Wiederentdeckung von Anolis laevis in der Region San Martín in Peru

Peru: Lizard with nose extension rediscovered after more than 150 years – Anolis laevis

In 1876, the American naturalist Edward Drinker Cope described a small lizard from the montane forests of northeastern Peru. What stood out most was an unusual appendage at the tip of its snout—a feature that set it apart from most other species. Cope originally described the species under a different

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Pholidoscelis cineraceus

Guadeloupe ameiva—isolation, colonization & the end of an island species

Islands under pressure The West Indies—including the Lesser Antilles—are among the most species-rich regions in the world. Many lizard and snake species are found exclusively there. These endemic species have adapted over millennia to the conditions of individual islands. Yet this very specialization makes them particularly vulnerable: when habitats are

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Tonga-Skink (Tachygyia microlepis)

Tongan Ground Skink

From the South Pacific to the museum—the last Tongan ground skinks The Tongan ground skink, a giant lizard, is known only from two specimens that are now housed in the Natural History Museum of Paris. The French doctors and naturalists Jean-René-Constant Quoy and Joseph Paul Gaimard collected the two animals

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gigarcanum

Delcourt’s Giant Gecko

The largest gecko in the world … In the early 1980s, French museum employee Alain Delcourt discovered a forgotten specimen of a single stuffed giant gecko in the basement of the Natural History Museum of Marseille, which had previously been on public display for years. This species was previously unknown

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emoia nativatis

Christmas Island forest skink

Another loss for Australia’s fauna The Christmas Island forest skink is, alongside the Christmas Island pipistrelle (2009) and the Bramble Cay melomys (between 2009 and 2011), among the most recent losses suffered by Australia’s wildlife. The last known Christmas Island forest skink was named Gump—a female that died in human

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gelbe gallwespenschleiche

Jamaican giant galliwasp

Last seen in 1851 The Jamaican giant galliwasp, endemic exclusively to the Caribbean island of Jamaica, belongs to the family of diploglossids (Diploglossidae)—lizards with small but well-developed legs. A report written around 1850 by the English naturalist Philip H. Gosse indicates that the Jamaican giant galliwasp was still commonly found

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Kapverdischer Riesenskink

Cape Verde Giant Skink

Ilhas Desertas—the terra typica of the Cape Verde giant skink Organisms that occur in isolated ecosystems such as islands are often adapted to the extreme conditions prevailing there. They exhibit characteristics such as dwarfism or gigantism and often lack defensive mechanisms due to the absence of predators, setting them apart

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Antiguan curly-tailed lizard

A reptile of disgusting appearance A Mrs. Lanaghan (also Lanagan) provided in 1844 in Antigua and the Antiguans a description of a reptile that could be the Antiguan curly-tailed lizard. She described a ground-dwelling lizard that was “considerably larger” than those in trees. Along its body ran “longitudinal blood-red stripes”

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