After 74 years the Ochoterena alligator lizard has been re-discovered in Mexico :
( from HERP>MX - facebook site ) :
The Lost Dragon, Abronia ochoterenai
In 1939, Rafael Martín del Campo described an arboreal alligator lizard from the mysterious little town of Santa Rosa, Chiapas. The species was christened Abronia ochoterenai in honor of Martín del Campo's mentor, Isaac Ochoterena; and the two specimens would be the last anyone would see for the next 74 years.
But, it wasn't just the lizard that vanished, the type-locality itself went missing. To the frustration of researchers, there are no fewer than 16 towns bearing the name Santa Rosa in the region, and the exact home for Ochoterena's Arboreal Alligator Lizard was long forgotten. Over the years several herpetologists published their best approximations based upon the flora and fauna collected along with those original alligator lizards, but efforts to locate additional specimens failed.
That is until a stroke of good luck, and a good deal of off-roading, landed the HERP.MX team in an unnamed sierra on the Atlantic slopes of southeastern Chiapas. Our early searches in this particular sierra had revealed a population of Bothriechis aurifer which, curiously enough, happened to be the species collected along with A. ochoterenai almost three-quarters of a century ago. With proximity and biogeographical similarities providing some motivation, we successfully secured several Abronia which later scale counts revealed to be the long-lost Abronia ochoterenai.
( from HERP>MX - facebook site ) :
The Lost Dragon, Abronia ochoterenai
In 1939, Rafael Martín del Campo described an arboreal alligator lizard from the mysterious little town of Santa Rosa, Chiapas. The species was christened Abronia ochoterenai in honor of Martín del Campo's mentor, Isaac Ochoterena; and the two specimens would be the last anyone would see for the next 74 years.
But, it wasn't just the lizard that vanished, the type-locality itself went missing. To the frustration of researchers, there are no fewer than 16 towns bearing the name Santa Rosa in the region, and the exact home for Ochoterena's Arboreal Alligator Lizard was long forgotten. Over the years several herpetologists published their best approximations based upon the flora and fauna collected along with those original alligator lizards, but efforts to locate additional specimens failed.
That is until a stroke of good luck, and a good deal of off-roading, landed the HERP.MX team in an unnamed sierra on the Atlantic slopes of southeastern Chiapas. Our early searches in this particular sierra had revealed a population of Bothriechis aurifer which, curiously enough, happened to be the species collected along with A. ochoterenai almost three-quarters of a century ago. With proximity and biogeographical similarities providing some motivation, we successfully secured several Abronia which later scale counts revealed to be the long-lost Abronia ochoterenai.