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Science

24 threatened lizard species discovered

U.S. researchers have identified two dozen new species of lizards on the Caribbean islands, and about half of them may be extinct or close to extinction.

New species are all skinks on the Caribbean islands

The Anguilla Bank skink is one of 24 new species of lizards identified on the Caribbean islands. (Karl Questel/Penn State University)

U.S. researchers haveidentified two dozen new species of lizards on the Caribbean islands,and about half of them may be extinct or close to extinction.

Blair Hedges, a professor of biology at Penn State University, led the study in the New Zealand journal Zootaxa that was published Monday and co-authored byCaitlin Conn, a researcher at the University of Georgia.

Skinks typically have small smooth round scales, thick bodies, strong necks and short legs or snake-like bodies. Theteamidentified 39 types of skinksix of which were already recognized andnine named long ago but considered invalid until now by examining museum specimens, DNA sequences and the animals themselves.

The Jamaican skink is one of the newly identfied species that is under threat. (Joseph Burgess/Penn State University)
The creatures range in size, with the some up to six time larger than others.

Thediscovery of new reptile species is relatively common, with about 130 added to the global species count each year, but the authors note that researchers haventidentified more than20 species at a time since the 1800s.

Thelizards will, however, join an unappealing club. Ofmore than3,000 reptiles listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the skinks are likely to join the quarter classified as being threatened with extinction.

"The mongoose is the predator we believe is responsible for many of the species' close-to-extinction status in the Caribbean," said Hedges, adding that the mongoose was introduced from India in 1872 to control rats in sugar cane fields.

Mongooseshave been spreading across the islands for decades and, Hedges says, have "nearly exterminated this entire reptile fauna, which had gone largely unnoticed by scientists and conservationists until now."

Skinks produce a human-like placenta and gestate offspring for up to a year, which makes them unique among lizards but may also make pregnant females more vulnerable to predators.

New data may guide conservation efforts

Hedges and Conn added that human activity, especially the removal of forests, is also contributing to the decline of many island species.

The new data may helpguide conservation efforts, as well as further research on the geographicdistribution and adaptation techniques of the lizards.

"We were completely surprised to find what amounts to a new fauna, with co-occurring species and different ecological types," said Hedges.

"Now, one of the smallest groups of lizards in this region of the world has become one of the largest groups."