Wang’s Garden Lizard Discovered in China

Researchers have identified a new species of iguana living in southern China and Vietnam that was previously confused with a close iguana relative found in the region.

Meet Calotes Wangi

The lizard has been named Calotes wangi or Wang’s garden lizard. It measures under 9 centimeters long and has an orange-hued tongue that distinguishes it. The name honors Professor Yuezhao Wang, former director of the Chengdu Institute of Biology’s herpetology museum, for his contributions.

An Unexpected Find

For years, experts thought they were studying the common Calotes versicolor lizard during surveys. Extensive genetic and morphological analysis revealed otherwise.

Key differentiating traits included more facial scales and longer toe claws. The two species also occupy slightly different forest habitats.

Habits and Habitats

Calotes wangi resides in subtropical and tropical forests, especially along hilly forest edges and shrub lands.

The agile climber is active April-October. It sleeps on sloped branches and feeds on insects and spiders.

Not Currently Threatened

While habitat loss impacts the lizard, researchers do not consider Calotes wangi threatened presently. However, medicinal uses and consumption demand monitoring.

Need for More Sampling

The scientists say more thorough sampling is still needed across the landscape to uncover divergent lineages and cryptic species that remain undescribed.

Indeed, biodiversity studies relying on genetics and morphology continue revealing unique species even in well-studied regions.

As human domination of landscapes keeps expanding, cataloging lifeforms through exploratory sampling grows increasingly urgent worldwide.


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