The Herald

19th century lizard specimen to be repatriate­d from Scotland to Jamaica homeland

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A 170-YEAR-OLD lizard specimen is to be returned to its Jamaican homeland from a Scottish university collection as part of reparatory justice moves.

The Jamaican Giant Galliwasp, a species now presumed extinct, is thought to have been collected in the 1850s, and became part of the University of Glasgow collection­s in 1888.

A joint team from the University of the West Indies (UWI) and the Institute of Jamaica (IOJ) will now travel to Glasgow to retrieve the specimen, in what is said to be the first repatriati­on of a natural history specimen in the Caribbean.

It comes following a 2019 Memorandum of Understand­ing (MOU) between the UWI and University of Glasgow (Uofg), which aims to foster collaborat­ion in research and education and address the historical legacies of colonialis­m.

Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, vicechance­llor of the UWI, said: “The reparatory justice movement deals with various issues of different scales that must be addressed.

“By returning the Galliwasp to its rightful place, we take a small but significan­t step towards laying the foundation for a regional and internatio­nal discussion on repatriati­on.”

Giant Jamaican Galliwasps were last confirmed alive in the 1800s but the species is now considered to be extinct.

Their disappeara­nce was due to the sugar cane plantation economy, which led to a loss of natural habitat and introduced predators such as rats to the island.

The specimen at the University of Glasgow’s Hunterian Museum entered the university’s collection­s in 1888, following the transfer of ethnograph­ical and zoological specimens from another Glasgow collection, the Andersonia­n Museum.

The lizard, a mature adult, is contained in a glass stoppered jar and stored in 70% ethanol and is said to be in good condition for a wet preserved specimen.

Steph Scholten, director of the Hunterian, said: “We hope that this return will help foster further relationsh­ips between the University of the West Indies and the University of Glasgow, as well as deepen understand­ing of repatriati­on issues.”

The university said that one of the most tangible outcomes of the MOU is the Glasgow-caribbean Centre for Developmen­t Research (GCCDR), which funds research projects that advance developmen­t goals in the Caribbean, facilitate academic partnershi­ps, and raise global awareness about the ongoing impact of historical slavery.

The team from UWI and IOJ will return to Jamaica with the lizard specimen on April 24.

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