanoceros viridibasalis is a species of snout moth. It is found in China.
Titanoceros vinotinctalis is a species of snout moth. It is found in China.
Jocara venezuelensis is a species of snout moth. It is found in Venezuela.
Jocara thilloa is a species of snout moth. It is found in Guatemala.
Jocara theliana is a species of snout moth. It is found in Guatemala.
Jocara rubralis is a species of snout moth. It is found in Colombia.
Jocara pictalis is a species of snout moth. It is found in Brazil.
Jocara parallelalis is a species of snout moth. It is found in Peru.
Selagia is a genus of snout moths described by Jacob Hübner in 1825.
Omphalomia is a genus of snout moths described by Charles Swinhoe in 1894.
Pyralis transcaspica is a species of snout moth. It is found in Turkmenistan.
Lascelina is a genus of snout moths described by Carl Heinrich in 1956.
The word auchenorrhyncha is from the Greek αὐχήν, 'neck, throat' and ῥύγχος, 'snout'.
Prorophora afghanella is a species of snout moth. It is found in Pakistan.
Prorophora eberti is a species of snout moth. It is found in Afghanistan.
Prorophora senganella is a species of snout moth. It is found in Iran.
Prorophora sacculicornella is a species of snout moth. It is found in Mongolia.
Myelodes is a genus of snout moths described by George Hampson in 1930.
The known specimens measure (female, holotype ) and (male, paratype) in snout–vent length.
Monoctenocera is a genus of snout moths described by George Hampson in 1899.
Megasis is a genus of snout moths described by Achille Guenée in 1845.
Metallosticha is a genus of snout moths described by Hans Rebel in 1901.
Metallostichodes povolnyi is a species of snout moth. It is found on Sumatra.
Reptilia and Batrachia Their length from snout to vent is about 2.5 in.
Marionana is a genus of snout moths described by Pierre Viette in 1953.
It is diurnal and heliothermic. Maximum snout-vent length is about 70 mm.
Male measures about and female in snout–vent length. Body is moderately robust.
Anisothrix adustalis is a species of snout moth. It is found in Peru.
Stemmatophora is a genus of snout moths described by Achille Guenée in 1854.
Male Leptodactylus diedrus grow to a snout–vent length of and females to .
Male Leptodactylus wagneri grow to a snout–vent length of and females to .
Two yellowish-green lateral stripes run from the snout to the hind legs.
Metacrateria is a genus of snout moths described by George Hampson in 1918.
Mescinia is a genus of snout moths described by George Hampson in 1901.
Juveniles are in snout–vent length. Its diet consists mainly of small invertebrates.
Nanorana polunini are medium-sized frogs, attaining a snout–vent length of about .
Nanorana feae are relatively large frogs, attaining a snout–vent length of about .
Male Micrixalus kottigeharensis grow to a snout–vent length of and females to .
Sacada is a genus of snout moths described by Francis Walker in 1862.
Caristanius is a genus of snout moths described by Carl Heinrich in 1956.
The holotype is adult female measuring in snout–vent length with regenerated tail.
Nhoabe is a genus of snout moths described by Pierre Viette in 1953.
Namibicola is a genus of snout moths described by Boris Balinsky in 1991.
Pima difficilis is a species of snout moth. It is found in Mozambique.
Phycitodes is a genus of snout moths described by George Hampson in 1917.
Phycitodes gallicella is a species of snout moth which is endemic to France.
C. turneri is large and robust, with a snout-vent length (SVL) of .
Nemotelus nigrinus, the all-black snout, is a Holarctic species of soldier fly.
The clinical signs observed were red ears, swollen snout, hypoactivity, and sternal recumbence.
Nectophrynoides wendyae is a robust-bodied dwarf frog. Adult males can grow to about and adult females to in snout–vent length. The head is longer than it is wide, and the snout is long and pointed. No tympanum is present.
Adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length, females are not known. The head is small, longer than it is wide. The snout is subelliptical in dorsal view and acute in lateral view. The tympanum is visible.
Males in the type series measure and the sole female in snout–vent length. The body is ovoid with a triangular head and small, protruding eyes; the snout is rounded. The tympanum is indistinct. Fingers are slightly fringed but not webbed.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length; females are unknown. The snout is slightly acuminate in dorsal view and rounded in profile. The canthus rostralis is distinct and straight. The tympanum is distinct; the supra-tympanic fold is moderately developed.
The type series consists of two adult males and an adult female. The males measure and the female in snout–vent length. The head is relatively broad and snout is rounded. The tympanum is hidden and supratympanic fold is indistinct.
Adult males measure and females, based on one measured specimen, in snout–vent length. The body is elongated and the head long. The snout is truncate in dorsal aspect and rounded in lateral and ventral aspects. There are four dorsal spines.
The peccary has a round body with a long snout that ends in a circular disk where the nasal cavity starts. It has white markings that start below the snout and run to the cheek area just below the eyes.
Two male specimens measure in snout–vent length, whereas an adult female specimen is much larger, in SVL. The body is squat and raised. The snout is bluntly pointed. The tympanum is distinct but partly concealed by the supratympanic fold.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is acuminate or sub-acuminate. The tympanum is absent. The fingers have traces of basal webbing while the toes are fully (toes I to III) to partially webbed (toe IV).
A large worm lizard, Z. nigra may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of . It is colored black and white, with a speckled or marbled appearance. It is more blackish dorsally, and is more whitish ventrally. The snout is rounded.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The dorsum is bright translucent green with some mottling. The snout bears a conspicuous light golden triangle. A light, brief, broad dorsolateral stripe is sometimes present, occasionally extending further back than the shoulder region.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded in profile and truncate in dorsal view. The tympanum is conspicuous but partly cover by the supratympanic fold. The fingers and the toes are partially webbed.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The snout is subelliptical in dorsal view. The head is longer than it is wide. The tympanum is small and not very distinct; its upper part is hidden by the supra-tympanic fold.
Rio Grande Chirping Frog (Eleutherodactylus cystignathoides), from Liberty County, Texas, USA Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is pointed and the body is flat and elongated. Tympanum is visible. The finger tips are slightly expanded.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The body and limbs are slender. The head is wider than the body and slightly wider than it is long. The snout is truncate in dorsal view and slightly protruding in lateral view.
Adult males in the type series (three specimens) measure in snout–vent length (SVL). An unsexed specimen from Rondônia measured SVL. The head wider than the body. The snout is short and round in dorsal view, but truncate in profile.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length; female size is unknown. The snout is truncated. The tympanum is visible and only slightly obscured by the supra-tympanic fold posterodorsally. The fingers have absent to moderate webbing (from inner to outer fingers).
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The digits have neither discs nor webbing. Males have conspicuous pectoral glands. The dorsum is green and has a dark brown lateral stripe that runs from the snout to the groin.
Adelophryne pachydactyla was described based on a single specimen, the holotype. It is an adult male measuring in snout–vent length, and with a subgular vocal sac. The head is slightly longer than it is wide. The snout is rounded.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is narrower than the body but wider than it is long. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and acutely rounded in lateral profile. The tympanum is prominent.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short and subacuminate in dorsal view, rounded in lateral profile. The tympanum is prominent. Skin of the dorsum has large flattened warts; the venter is coarsely areolate.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The head is narrower than the body, and the tip of snout is pointed. The tympanum is distinct. The skin of the dorsum is smooth to shagreened, with many small, short ridges.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head narrower than the body. The snout is short and rounded (or weakly subacuminate in dorsal view). The tympanum is concealed beneath the skin on the side of the head.
Adult males measure on average in snout–vent length and can reach ; females are unknown. The snout is protruding in profile. The canthus rostralis is well defined. The supra-tympanic fold is prominent and hides the upper edge of the tympanum.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and truncate in lateral profile. The tympanum is prominent. Both the fingers and the toes have lateral fringes and broadened tips with discs.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is visible with a distinct annulus. All toes and all but the innermost finger bear small discs; no lateral keels nor webbing are present.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is wider than it is long; the snout is rounded. The tympanum is ovoid. The dorsa-lateral folds start from above the tympanum and extend to the groin.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The body is rotund, and the head is narrower than the body. The snout is blunt from above and rounded, slightly projecting in profile. The tympanic ring is barely visible externally.
Males measure (based on just two specimens in the type series) and females in snout–vent length. The body is ovoid with short head. The snout is short and truncate in dorsal and rounded in lateral view. No tympanum is visible.
Callulops stictogaster is a relatively large species that can reach in snout–vent length. There is a characteristic small ridge or tubercle between the eye and the nostril. The head is narrower than the body. The snout is bluntly rounded.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is bluntly rounded when viewed from above but truncate when viewed laterally. The eyes are moderately large. In males, the tympanum is hidden whereas it is visible in females.
The species description is based on a single adult male and series of tadpoles, one of them reared past metamorphosis. The adult male measures in snout–vent length. The head is broad but much narrower than body. The snout is rounded.
Austrochaperina adamantina was described based on a single specimen, which is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The head is narrow. The snout is truncate as seen from above and slightly rounded in profile. The eyes are relatively large.
The holotype is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The head almost as wide as the body. The snout is tapering to a sharply rounded tip but is rounded and slightly projecting in profile. The eyes are large.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is moderately short and sub-acuminate. Dorsal skin of dorsum smooth, but has small, scattered tubercles in males. Neither fingers nor toes are webbed but they do have lateral fringes.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is as wide as the body and wider than it is long. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view but rounded in profile. The canthus rostralis is sharp.
Adult males measure (based on two males only) and females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal and rounded in lateral profile. The tympanum is visible. The fingers and toes bear discs and lateral fringes but no webbing.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and pointed when viewed laterally. The tympanum is hidden. All digits bear discs; the fingers have lateral fringes and the toes have lateral keels.
The type series consists of three adult males that measure in snout–vent length; the heaviest specimen weighs . The snout is subacuminate and short. The tympanum is small and round. All fingers and toes have expanded tips but no webbing.
The holotype, a female, measures in snout–vent length, and this is also given as the maximum size for the species. The body has a robust and compact appearance. The head is wider than it is long. The snout is short.
The type series consists of five specimens, two of which appear to be lost. Two male syntypes at the Swedish Museum of Natural History measure in snout–vent length. The snout is sloping in profile. The toes have reduced webbing.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short. Tympanic membrane is absent and tympanic annulus is usually absent. Fingers and toes have narrow lateral keels but no webbing; the digital discs are small but distinct.
The type series consists of three specimens. The holotype is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The other female type is of similar size, whereas the male type measures in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is robust.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The tympanum is distinct. Males have more acuminate snout than females. Dorsal folds are absent and dorsolateral folds are indistinct or (usually) absent; lateral folds are also absent or interrupted.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on only two specimens, in snout–vent length. The head is wider than it is long. The snout is rounded from above but obtuse in lateral view. The tympanum is not externally visible.
Males grow to and females to in snout–vent length. The snout is moderately long and acutely rounded. The tympanum is distinct but partly covered by the suprtympanic fold. The fingers bear comparatively small discs and are about one-third webbed.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, in snout–vent length. This frog has a slender overall appearance. The head is wider than the body. The snout is bluntly rounded in dorsal view and truncate in profile.
Three adult males in the type series measure in snout–urostyle length, making it a relatively large Choerophryne; females are unknown. The snout is moderately long (20–21% of the body length). The eyes are moderately-sized. The tympanum is small.
Atractaspis irregularis is completely dark brown or black. Snout very short, rounded. Portion of rostral visible from above measuring ⅔ to ¾ its distance from the frontal. Frontal as long as broad, much longer than its distance from the end of the snout.
The front part of the snout is expanded. The palate curves upwards. The first tooth pair is located in the snout tip. Each of the species of Camposipterus has its own unique derived traits, autapomorphies, and a unique combination of traits.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The body is spherical with small head. The snout is tapered and has a hardened, pale tip. The arms short and muscular, with pointed fingers (the fore limbs are used in burrowing).
Adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length; females are unknown. The snout is bluntly pointed in dorsal view and bluntly rounded in lateral profile. The tympanum is indistinct. The fingers and the toes have no webbing.
With males measuring and females in snout–vent length, it is a very small species even among the generally small Thorius. It has a slender habitus. The head is relatively wide; the snout is bluntly pointed. The eyes are relatively large.
Scinax squalirostris is a small species measuring in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is slender; the limbs are slender and the hind limbs are fairly long. The head is long and wider than the body. The snout is very elongated.
The fins are large and curved, and the origin of the dorsal are about equidistant between the snout and caudal fin base. The mouth is inferior, and overhung by the snout. The pharyngeal arch is small, with a short lower ramus.
The type series consists of two adult females measuring in snout–vent length (SVL) and in total length. A subadult female measured SVL. The snout is truncate in dorsal aspect and rounded in profile. The tail is strongly constricted basally.
Male Nyctimystes daymani grow to a snout–vent length of at least . The snout is relatively long and narrow. The palpebral reticulum has very distinct, near-vertical veins. The tympanum is small but distinct and the supratympanic fold is strongly developed.
The type series consists of two adult males measuring in snout–vent length. The snout is short and acutely rounded in dorsal view, sloping when viewed laterally. The tympanum is distinct. The fingers have discs of moderate size but no webbing.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is indistinct, but the supratympanic fold is prominent. The fingers have well- developed discs and dermal fringes but no webbing.
The holotype is an adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The body is stout and the head is flat. The snout is angled in dorsal view and blunt in profile. No tympanum is visible, but the supratympanic fold is prominent.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, in snout–vent length. The head is broader than it is long. The snout is short and rounded in dorsal view, truncate in profile. The eyes are large and protuberant.
The type series consists of two adult males that measure in snout–vent length. A female has been reported to measure in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is slender. The head is depressed, slightly longer than it is wide.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length; females are unknown. The overall appearance is moderately slender with long head. The snout is obtusely pointed in dorsal view (projecting beyond lower jaw) and round in profile. The tympanum is distinct and round.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate in dorsal view and bluntly rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct and a supra-tympanic fold is present but weak. The canthus rostralis is rounded.
Eutrachelus temmincki is the largest species in the family Brentidae and has one of the longest snouts among beetles. These giant weevils can reach a length of in males (including snout), while females are smaller (about 65 mm.), with a narrower head and snout. Body is elongated, with a long snout and more or less developed jaws. The basic color is black with small orange to red spots on the elytra.
Cartorhynchus had an unusually short and constricted snout, which only occupied half of the skull's length, and a deep jaw. The tip of the snout was only wide. Unlike most reptiles, its nasal bone reached the front of the snout. Due to its likewise elongated premaxilla, its bony nostrils were located relatively far back on the skull, and its frontal bone also lacked an expansion at its rear outer corner.
There are several large species that are more than in snout-to-vent length. Males of the largest, the knight anole, reach up to about in snout-to- vent length, in total length, and in weight. There are both robust and gracile species, and the head shape varies from relatively broad to elongate. The tail of anoles varies, but mostly it is longer than the snout-to-vent length.
The longnose dace (Rhinichthys cataractae) is a freshwater minnow native to North America. Rhinicthys means snout fish (reference to the long snout) and cataractae means of the cataract (first taken from Niagara Falls). Longnose dace are small, typically less than 100 mm and characterized by their fleshy snout that protrudes past the mouth. They are well adapted for living on the bottom of fast-flowing streams among stones.
Sahitysuchus skull All sebecosuchians were carnivorous and terrestrial. The nares open at the very tip of the snout, suggesting that it lived on land rather than in water (in aquatic crocodyliforms, the nares usually open dorsally on top of the snout). The snout itself is laterally compressed, a feature shared with other terrestrial reptiles such as theropod dinosaurs. The eye sockets are opened laterally rather than dorsally as in aquatic crocodyliforms.
Thospia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Ragonot in 1888.
Tsaraphycis is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Viette in 1970.
Pyralosis is a genus of snout moths described by Hans Georg Amsel in 1957.
Imerina is a genus of snout moths described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1891.
Jocara gillalis is a species of snout moth. It is found in South America.
Jocara nana is a species of snout moth. It is found in Costa Rica.
Jocara noloides is a species of snout moth. It is found on the Bahamas.
Keradere is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Whalley in 1970.
Psorosa is a genus of snout moths described by Philipp Christoph Zeller in 1846.
Paralipsa is a genus of snout moths described by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1879.
Polopeustis is a genus of snout moths described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1893.
Pima is a genus of snout moths described by George Duryea Hulst in 1888.
Laurentia is a genus of snout moths described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1888.
Endotricha flammealis, the rose-flounced tabby, is a species of snout moth, family Pyralidae.
Pseudoceroprepes piratis is a species of snout moth described by Edward Meyrick in 1887.
Prorophora is a genus of snout moths described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1887.
Mussidia is a genus of snout moths described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1888.
Macrophycis is a genus of snout moths described by Rolf-Ulrich Roesler in 1982.
Coenochroa is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Ragonot, in 1887.
Encryphodes is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Turner in 1913.
Moodna is a genus of snout moths described by George Duryea Hulst in 1890.
The skink is olive-brown in colour with an average Snout-Vent length of .
Etielloides is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Shibuya in 1928.
Cavipalpia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Ragonot, in 1893.
Centrometopia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Ragonot in 1887.
Trachyphloeus alternans is a species of snout or bark beetle in the family Curculionidae.
The snout and the tail are yellowish. The inside of their mouth is white.
Rhaebo colomai are medium-sized toads: males measure and females in snout–vent length.
Malgachinsula is a genus of snout moths described by Rolf-Ulrich Roesler in 1982.
Maricopa is a genus of snout moths described by George Duryea Hulst in 1890.
Sexually mature males have a significantly smaller snout-vent length than sexually mature females.
A. ibijara does not show sexual dimorphism in any characters including snout–vent length.
Mediavia is a genus of snout moths erected by Maria Alma Solis in 1993.
Pseudoceroprepes is a genus of snout moths described by Rolf-Ulrich Roesler in 1982.
Crocidomera is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Zeller, in 1848.
Didia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Ragonot in 1893.
Dasypyga is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Ragonot in 1887.
Dasyvesica is a genus of snout moths erected by Maria Alma Solis in 1991.
Tyloderma variegatum is a species of hidden snout weevil in the beetle family Curculionidae.
Eubulus bisignatus is a species of hidden snout weevil in the beetle family Curculionidae.
Gerstaeckeria unicolor is a species of hidden snout weevil in the beetle family Curculionidae.
This relatively large poison dart frog has a snout-vent length of up to .
Male Oreolalax multipunctatus grow to about in snout-vent length. Tadpoles are in length.
Males measure 24.1–29.5 mm and females 32.0–36.0 mm in snout–vent length.
Gerstaeckeria porosa is a species of hidden snout weevil in the beetle family Curculionidae.
Lipographis is a genus of snout moths described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1887.
Tyloderma foveolatum is a species of hidden snout weevil in the beetle family Curculionidae.
Cophes texanus is a species of hidden snout weevil in the beetle family Curculionidae.
Acalles clavatus is a species of hidden snout weevil in the beetle family Curculionidae.
Gerstaeckeria hubbardi is a species of hidden snout weevil in the beetle family Curculionidae.
Cimberis bihirsuta is a species of pine flower snout beetle in the family Nemonychidae.
Tyloderma aereum is a species of hidden snout weevil in the beetle family Curculionidae.
Male Odorrana lungshengensis grow to a snout–vent length of about and females to .
Snout short. Dorsal scales with smooth granules. Median sub-caudals are enlarged. Ventrals smooth.
Sceloporus bicanthalis is a small, viviparous lizard measuring on average in snout–vent length.
Arispe is a genus of snout moths described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1891.
Male Kurixalus odontotarsus grow to a snout–vent length of about and females about .
The maximum size is at least in snout–vent length and in total length.
Teliphasa is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Moore in 1888.
Epischidia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Rebel in 1901.
In higher primates, the structural reduction of the snout is correlated with diminished priority for olfaction. As such, the human nose displays reduced innervations of the olfactory mucous membrane, decreased snout length, and an overall reduction of complexity of the nasal concha.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The head is small and flat above with a pointed snout that is rounded in lateral view. The dorsum is reddish orange with irregular, light brown patches. The tympanum and its surroundings are dark grey.
Scutiger boulengeri from Sikkim, India Scutiger boulengeri males measure about and females about in snout–vent length. The head is flat, wider than long and with a rounded snout. The eyes are protruding. The tympanum is indistinct; the supratympanal fold is present.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is The limbs are long and slender. The fingers and toes are partially webbed. The dorsum is olive green and is covered with rounded black spots that also extend to the limbs.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The body is robust and the head is slightly wider than it is long. The snout is nearly rounded but has a protruding tip in dorsal view. The tympanum is distinct but comparatively small.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen only, in snout–vent length. A smaller female ( SVL) was not mature. The snout is pointed in dorsal view and acutely rounded and protruding in lateral view. The canthus rostralis is sharp.
Osornophryne percrassa are relatively small toads: males measure and females in snout–vent length. It differs from other Osornophryne by its truncated snout in lateral view, with a little non-projected papilla at the end, and by its light spots on the belly.
Males grow to and females to in snout–vent length. The snout is protruding. The dorsum is yellowish, sometimes with a hint of green or light brown, and turns brilliant yellow in breeding males. There are usually some darker markings on the dorsum.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is acutely rounded in dorsal view and rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is absent. Skin on dorsum is shagreen and has scattered tubercles and forms thoracical and discontinuous dorsolateral folds.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short and truncate. The tympanum is visible, with its upper edge barely covered by the weakly-developed supra-tympanic fold. The fingers are only slightly webbed and have broad discs.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length; female length has not been reported. The snout is truncate, or sometimes slightly protruding laterally. The tympanum is visible, with its upper hidden by the supra-tympanic fold and tubercles. The toes are two-thirds webbed.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The head is wider than the body; the snout is short and truncate. The eyes are moderately large with silvery bronze iris, with black reticulations. The lower two-thirds of the tympanum are visible.
Nymphargus nephelophila lay the eggs on leaves overhanging water; when the tadpoles hatch they drop into the water below where they develop further. Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The snout is truncate and dorsal skin is smooth with diminutive tubercles.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The body is flattened and the snout is long and pointed. The eyes are protruding with rhomboid pupils. Both the hands and feet are webbed, and the finger and toe tips are enlarged to discs.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is subovoid to subelliptical from above and rounded in profile. The tympanum is distinct; it is round in males but ovoid in females. The fingers have discs and weak lateral keels.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is acuminate to subacuminate in dorsal view. The tympanum is just discernible; the supratympanic fold is low and not obscuring the tympanum. Dorsal skin is smooth but has scattered, pungent warts.
Eleutherodactylus pinchoni is a small frog: males measure and females in snout–vent length; the smallest gravid female was . The snout is acuminate. The tympanum is visible and almost circular. The fingers are long, slender, and unwebbed, but have moderately well-developed discs.
Kalophrynus eok is only known from the holotype, an adult male measuring in snout–vent length. The snout is obtuse and slightly projects beyond the mandible. The head is broader than it is long. The tympanum is distinct; no supratympanic fold is present.
Adult males grow to at least and adult females to in snout–vent length; females appear to reach maturity at . The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is very indistinct, and the supratympanic fold is very faint. The legs are relatively long.
Callulops personatus is a relatively large species, with males reaching a snout–vent length of and females . The head is narrower than the relatively robust body. The snout is truncate. The tympanum is indistinct; the supratympanic fold runs over and behind the tympanum.
The type series consists of three specimens: two adult males measuring and one adult female measuring in snout–vent length. The body is rounded and roughly triangular in shape. The head is wider than it is long. The snout is obtusely pointed.
The holotype is an adult male measuring in snout–vent length. The head is broader than body. The snout is subacuminate dorsally and sloping in lateral view. The supratympanic fold obvious and obscuring upper edge of the tympanum that is otherwise round.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is acutely rounded. The tympanum is round and distinct but obscured posterodorsally by the weak supratympanic fold. The fingers and the toes have elliptical discs and lateral keels but no webbing.
Adult males measure about (based on two young males) and adult females at least in snout–vent length (size of a young female). The snout is truncate in lateral profile. The tympanum is prominent. Skin is prominently tuberculate dorsally and smooth ventrally.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length; adults weight about . The body is dorsoventrally flattened. The head is as wide as the body and has one or more distinct, subconical tubercles on its dorsal surface. The snout is subacuminate.
Males can grow to and females to in snout–vent length; the mean adult size for males and females is and , respectively. The body is dorso-ventrally flattened. The snout is rounded or has a flared lip. The toes are moderately webbed.
Megaelosia lutzae are relatively large frogs: two males in the type series measure and a female in snout–vent length. Dorsolateral skin has many large granules. The snout acuminate in dorsal view and rounded in profile. Canthus rostralis is evident and straight.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct. The fingers are long and slender and lack webbing and lateral fringes; the tips are narrowly round and the fingers I–II have pads.
The type series consists of three adult males measuring about in snout–vent length. The head is moderately flattened and longer than it is wide. The snout is rounded and not prominent. The tympanum is visible; the supratympanic fold is curved and conspicuous.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on only two specimens, in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is robust. The snout is rounded, but may be truncated in lateral view. The tympanum is covered by skin but is visible in most specimens.
Adult females measure in snout–vent length (neotype and a referred specimen); males are presumably much smaller. The body is dorsoventrally compressed. The head is broad and the snout is rounded. The tympanum is round and distinct; the supratympanic fold is weak.
Phrynobatrachus keniensis are small frogs; males reach a snout–vent length of no more than and females no more than . The overall appearance is stout. The head is as long as it is broad. The snout is rounded or very obtusely pointed.
Petropedetes cameronensis is a small-sized Petropedetes with compact body. Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is short. The tympanum is very small and rather indistinct, and without tympanic papilla (present in breeding males of many other Petropedetes species).
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is wider than it is long. The snout is truncate in dorsal view and rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is not externally visible but a tympanic ridge is present.
The type series of Alcalus mariae consists of two males measuring in snout–vent length. They are stocky frogs with depressed, broad head and rounded snout. Tympanum is visible though rim hidden by skin. Tips of digits are expanded into large, round disks.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length, based on two males and two females in the type series. The snout is bluntly pointed, and the canthus is distinct but rounded. The tympanum is distinct. The supratympanic fold is strong.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is pointed in dorsal view and angles sharply back when viewed laterally. The tympanum is visible. The fingers are one-half to two-thirds webbed whereas the toes are fully webbed.
Males grow to and females to in snout–vent length. The snout is long. The dorsum varies from grey to brownish to orangish. There is usually a dark brown triangular patch between the eyes, and often some additional dark markings on the back.
The holotype of Thorius adelos (an adult male) measures in snout–vent length and has a long tail. The dorsum and tail are brown. There is a dorsal, cream- coloured stripe on both sides. The snout is blunt with slightly upward-tilted nostrils.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, in snout–vent length. The snout is short and truncated in dorsal view, sloping when viewed laterally. The tympanum is distinct. The fingers have discs of moderate size but no webbing.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, in snout–vent length. The snout is rather truncate and not protruding. The fingers have basal webbing while the toes have moderate webbing. The dorsal colouration is reddish-brown to brownish-grey.
Adult males grow to and adult females to in snout–vent length. The snout is pointed and projecting. The tympanum is distinct and relatively larger in males than in females. The fingers have no webbing whereas the toes are almost completely webbed.
Kammerer, Christian F. "Systematics of the Anteosauria (Therapsida: Dinocephalia)." Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 9.2 (2011): 261-304. The snout of Syodon is relatively long narrow compared to the rest of the body. The snout comprises approximately 1/4 the length of the skill.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded dorsally and angular in profile. The tympanum is visible. Both fingers and toes are broadly webbed and have discs, the toe discs being smaller than those on the fingers.
Adult males measure and adult females, based only a single specimen, in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is rotund. The snout is slightly pointed with its tip rounded. The tympanum is hidden and indistinct; the tympanic fold can be prominent or indistinct.
Mittonia is a genus of snout moths described by Paul Ernest Sutton Whalley in 1964.
Thylacoptila is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1885.
Synoria is a genus of snout moths. It was first described by Ragonot in 1888.
Oenogenes is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1884.
Omphalepia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1906.
Omphalocera is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Julius Lederer in 1863.
Stericta is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Julius Lederer in 1863.
Titanoceros is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1884.
Tosale is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1859.
Lamida is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1859.
Raphimetopus is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1918.
Pyralis is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Carl Linnaeus in 1758.
Maradana is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Frederic Moore in 1884.
Lasiosticha is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1887.
Prorophora albunculella is a species of snout moth. It is found in Turkey and Iraq.
Chararica is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Carl Heinrich in 1956.
Chrysauge is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Jacob Hübner in 1823.
Chrysophila is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Jacob Hübner in 1831.
C. russelli is large for its genus. Maximum recorded snout-to-vent length (SVL) is .
Arippara is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1863.
Ptyomaxia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1903.
Monoloxis is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1897.
Erelieva is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Carl Heinrich in 1956.
Ertzica is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1866.
Ethopia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1865.
Large for its genus, L. grandis may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of .
G. hasemani may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of .Griffin (1917). p. 306.
Herpetological Review 37(1):75-76 Its length from snout to vent is 1.4 in.
Metallostichodes vinaceella is a species of snout moth. It is found in Syria and Turkey.
Eurhodope is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Jacob Hübner in 1825.
Faveria is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1859.
Eucarphia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Jacob Hübner in 1825.
Eulophota is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1926.
Polylophota is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1863.
The colour is bright green with black speckles. Average snout to vent length (SVL) is .
Niphopyralis is a genus of snout moths of the subfamily Spilomelinae in the family Crambidae.
Pachypodistes is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1905.
According to the modern research the snout has moved 1 km in just 70 years.
Anderida is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Carl Heinrich in 1956.
Cyclopalpia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1897.
Curena is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1866.
Jocara is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1863.
Euzopherodes is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1899.
A small species, A. multimaculatus may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of about .
Male Nymphargus spilotus grow to a snout–vent length of . The dorsum is finely shagreen.
Apocera is a genus of snout moths. It was described by William Schaus in 1912.
Aptunga is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Carl Heinrich in 1956.
Araeopaschia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1906.
At snout–vent length, female Diasporus hylaeformis are the largest frogs in the genus Diasporus.
Megaelosia are relatively large frogs, with adults attaining lengths up to in snout–vent length.
Mesciniadia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1901.
Lophothoracia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1901.
Locastra is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1859.
Lista is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1859.
The term groyne is derived from the Old French groign, from Late Latin grunium, "snout".
Juveniles of this species have relatively longer snout, larger eyes, and broader heads than adults.
Azaera is a genus of snout moths. It was described by William Schaus in 1913.
Bahiria is a genus of snout moths. It was erected by Boris Balinsky in 1994.
Head is not depressed. Snout short. Body robust. Lamellae under fourth toe are 6-7.
Arouva is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1864.
Buergeria japonica is a small to medium-sized frog, about snout-vent length in males.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. Tadpoles are up to in total length.
The type series consists of two specimens of unspecified sex measuring in snout–vent length.
The barred wedge-snout ctenotus (Ctenotus schomburgkii) is a species of skink found in Australia.
Noctuides is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Otto Staudinger in 1892.
Lorymodes is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1917.
Macna is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1859.
O. macgregori is a medium-sized lizard species. Maximum recorded snout-vent length (SVL) is .
Salebriaria is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Carl Heinrich in 1956.
B. schultzei may attain a snout- to-vent length (SVL) of , plus a tail long.
Polylophota is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1906.
Relatively small, they are distinguished by a strongly upturned snout. No subspecies are currently recognized.
Phycitodes eliseannae is a species of snout moth. It is found in France and Spain.
Ephedrophila is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Constantin Dumont in 1928.
Thiallela is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Francis Walker in 1863.
Epidauria is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Hans Rebel in 1901.
Microchlora is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Hampson in 1901.
Milgithea is a genus of snout moths. It was described by William Schaus in 1922.
This species is notable for its "broad" snout, which is as deep as its body.
Epacternis is a genus of snout moths. It was erected by Edward Meyrick in 1933.
The holotype of S. lazelli has a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of .Shreve (1968).
Midbody scales rows 22-26. Ventral scales 103-114. Infralabials 93-105. Snout acutely pointed.
The holotype of S. levinsi has a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of .Heatwole (1968).
Adults of S. molei have a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of about .Barbour (1921).
T. mesriensis is a medium-sized gecko. Maximum recorded snout-to-vent length (SVL) is .
Another unique trait it had among sauropodomorphs was a closed supratemporal fenestra. The nasal openings, the bony nostrils, were elongated. Though the nasal bones are not completely known, it appears the front margin of the bony nostril was closer to the snout than in other diplodocoids. The snout was also proportionately shorter, and the tooth row was not at all prognathous, the snout tip not protruding relative to the remainder of the tooth series.
Restoration Unusual among crocodyliforms, Sebecus has a deep, narrow snout. The nares, or nostrils, open anteriorly at the tip of the snout. While most crocodilians have flat skulls that are raised near the eyes and postorbital region behind the eyes, the skull of Sebecus is essentially level. The great depth of the snout makes most of the length of its upper margin level with the margin of the orbits, or eye sockets.
The snout of Cerrejonisuchus is narrow and consistent in width from the external nares, or nostril openings, to the orbits, or eye sockets. The margin of the snout, unlike that of many long- snouted dyrosaurids, is smooth rather than festooned. "Festooned" refers to the lateral undulations in the maxillae and premaxillae that form around the tooth sockets, or alveoli. The external nares are positioned extremely anteriorly at the very tip of the snout.
Tapir (Tapirus terrestris) snout showing flehmen A snout is the protruding portion of an animal's face, consisting of its nose, mouth, and jaw. In many animals, the structure is called a muzzle, rostrum, snoot, or proboscis. The wet furless surface around the nostrils of the nose of some animals is called the rhinarium (colloquially this is the "cold wet snout" of some animals). The rhinarium is often associated with a stronger sense of olfaction.
The Colares stingray has a diamond-shaped pectoral fin disk about as long as wide, with rounded margins and a long snout that tapers to a point. The snout of the female is shorter than that of the male, and snout edges dip in slightly near the tip. The eyes are small and followed by large spiracles. There is a flap of skin between the nares with a fringed rear margin and rounded corners.
Restored E. rugosidens skeleton without back armour The skull of Edmontonia, up to half a metre long, is somewhat elongated with a protruding truncated snout. The snout carried a horny upper beak and the front snout bones, the premaxillae, were toothless. The cutting edge of the upper beak continued into the maxillary tooth rows, each containing fourteen to seventeen small teeth. In each dentary of the lower jaws, eighteen to twenty- one teeth were present.
Strongylopus grayii is a fairly small species (snout-to- vent length of breeding specimens about 25 to 50 mm). The snout is not as pointed as most of the genus, the snout profile being rather reminiscent of the Cape river frog. The ventral skin is smooth, pale to white, the dorsal skin colour is variable, generally shades of brown with darker blotches. Similar blotches form bars across the upper surfaces of the thighs.
The premaxilla also has a pair of bony projections (processes) which connect to other snout bones. The posterodorsal process snakes up the front of the maxilla, separating that bone from the nares (nostril holes). The thin anterodorsal process instead runs along the midline of the snout. The paired nasal bones on the upper edge of the snout are long and rectangular, and at their front edge are the rounded, upwards-pointing nares.
Flat-snouted globidontans occurred two times in the evolution of the clade: once in caimans and once in alligators. Alligator sinensis, the Chinese Alligator, has a snout that is somewhat blunt and could be considered specialized. However, its snout is not nearly as blunt as those of more basal globidontans such as Albertachampsa. If the last common ancestor of Diplocynodon and globidontans was more like Diplocynodon, it would have had a generalized snout shape.
Males and females of the species grow to an average of 7 cm. A male will have a series of bumps and hooks on the upper surface of its snout, while a female will have a smooth snout. Males mature around lengths of 31 mm.
The white-spotted supple skink is found in South Asia. Its body is elongated with weak limbs. The distance between the end of its snout and forelimbs is 2 to 2.5 times the distance between the axilla and groin. The snout is short and obtuse.
Cophixalus petrophilus female Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is narrower than the body. The snout is blunt to projecting in profile. The tympanum is comparatively large but indistinct to moderately distinct, bordered by the supra-tympanic fold.
Like all members of the genus Scincella, S. gemmingeri is long and cylindrical, with short limbs. Its color is dark gray, and it has a dark stripe originating at the snout and running dorsolaterally along its body. Its maximum snout-vent length (SVL) is about .
The type series consists of one adult female (holotype), one adult male, and a juvenile. The female measures and the male in snout–vent length. The head is broad and dorsoventrally depressed. The snout is rounded in dorsal view and truncate in lateral view.
Skull, showing short snout. The sun bear is the smallest of all bear species. It is stockily built, with large paws, strongly curved claws, small rounded ears and a short snout. The head-and-body length is between , and the shoulder height is nearly .
The snout slightly projects beyond the mouth, often studded with pores. A pair of small maxillary barbells is hidden inside the labial fold. There is no cartilaginous support to the lips. The dorsal originates midway between the snout tip and the anterior base of anal.
Three adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length; females were not reported. The snout is obtusely pointed. The tympanum is distinct and vertically elongated. The finger tips have discs with circum- marginal grooves; there is no webbing nor dermal fringes.
The Bhagirathi river here is pretty speedy. Around the snout, nature presents a wild topography. There are boulders scattered here and there with some pieces of broken snow, along with the hard clayey snow of the glacier. The Gomukh snout is rapidly moving backwards.
Five small pointed teeth are located behind each canine. The snout is wider in the front than it is behind, a usual feature among therapsids but present in several other related therocephalians. The nostrils are positioned at the tip of the snout and directed forward.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is weakly pointed in dorsal view and rounded laterally. The cranial crests are well-developed, while the parietal crests are low. The supra-tympanic crest is large and bulbous; the tympanum is visible.
Males measure on and females in snout–vent length. The body is robust with long limbs and truncate snout. The dorsal coloration is uniformly black, as is the iris. The ventral side is orange-red; the belly is lighter in color, suffused with yellow.
The type series consists of two adult males measuring in snout–vent length; the maximum male length in a larger material is . The head is relatively broad and the snout short. The tympanum is distinct; supratympanic fold is present. The canthus rostralis is slightly curved.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on two specimens only, in snout–vent length. The body is moderately robust and the head is longer than it is wide. The snout is subacuminate. The tympanum is distinct but partly covered by the supratympanic fold.
The single known female is in snout–vent length (SVL); males are SVL. The head is wider than it is long and hexagonal in shape. The head has prominent dorsolateral bony ridges and a prominent but short middorsal ridge. The snout is short and truncate.
Craugastor silvicola was described based an adult female, the holotype, measuring in snout–vent length. The head is as wide as the body and slightly broader than long; the snout is rounded. The canthus rostralis is sharp. The tympanum is visible and relatively large.
Males in two Chilean locations measured on average and females in snout–vent length. The body is bulky and extremities are robust. The head is wide with snout that is short and rounded. The dorsal coloration is light brown with diffuse, irregular, darker blotches.
Adult females measure in snout–vent length; male length is not reported. The snout is rounded in dorsal view and sloping in lateral profile. The tympanum is visible; the supra-tympanic fold is evident. The fingers and toes are slender and have moderately pointed tips.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The dorsum is smooth, green, beige, or grey, and either uniform or with a darker dorsal spot reaching the upper eyelid. The ventrum is white. The snout is very brief (hence the specific name brevirostris).
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is broad with short snout. The tympanum ranges from completely hidden to somewhat noticeable. The fingers are unwebbed or have some webbing between the fingers III and IV. The toes are moderately webbed.
The dorsal coloration is brown; there is a darker pattern starting from between the eyes. The snout and the sides are brown. There is a dark brown band running from the snout to the sides and tapering towards the groin. The limbs have cross-bands.
Adult males can reach at least and adult females at least in snout–vent length. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and round in lateral view. Males have a few scattered, large, flat or rounded tubercles in their upper eyelids. The tympanum is distinct.
Afrixalus weidholzi is a small species: adult measure in snout–vent length. The dorsum is whitish to yellow and has a thin, dark vertebral line, at least posteriorly. There is also a broader, dark lateral stripe running from the tip of snout to the groin.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is narrower than the body. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and rounded in lateral view. The canthus rostralis and supra-tympanic fold are evident, the latter obscuring upper edge of tympanum.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is acuminate in dorsal view and sloping in lateral profile. The tympanum is round and the supratympanic fold is well defined. The finger tips bear discs but no lateral fringes or webbing.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length; Lynch (1979) gives somewhat higher maximum sizes (34 mm and 45 mm, respectively). The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and rounded in profile. The tympanum is prominent. The upper eyelid has low tubercles.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is long, subacuminate in dorsal view, and rounded in lateral profile. The tympanum is round and prominent. The fingers and the toes have lateral fringes and round terminal discs but no webbing.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. Dorsal skin is shagreened and has scattered small warts, but ventral skin smooth. The tympanum is prominent and vertically oval. The snout is subacuminate to acuminate in dorsal view, but round in vertical profile.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is long, subacuminate in dorsal view, and rounded in lateral profile. The tympanum is distinct, but the supra-tympanic fold obscures its upper edge. Skin of the dorsum has numerous minute, low warts.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is as broad as the body in males but narrower in females. The snout is rounded in females, but in males it is subacuminate in the dorsal view. The tympanum is round.
Adult males of this species have a snout-vent length (SVL) of ,but adult males can reach a maximum of ,and adult females of this species have a snout-vent length of Frogsofborneo- Microhyla borneensisBornean Chorus Frog-Microhyla borneensis, Tadpoles measure just 3 mm.
Adult males grow to at least and adult females to in snout–vent length; males appear to reach maturity by they are . The snout is short and bluntly rounded. The tympanum is only barely visible at its lower edge. The supratympanic fold is weak.
The type series consists of two adult males that measure in snout–vent length. The snout is projecting and moderately elongated. The tympanum is indistinct and poorly defined. The first finger is reduced, the other fingers have tips that are at most slightly expanded.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct and relatively large (about as large as the eye ); the prominent supratympanic fold partly hides the tympanum dorsally. Finger tips have prominent discs; those of the toes are less prominent.
The holotype, an adult male and the only type specimen, measured in snout–vent length (SVL). This is also the maximum (recorded) size for males, while the maximum female size is SVL. The head is slightly wider than it is long. The snout is truncate.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is moderately long and subacuminate in dorsal view, rounded or weakly protruding when seen laterally. The tympanum is visible; the supra-tympanic fold is indistinct because of warts. Skin is dorsally areolate.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is narrower than the body and longer than it is wide. The snout is long, nearly acuminate in dorsal view and rounded in lateral view. The upper eyelid bears a subconical tubercle.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The head as wide as the body and slightly longer than it is wide. The snout is rounded to truncate in dorsal view and rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is round to vertically oblong.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on a single specimen, in snout–vent length. The head is as wide as the body and wider than it is long. The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and round in lateral profile. The tympanum is prominent.
Psychrophrynella wettsteini is a comparatively large species (maximum snout–vent length ) and has a robust body and long limbs. The snout is rounded. The tympanic membrane is absent, whereas the tympanic annulus is visible through the skin. Tips of the digits are only slightly swollen.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is vertically ovoid; the supra-tympanic fold is weakly developed and granular. The fingers have no webbing whereas the toes have basal webbing; the discs are almost round.
Oreobates choristolemma are robust frogs with adults measuring in snout–vent length. The head is large and wider than long; the snout is short. The dorsum is brown with darker markings; the skin is granular, with round keratinized granules and small and large warts.
Lynchius simmonsi is a small frog; a subadult female measured in snout–vent length. The head is longer than wide; the snout is short. The dorsum is reddish brown with dark brown marks; the skin is uniformly granular, with small, round, elevated, keratinized granules.
Adult males measure about (based on the sole male in the type series) and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is slightly wider than it is long. The snout is bluntly rounded in dorsal view and truncate in profile. The tympanum is brown.
This species is known from the holotype, an adult female measuring in snout–vent length, and another specimen. The head is as wide as the body. The snout is moderately long and truncate. The tympanum is distinct but partly covered by the supra-tympanic fold.
Males in the type series measure and the single female in snout–vent length. The body is robust and the head is relatively wide. The snout is generally rounded, but in the female it is longer and acute in dorsal view. The tympanum is distinct.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length; females are unknown. The body is robust and broader than the head. The snout is truncate and rounded in lateral profile and truncate in dorsal view. The tympanum is indistinct and the supra-tympanic fold is short.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length; on average, adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The tympanum is distinct. The toes are fully webbed and the toe discs are large. The dorsum is scattered with tubercles and large warts.
Odorrana junlianensis are large frogs, with adult males measuring about and adult females in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is moderately slender. The snout is depressed, obtusely pointed in dorsal view and rounded in profile. The tympanum and the canthus rostralis are distinct.
The caudal fin is forked or emarginated. Unlike species of Paramphilius, the snout is greater than half of the snout length, the adipose fin is not confluent with the caudal fin in adult specimens, and the anal fin has seven or fewer branched rays.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is longer than it is broad, but the snout is short. The tympanum is present but may be obscured by skin. The toe tips are dilated into small but distinct, round discs.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short and rounded. The tympanum is visible and darker than the surrounding skin; the supratympanic ridge is minimal. The finger and the toe tips are swollen but not expanded into discs.
Adult males measure about and adult females in snout–vent length (each of these ranges is based on just two specimens). The head is relatively narrow. The snout bluntly rounded, approaching truncate, in dorsal view, and vertical in profile. The canthus rostralis is rounded.
Nanorana blanfordii are medium-sized frogs, though relatively small among their closest relatives: adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is not very distinct. The finger and toe tips bears discs; the toes are webbed.
The original species description was based on a single specimen (the holotype, collected in 1956), a small adult female in snout–vent length. The holotype is a small female. Two males found in 1999 measure in snout–vent length. The overall appearance is slender.
Males measure typically whereas females can grow to in snout–vent length. The snout is blunt; the body is slightly more stocky compared to some other Meristogenys species. The skin on the dorsum has smooth warts. The dominant color is green, including the eyes.
It is clearly distinct from other Sphaenorhynchus species. Adult males measure in snout–vent length. The snout is pointed or truncate-subovoid from above and acute in the lateral profile. The finger and toe tips bears discs; both the fingers and toes are moderately webbed.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. There is a dark dorso-lateral line running from the snout almost to the groin. No externally visible tympanum is present. A late-stage tadpole (Gosner stage 37) measured in total length, of which the body made .
Females in the type series measure in snout–vent length. The tail length is about 1.4 times the body length, giving a maximum total length of . The snout is broadly rounded and the eyes are protuberant. The head is just slightly wider than the neck.
The holotype of Nototriton alvarezdeltoroi (an adult male) measure in snout–vent length and has a long tail. The dorsum and tail are a reddish brown with an irregular, obscure dorsal stripe. The limbs are orange. The snout is blunt with forward- pointing nostrils.
Its snout-vent length is in males and in females. It has a markedly slender head with a pointed snout and a rather short fourth finger, distinguishing it from its relatives. Its vomer lacks teeth, and it has a lingual papilla. The eggs are unpigmented.
Adult males measure and females in snout–vent length. The webbing in feet leaves one phalanx of toe V free (two in P. pujoli). The head is slightly longer than wide and with a pointed snout. The tympanum is almost as large as the eye.
Male of Pristimantis attenboroughi (lateral view) Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is short and rounded. No tympanum is present. The finger and toe tips are narrow and rounded, without circumferential grooves; neither lateral fringes nor webbing is present.
Saun glacier is situated north to Neola glacier. The snout of the Neola glacier is a one-hour trek along Duktu Nala from Duktu village. The snout of Neola is situated at an altitude of . This place also serves as base camp for Panchchuli expeditions.
Oreobates are small to medium-sized frogs with males measuring and females in snout–vent length. They are generally brownish in colour. Body is robust with a short snout. The toes lack discs and fingers have reduced or absent discs; there is no webbing.
Trachonitis is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Philipp Christoph Zeller in 1848.
Vitula is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1887.
Hypolophota is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Alfred Jefferis Turner in 1904.
Jocara albimedialis is a species of snout moth. It is found in Mexico and Costa Rica.
Scotomera is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1881.
Saluria is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1887.
Pempeliella lecerfella is a species of snout moth. It is found in North Africa, including Morocco.
G. aaronbaueri is medium-sized for its genus. Maximum recorded snout-to-vent length (SVL) is .
G. boehmei is medium-sized for its genus. Maximum recorded snout-to-vent length (SVL) is .
G. bonkowskii is medium-sized for its genus. Adult snout-to-vent length (SVL) is about .
A. spurrelli may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of , plus a tail long.Gans (1962).
Seleucia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1887.
Oneida is a genus of snout moths. It was described by George Duryea Hulst in 1889.
Specialized snout masks which supply oxygen to revive family pets have been donated to fire departments.
Clydonopteron is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Norman Denbigh Riley in 1880.
Condylolomia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Augustus Radcliffe Grote in 1873.
Neophrida is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Heinrich Benno Möschler in 1882.
Doddiana is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Alfred Jefferis Turner in 1902.
Epitamyra is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1891.
Etiella is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Philipp Christoph Zeller in 1839.
Laodamia is a genus of snout moths. It is sometimes listed as a subgenus of Oncocera.
The snout-to-vent length (SVL) of adults of L. victormartinezi is .Batista et al. (2015).
Ceracanthia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1893.
Nevacolima is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Herbert H. Neunzig in 1994.
Hypsipyla is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1888.
Eurythmia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1887.
Mampava is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1888.
The holotype of E. schmidti has a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of .Brown WC (1954).
Relatively large for its genus, P. monicae may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of .
Interim Resurgence is the fourth studio album by Zoogz Rift, released in 1985 by Snout Records.
Mecistophylla is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Alfred Jefferis Turner in 1937.
Medium-sized for its genus, G. truongi may attain a snout-to- vent length (SVL) of .
Pandoflabella is a genus of snout moths. It was erected by Maria Alma Solis in 1993.
The average snout-to-vent length (SVL) of several specimens of the salamander Thorius arboreus was .
The most notable features are large temporal fenestrae, a narrow snout, and a high parietal crest.
Amputees in Limbo is the second studio album by Zoogz Rift, released in 1982 by Snout.
Oncocera is a genus of snout moths. It was described by James Francis Stephens in 1829.
Myrlaea albistrigata is a species of snout moth. It is found in FranceFauna Europaea and Turkey.
Meroptera is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Augustus Radcliffe Grote in 1882.
Anisothrix is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1891.
Anonaepestis is a genus of snout moths. It was erected by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1894.
Male Nymphargus oreonympha grow to a snout–vent length of . The dorsum has numerous small tubercles.
Males measure in snout–vent length. Texture of dorsal skin of males is shagreen with spinules.
Boulenger 1921.Boulenger 1887. Snout-vent-length is up to ; total length is almost .Schmidt 1919.
Adult males of C. otai are snout-to-vent length (SVL). Females are larger, at SVL.
A tricolor Dalmatian female—with tan spotting on the eyebrows, snout, cheeks, neck, chest, and legs.
Bradyrrhoa is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Philipp Christoph Zeller in 1848.
Gymnancyla is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Philipp Christoph Zeller in 1848.
Dioryctria is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Philipp Christoph Zeller in 1846.
Adulis is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1891.
Diatomocera is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1893.
Legless and snake-like, D. tealei may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of almost .
Arivaca is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Jay C. Shaffer in 1968.
Arta is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Augustus Radcliffe Grote in 1875.
Other distinguishing features include a more prominent snout, longer fur, and the absence of a tail.
H. prashadi may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of , with a tail length of .
Cathyalia is a genus of snout moths. It was erected by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1888.
Nefundella is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Herbert H. Neunzig in 1986.
Pima parkerella is a species of snout moth. It is found in North America, including Montana.
Epicrocis is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Philipp Christoph Zeller in 1848.
Ephestiodes is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot in 1887.
Epipaschia is a genus of snout moths. It was described by James Brackenridge Clemens in 1860.
C. eisenmanae has an average snout-to-vent length (SVL) of and is chocolate brown.Tri (2008).
Michaelshaffera is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Maria Alma Solis in 1998.
Adults of S. gaigeae may attain a snout-to-vent length (SVL) of .Thomas & Schwartz (1966).
Lineodini is a tribe of the species-rich subfamily Spilomelinae in the snout moth family Crambidae.
Like various other dicynodonts, the face is ornamented with bony bosses on the snout around the eyes. The bulbous nasal bones on the top of the snout each sport a single ovoid-shaped boss that overhangs the nostrils and stops just short of the orbits (eye sockets) in front of the eyes. The paired bosses are separated by a 3—7 cm (1—3 in) wide gap of flat, featureless bone between them on top of the snout where the premaxilla and the nasals meet. This is an unusual condition for kannemeyeriiforms, which typically only have a single large boss across the whole surface of the snout.
The holotype skull of Livyatan was about long. Like other raptorial sperm whales, Livyatan had a wide gap in between the temporal fossae on the sides of the skull and the zygomatic processes on the front of the skull, indicating a large space for holding strong temporal muscles, which are the most powerful muscles between the skull and the jaw. The snout was robust, thick, and relatively short, which allowed it to clamp down harder and better handle struggling prey. The left and right premaxillae on the snout probably did not intersect at the tip of the snout, though the premaxillae took up most of the front end of the snout.
The skull of Repelinosaurus is relatively narrow for a dicynodont, and the snout in front of the eyes is especially short—among the shortest of any dicynodont—but proportionately wide, tapering slightly to a flat, squared-off beak. The bony nostrils are large, and occupy half of the length of the short snout. The upper surfaces of the snout are strongly rugose, particularly on the premaxilla, and this textured surface ends abruptly at the contact of the nasal and frontal bones. Like other Kannemeyeriiformes, the nasals sport bony bosses, however uniquely they form as a single central swelling on the snout while most other Kannemeyeriiformes have a distinct pair.
Like other dicynodonts, Taoheodon had a short skull with large temporal fenestra at the back, large orbits and a short snout, which in Taoheodon was proportionately short even for a dicynodont. Its skull is slightly longer than wide, with elongated temporal fenestra. The external nostril is rounded and not especially large for a dicynodont, but the area of bone behind and beneath it is hollowed out and concave compared to the rest of the snout. The nasal bones along the roof of the snout are relatively flat, but are nonetheless rugosely textured and bore a single weakly developed boss of tough skin or keratin on top of the snout.
Based on the type series consisting of four adult males and two adult females, males measure and females in snout–vent length. The body is robust. The head is longer than it is wide. The snout is subelliptical in dorsal view and protruding in lateral view.
Snout Spout is never shown in the 200X cartoon series but Eternian firemen are shown in the accompanying comic series dressed like Snout Spout, the line was canceled before his figure could be released. In 2004, a mini statue of the character was produced by NECA.
Adult males measure and adult females—based on a single specimen—about in snout–vent length. The body of the males is moderately slender and the limbs are long; the head is winder than the body. The snout is rounded. The eyes are large and prominent.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. Snout is short. Dorsal skin is smooth and has scattered granules, and usually, a few curved weak ridges. There is a small, horn-like tubercle at the edge of the eyelid as well as several tubercles on the flanks.
Four adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length; females were not reported. The upper eyelid has a prominent tubercle. The snout is obtusely pointed in dorsal view and rounded laterally. The tympanum is distinct and oval; the supra-tympanic fold is distinct.
The snout is constricted just in front of the eye sockets. The upper beak, of the snout, is rounded and relatively small. The vomers at their front side overlap the rear underside of the fused premaxillae. At the rear of the skull, the occipital condyle is large.
Indirana semipalmata is a small frog, with a snout-vent length (SVL) of . The snout is blunt with moderate canthal ridges. The space between the eyes is about the same width as each of the upper eyelids. The tympanum and the eyes are of the same diameter.
The type series consists of three males and two females measuring in snout–vent length; the holotype, an adult male, measures . They eyes are inconspicuous. The tympanum is small, about half of the eye diameter. The snout is rounded in dorsal view and truncated in lateral view.
Craugastor guerreroensis was described based a type series consisting of three adult males measuring in snout–vent length. The head is as wide as the body and broader than long; the snout is subacuminate. The canthus rostralis is moderately sharp. The tympanum is visible and large.
Eleutherodactylus zugi is a small species: adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rather acute. The tympanum is visible and larger in females than in males of the same size. The fingers and toes are short and have no webbing.
Males measure and female(s) in snout–vent length; it is uncertain whether these are juveniles or adults. The snout is short and truncate. The tympanum is visible and about two-thirds of the eye diameter. The toes are one-third webbed and have bluntly pointed tips.
Adult males measure in snout–vent length. An adult female measures , whereas a female measuring 22 mm appears to be a sub-adult. The head is broader than it is long; the snout is tapering and projecting. The tympanum is covered by skin and barely visible.
Adult males measure and adult females up to in snout–vent length. The snout is bluntly rounded. The tympanum is visible but not prominent, and it is partially hidden by a weak supratympanic fold. The fingers and toes bear discs that are better developed on the former.
Among Leptolalax, Leptolalax hamidi is among the larger species: male measure in snout-vent length and females in SVL. It has a slender head and body. Its back, including on top of snout, is clearly marked with discrete blotches; chest and abdomen are without large dark markings.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is distinct and supra-tympanic fold is prominent. The fingers have expanded discs but no webbing; the toes are webbed but the discs are smaller than those on the fingers.
The type series consists of eight unsexed individuals measuring in snout–urostyle length. Later examination of six of these has revealed them all as males, measuring in snout–vent length. The dorsum is exceptionally warty. The throat is black whereas the belly is grey or spotted.
Two adult males in the type series measure in snout–vent length (females are unknown). The head is narrower than the body; the snout is rounded. The tympanum is ovoid and the membrane is barely differentiated. The supra-tympanic fold is low and not obscuring the tympanum.
Based on the type series consisting of two adult males and a single female, adult males measure about and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is short and narrower than the body. The snout is rounded to slightly truncate. The canthus rostralis is moderately sharp.
The holotype is a female measuring in snout–vent length, whereas the other known specimen is a male measuring . The body is moderately robust. The is head is slightly wider than it is long but not as wide as the body. The snout is bluntly rounded.
The holotype, of unknown sex, measures in snout–vent length (the specimen is somewhat dehydrated was not dissected to avoid damage). The snout is subacuminate in dorsal view and truncate in profile. The canthus rostralis is distinct and straight. The tympanum is distinct with an ossified annulus.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The head is large and wide. The snout is rounded in profile but blunt and barely rounded in dorsal view. The tympanic annulus is indistinct; the weakly- developed supratympanic fold hides the upper part of the tympanum.
Adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is rounded to truncate in dorsal view, and rounded, slightly protruding in lateral profile. The tympanum is large, with its dorsal edge partly concealed by the supra-tympanic fold. The eyes are large and bulging.
Raorchestes coonoorensis is a small frog. Only males have been collected; the five males in the type series measure in snout–vent length. Snout is long (longer than horizontal diameter of the eye) and tympanum is rather distinct. Body is slender and hind-limbs are relatively long.
Idiacanthidae have a snout equal or less than their bony orbit length with nostrils closer to their eyes than snout. Their premaxilla, maxilla, and mandible teeth are almost all capable of being depressed. Idiacanthidae also present pectoral fins in larvae, but have an absence in adulthood.
The type series consists of three specimens measuring in snout–vent length; the smallest one is the holotype, an adult male. Females can reach at least in snout–vent length. The head is narrow and flat, and the eyes point almost directly upward. No tympanum is visible.
Specimens in the type series measure in snout–vent length; the largest specimens are all females. The snout is rounded. The tympanum is very distinct. The fingers have no webbing whereas the toes are about one-third webbed; the tips of the digits are slightly dilated.
In the material from the Upemba National Park (Democratic Republic of the Congo), adult males measure and adult females in snout–vent length. The snout is somewhat flattened and pointed. The tympanum is present but usually not visible through the skin. The limbs are relatively short.
Adult males measure and adult females, based on the only female in the type series, in snout–vent length. The snout is bluntly rounded. The pupil is horizontal. The limbs are short and the fingers and toes lack webbing; the toe tips are very slightly expanded.
The holotype, an adult male, measures in snout–vent length (SVL). In a population in Linhares observed at the time of breeding, adult males measured and females in SVL. The body is very stout. The snout is short, rounded in dorsal view but more acute in profile.
Adult females measure and adult males in snout–vent length, although only males larger than SVL had nuptial pads in addition to vocal sacs. The overall appearance is stocky. The snout is obtusely pointed or rounded in dorsal view and rounded in profile. The tympanum is visible.
Cornufer heffernani has a small, delicate, slender body and limbs. A syntype specimen of Hylella solomonis in the Senckenberg Museum measures in snout–vent length. The head is broader than the body and triangular in shape. The snout is broadly rounded and the eyes are large.
Adult females grow to about snout–vent length, whereas males are considerably smaller. The maximum lengths reported by Shimada and colleagues are for males and females, respectively. Males are less robustly built than females and have a relatively much larger tympanum. The snout is comparatively blunt.
Adult males in the type series measure and adult females in snout–vent length (based on respectively 2 and 3 specimens). The overall appearance is moderately slender. The head is narrow and the snout is projecting and obtusely pointed; rounded in lateral view. The tympanum is distinct.
The holotype, an adult male, measures in snout–vent length, whereas an adult female paratype measures . The head is broader than it is wide and the snout is slightly pointed. The tympanum is large and distinct. The fingers are slender and bear large discs in their tips.
Adult Bolitoglossa orestes measure in snout–vent length. Males and females are alike. Their skin is smooth and brown-orange to pale brown or yellowish in colour in the dorsum but darker in the flanks. The tail is about as long as the snout–vent length.
Tadpole of Megophrys brachykolos Megophrys brachykolos are relatively small but robust frogs. Males have a snout-vent length of and females . They have a strongly projecting snout and a small horn-like tubercle at the edge of the upper eyelid (the "horn" of a "horned toad").
The Snout reflex (also orbicularis oris reflex) or a "Pout" is a pouting or pursing of the lips that is elicited by light tapping of the closed lips near the midline. The contraction of the muscles causes the mouth to resemble a snout. This reflex is tested in a neurological exam and if present, is a sign of brain damage or dysfunction. Along with the "suck", palmomental reflexes and other reflexes, snout is considered a frontal release sign.
The snout is considered a weak point on most animals: because of its structure, an animal can be easily stunned or knocked out, or even have its snout snapped by applying sufficient force.The Cyclopædia of Anatomy and Physiology, Robert Bentley Todd, Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans & Roberts, 1852, ... this is especially the case with those which have the lips or nostrils prolonged into a snout or proboscis, as in the pig, the rhinoceros, the tapir, and the elephant ...
When the female's eggs reach maturity, she and her mate let go of any anchors and drift upward snout-to-snout, out of the sea grass, often spiraling as they rise. They interact for about 6 minutes, reminiscent of courtship. The female then swims away until the next morning, and the male returns to sucking up food through his snout. The female inserts her ovipositor into the male's brood pouch and deposits dozens to thousands of eggs.
The bluntnose stingray is characterized by the shape of its disc and snout. The bluntnose stingray has a diamond-shaped pectoral fin disc about a sixth wider than long, with broadly rounded outer corners. The leading margins of the disc are nearly straight and converge at the tip of the snout at up to a 130° angle; the anterior disc shape distinguishes this species from the similar Atlantic stingray (D. sabina), which has a longer, more acute snout.
Byctiscus populi in copula and leaf-rolling The tooth-nosed snout weevils, Rhynchitidae, are small beetles (1.5 to 6.5 mm) that are usually found vegetation. They usually use buds, fruits, or seeds for oviposition. The tooth-nosed snout weevils receive this name due to the teeth on the edges of their mandibles. Traditionally considered a subfamily of Attelabidae within the Curculionoidea (weevils and relatives), the tooth-nosed snout weevils are regarded as a separate family Rhynchitidae by some authorities.
A large species, L. schreiberi measures about snout-to-vent (SVL); including the tail, it measures about .
Medium-sized for an amphisbaenid, the maximum recorded snout- to-vent length (SVL) for A. hoogmoedi is .
Oenogenes congrualis is a species of snout moth in the genus Oenogenes. It is found in Australia.
Immyrla is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Harrison Gray Dyar Jr. in 1906.
Jocara chrysoderas is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found in Guyana.
Jocara claudalis is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found on Jamaica.
Jocara cononalis is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found in Guatemala.
Jocara conrana is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found in Peru.
Jocara pagiroa is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found in Brazil.
Jocara malrubia is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found in Brazil.
Jocara maroa is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found in Cuba.
Jocara martinia is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found in Guatemala.
Jocara monosemia is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found in Brazil.
Jocara pyropicta is a species of snout moth in the genus Jocara. It is found in Brazil.

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