Mail & Guardian

Desperate 11th-hour bid to rescue little dragon ‘Smaug’

- Guy Jepson

They’re extremely rare, the razorsharp spikes on their backs and tails make them look like dragons and they fetch a small fortune on the black market.

South Africa’s sungazer lizard — known for seeming to stare at the sun — is under severe threat, despite steps to curb the illicit exporting of specimens caught in the wild.

Unique to the Free State and parts of Mpumalanga, sungazer colonies have been devastated for decades by habitat loss and the degradatio­n of the pristine grassland they inhabit because of farming, mining, roadworks, power stations and dams.

But the dragonlike lizards, which can grow up to 38cm long, face other threats. They are prized internatio­nally as pets and sought after locally to make love potions and for use in traditiona­l medicines.

A proliferat­ion of adverts on social media for sungazers reflects the extent of the internatio­nal trade in the species known to biologists as Smaug giganteus, named after JRR Tolkien’s dragon in The Hobbit.

“People in places like Japan, Europe and the US [United States] are paying ridiculous amounts for them just to keep them in glass tanks for bragging rights,’’ says Shivan Parusnath, a PhD student at the University of the Witwatersr­and who has created genetic markers for wild sungazers to help to conserve them.

“If you search [for] them on Instagram, you’ll see lots of people with their pet sungazers ... I started a Facebook page for people who want to know about the species and share pictures of them. But pretty much everybody who joins does so because they want to know where to buy one. They think I’m a breeder or something,’’ Parusnath said.

Last year, a passenger was arrested at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport travelling from South Africa to Germany with 19 sungazers in his luggage.

Potions made from their body parts are sold on traditiona­l markets in places such as Johannesbu­rg and Durban. Among the many beliefs is that the potions will allow men to have multiple partners if it’s spirited into their wives’ food.

“Kids in the Free State, impoverish­ed people, catch sungazers and sell them to sangomas just as a way of getting something to eat, which is sad,’’ Parusnath says.

Using population modelling, Parusnath, who surveyed more than 100 sungazer population­s for his master’s degree research, conservati­vely estimates that about 680 000 adults have survived the onslaught of infrastruc­ture, farming and poaching in recent decades.

Their habitat has shrunk dramatical­ly — by about two-thirds between 1978, when a large-scale survey was previously done, to about 1 100km2 today.

“In Mpumalanga, for instance, they used to be found in Standerton. We went to Standerton, visited the farms and they’re not there any more,’’ he says.

The picture is particular­ly bleak when you consider that female sungazers, which don’t lay eggs, only give birth every few years and do not produce many offspring.

Sungazers have long been flagged as vulnerable on the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature’s Red Data list of threatened species and placed on Cites Appendix 2, outlawing their trade unless they are bred in captivity. They are also listed nationally as a threatened and protected species, along with animals such as rhinos.

Parusnath says sungazer births in captivity are extremely rare, so the only conclusion is that large numbers of wild-caught reptiles have been “laundered’’ using valid Cites (Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species) permits issued by officials who don’t know any better.

 ??  ?? Red alert: Factors like habitat loss, illegal trading and being hunted for muthi are devastatin­g sungazer population­s. Photo: Shivan Parusnath
Red alert: Factors like habitat loss, illegal trading and being hunted for muthi are devastatin­g sungazer population­s. Photo: Shivan Parusnath

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