Hoplodactylus delcourti, the giant 60cm gecko famous for being known from one specimen found in a French museum with no locality information attached, is most closely related to New Caledonian taxa, according to this new study. A new genus is erected for it, Gigarcanum.
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/dna-origin-giant-mystery-gecko
The paper itself can be found here: Reappraising the evolutionary history of the largest known gecko, the presumably extinct Hoplodactylus delcourti, via high-throughput sequencing of archival DNA | Scientific Reports
This poses more questions than it answers; did the species lay eggs, like those it is now known to be closely related to? What were a 60cm gecko's eggs like? Who collected the specimen from New Caledonia? When and why did it go extinct? And what was the inspiration for the Maori folk legend of the Kawekaweau, previously linked to this species?
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/dna-origin-giant-mystery-gecko
The paper itself can be found here: Reappraising the evolutionary history of the largest known gecko, the presumably extinct Hoplodactylus delcourti, via high-throughput sequencing of archival DNA | Scientific Reports
This poses more questions than it answers; did the species lay eggs, like those it is now known to be closely related to? What were a 60cm gecko's eggs like? Who collected the specimen from New Caledonia? When and why did it go extinct? And what was the inspiration for the Maori folk legend of the Kawekaweau, previously linked to this species?