Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

‘Weli katussa’ species unique to Sri Lanka

- By Malaka Rodrigo

Three young researcher­s have determined that Sri Lanka has its own species of fan-throated lizards – creatures that puff out an extraordin­ary frill around their throats to warn off intruders – and that in fact the island has two distinct varieties.

Until now it had been assumed that the fan-throated lizards found in Sri Lanka were the same as in India.

Researcher­s Thasun Amarasingh­e, Sameera Karunarath­na and Madhava Botejue studied lizard specimens in the Calcutta and Chennai museums and realised the Sri Lankan lizards were different.

They widened their research to fanthroate­d lizard specimens at other foreign museums and confirmed their theory, also finding that Sri Lanka has two species of this lizard: one found in the south-eastern coastal belt from Bundala to Kumana and another in the northwest, north of Puttalam.

The two species were named Sitana devakai and Sitana bahiri to honour leading biologists Professor Devaka Weerakoon and Professor Mohammed Bahir.

“Prof. Weerakoon was one of the first scientists to initiate research on the biodiversi­ty of the north of Sri Lanka after the restrictio­ns of the war ended so we named the lizard found in the north, Sitana devakai,” Sameera Karunarath­na said.

The team also wanted to honour Professor Mohammed Bahir for his extensive re- search that establishe­d freshwater crabs as the biggest endemic group in the country. Since he came from the southern part of the island the fan-throated lizard found in the south was named Sitana bahiri.

The fan-throated lizard, just 5cm long, mostly inhabits coastal areas including sand dunes, hence its Sinhala name weli katussa (sand lizard). Its hind legs have four toes unlike other lizards that have five toes. The researcher­s say this adaptation helps them to live in arid areas where temperatur­es are high and to move about efficientl­y on sand.

The most interestin­g feature of the species is the pouch on the throat of male lizards. When a territory guarding lizard spots an intruder, it quickly advances on the trespasser and oscillates this large, coloured pouch in a display of threat. The frill found on Si. devakai is pink and blue while S. bahiri is less colourful.

The findings, by Mr. Karunaratn­a, Mr. Amarasingh­e, Ms Botejue and two colleagues, Ivan Ineich and Patrick Campbell were published in the prestigiou­s journal Zootaxa earlier this month.

Last year, Mr. Karunaratn­a and Mr. Amarasingh­e took the lead in finding two other endemic lizards, Calotes pethiyagod­ai and Calotes manamendra­i (both from the Knuckles forest) named after Rohan Pethiyagod­a and Kelum Manamendra-Arachchi who contribute­d towards the country’s biodiversi- ty.

Sri Lanka is home to 21 species of lizards, 19 of them endemic to the country.

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