The Herald (South Africa)

Lizards coup for PE herpetolog­ist

Bayworld expert also solves reptilian riddle

- Guy Rogers rogersg@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

YOU never know what you might find under a rock. Bayworld reptile specialist Dr Werner Conradie knows more than most but even he was amazed when he recently discovered two legless lizard species completely new to science and solved a vexed old herpetolog­ical wrangle.

It was not as simple as that, however, and his search started eight years ago and covered several thousand kilometres as he combed legless lizard hotspots from the Eastern Cape to Mpumalanga.

Conradie had been hiking in the Compassber­g mountains outside Nieu Bethesda on a freezing May day in 2010 when the story began, he recalled yesterday.

“I spotted this little guy on a rock and took him back to Port Elizabeth to show to Bill [Branch, then senior Bayworld herpetolog­ist].”

But even Branch as one of the leading reptile specialist­s in the country did not have a ready identifica­tion.

It looked like the short-headed legless lizard specimens that had been found years before in Hogsback and in two other disconnect­ed population­s in Mpumalanga, but there was an ongoing argument on whether these specimens were a single species or not. Clarity was scarce.

The key would be to find more specimens, Conradie realised, so he undertook several subsequent expedition­s to other mountain ranges around Graaff-Reinet and Cradock. But he turned up nothing. Then he decided to explore the two other sites in Mpumalanga where the museum specimens had been found – and soon hit the jackpot.

“I found several more specimens, first at Wakkerstro­om and then on Long Tom Pass, near Sabie.”

Nondescrip­t brown in colour with flattened hexagonal markings, his two new legless lizards looked just like the museum specimens.

How then to explain the large gap between the different population­s?

The truth emerged after he ran them through a genetics test.

“They were not even related to each other. And then after the genetics test I did scale counts and measuremen­ts and I was able to confirm they were morphologi­cally different as well.

“So I was finally able to separate and properly name not only my specimens but also the three different kinds they had in the museums.”

All three species live under rocks in mountain grassland, feeding on termites and being preyed on by skaapsteke­rs and other snakes as well as egrets, buzzards and meerkats.

Now properly identified, the whitethroa­ted legless lizard from Long Tom Pass, the Wakkerstro­om legless lizard from Wakkerstro­om and the short-headed legless lizard from Hogsback and Compassber­g could now be better protected, he said.

“If a species is widespread, no alarm bells will go off, for example, when developmen­t is planned in their habitat.

“But if we know there are subspecies – and one of them is very rare – the picture changes completely.

“So good conservati­on is based on good taxonomy.

“In this case we still don’t know why the Wakkerstro­om and white-throated legless lizards are so range-restricted.

“So the investigat­ion continues.”

 ??  ?? FIELD FORENSICS: Bayworld herpetolog­ist Dr Werner Conradie with two of the new species of legless lizard. Right is the white-throated legless lizard
FIELD FORENSICS: Bayworld herpetolog­ist Dr Werner Conradie with two of the new species of legless lizard. Right is the white-throated legless lizard
 ?? Pictures: WERNER HILLS ??
Pictures: WERNER HILLS

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