La Palma giant lizard

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La Palma giant lizard

Critically endangered, possibly extinct  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Lacertidae
Genus: Gallotia
Species:
G. auaritae
Binomial name
Gallotia auaritae
Mateo, García-Márquez, López Jurado & Barahona, 2001
Synonyms
  • Gallotia simonyi auaritae
    Mateo, García-Márquez, López Jurado & Barahona, 2001

The La Palma giant lizard (Gallotia auaritae) is a large

critically endangered
.

History

xerophytic
vegetation.

Though described from bones and generally considered extinct, sightings and photographic evidence of a large

lacertid made in 2007 north of the island could belong to this species.[2][3] Some authors consider the sightings doubtful.[4]

Taxonomy

The La Palma giant lizard was described originally as a subspecies of Simony's giant lizard (G. simonyi),[5] but was elevated later to full species rank.[6] Remains from La Palma previously assigned to Gallotia goliath seem to belong to this taxon instead; if this is correct, they indicate that the average size of the species has decreased over the last millennia, possibly due to humans hunting the larger lizards.[7] The sighted La Palma giant lizard individual was slightly more than 30 cm (~1 ft) long and had an estimated age of four years.[2] New expeditions to the area were planned in hopes of finding more individuals and possibly a breeding population.[3]

Scientists did not have a chance to study living specimens, and present fossil and subfossil material of G. auaritae does not allow for sufficiently detailed analyses of its

phylogenetic status. It likely belongs to the simonyi clade like the other giant Gallotia species from the western Canary Islands, but whether it actually was as close to G. simonyi as presumed remains unverified.[8]

Status

Its decline may have started 2000 years ago with the arrival of humans on La Palma[citation needed]. Until the sightings, it was believed to have become extinct in the last 500 years. The main causes of extinction were believed to have been introduced cats, consumption by the original human population of the Canary Islands, and habitat destruction for agriculture. It would not be the only lizard from the Canary Islands to have been considered extinct only to be rediscovered later: the same happened to El Hierro giant lizard and La Gomera giant lizard (rediscovered 1974 and 1999, respectively). The somewhat smaller Tenerife speckled lizard was only discovered for the first time in 1996.

Not a single living individual has been captured and any remaining population, if existing, is assumed to be tiny.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ . Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Giant Lizard found on La Palma". Archived from the original on 2007-12-23. Retrieved 2007-12-20.
  3. ^ a b Canary island giant lizard sighting gives hope to local biologists EL PAÍS via expatica.com. Accessed 28/12-2007
  4. .
  5. ^ Mateo, J.A.; García-Márquez, M.; López-Jurado, L.F. & Barahona, F. (2001): Descripción del lagarto gigante de La Palma (Islas Canarias) a partir de restos subfósiles. Revista Española de Herpetología 15: 53-59. [Spanish with English abstract] PDF abstract
  6. ^ Afonso, O.M. & Mateo, J.A. (2003): Los lagartos gigantes canarios: conservación creativa de poblaciones mínimas. In: Jiménez, I. & Delibes, M. (eds): Al Borde de la Extinción: Integrando Ciencia, Política y Sociedad en la Recuperación de Especies Amenazadas. Evren, Valencia PDF abstract
  7. (HTML abstract)

External links