An Entomologist in Iraq Finds a Rare, Recently Described Monitor Lizard! - Observation of the Week, 6/28/20

Our Observation of the Week is the first Nesterov’s Desert Monitor posted to iNat, seen in Iraq by @soran4!

“I grew up in a small village in the Kurdistan region of Iraq so I have great contact with nature,” says Soran Ahmed, who is currently a Masters of Science student in entomology at the University of Sulaimani. “I have a huge interest in studying biodiversity of Iraq, mainly insect diversity but I also love identifying any animals I find in our nature, and conserving threatened animals. I usually go to the field at least once a week to find animal diversity in our region.”

Soran found the monitor lizard you see above near a water source (see video here), and tells me they’re at risk of being killed by humans due to a misunderstanding about their behavior. The lizard’s local common name translates roughly as “goat sucker” and people in the area mistakenly believe they bite the teats of goats and sheep, and will thus sometimes dispatch them.

This monitor species was described in 2015 by Wolfgang Böhme, et al. A specimen was actually collected in 1914 by Russian herpetologist P.V. Nesterov, who “had intended to include them as a new Varanus species in his long manuscript on the reptiles of Kurdistan,” but he was not able to finish his work due to the outbreak of World War I and the Russian Revolution of 1917. A closer look at these once forgotten specimens, along with a recent photo of the lizard in the field by Willi Schneider, led to further study and finally a description of the species. Although little is known about these lizards, they are believed to range only in “the western and southwestern margin of the Zagros Mountain range on both sides of the Iraqi/Iranian border and down to the area of Shiraz, Fars Province, Iran.”

Soran (above) says “since we do not have sufficient sources for identification, using iNaturalist indeed helps me for identification purposes; it is really helpful. It’s also a perfect gate for sharing our diversity with other peoples around the world.”

- by Tony Iwane. Some quotes have been lightly edited for clarity and flow.


- Take a look at Soran’s YouTube channel, and he also has an Instagram account here

- There are over 7,500 monitor observations on iNat, check them out!

- Another reptile in the region, the spider-tailed horned viper, was also only recently described after a specimen was collected decades ago. It was the subject of an Observation of the Week post back in 2016.

Posted on 28 de junho de 2020, 08:52 PM by tiwane tiwane

Comentários

Nice bideo! And definitely a good story of description after 100+ year delay.

Publicado por marina_gorbunova mais de 3 anos antes

A gorgeous rare monitor lizard! Chokran -- thank you -- Soran Ahmed!

@tiwane, can you rotate Soran's image, so that it shows correctly?

Publicado por susanhewitt mais de 3 anos antes

Both photos look good to me in Firefox, Chrome, and Safari, @susanhewitt. But I uploaded a new version of the image, let me know if it works for you. If not, please send a screenshot to help@inaturalist.org.

Publicado por tiwane mais de 3 anos antes

@tiwane -- now it looks fine, thanks. I am using Safari.

Publicado por susanhewitt mais de 3 anos antes

That is an awesome story. Way to go @soran4!

Publicado por sullivanribbit mais de 3 anos antes

Stunning!

Publicado por lisa_bennett mais de 3 anos antes

Nice observation!!!

Publicado por sajibbiswas mais de 3 anos antes

Wait a minute - what's an Entomologist doing looking at something with so few legs....
Seriously, it's a wonderful find, and a nice reminder that in spite of all the conflict and turmoil that Iraq has been through, that people are still living normal lives. It's often easy to forget that. Good luck with your Masters @soran4 !

Publicado por mamestraconfigurata mais de 3 anos antes

Way to go! Beautiful lizard.

Publicado por wetlandsuzanne mais de 3 anos antes

This is great!

Publicado por tristantaber mais de 3 anos antes

Superb!

Publicado por jmaughn mais de 3 anos antes

Very nice find!

Publicado por ken-potter mais de 3 anos antes

Congratulations on a great find!

Publicado por wendyjalexander mais de 3 anos antes

Congratulations!

Publicado por annikaml mais de 3 anos antes

Fantastic! Thanks for sharing!

Publicado por sonnekke mais de 3 anos antes

That´s so cool! Congrats for this observation!

Publicado por ajott mais de 3 anos antes
Publicado por abounabat mais de 3 anos antes

Great find! Thank you and am glad you too, find iNaturalist a helpful tool to Id. and share with others!

Publicado por katharinab mais de 3 anos antes

@soran4 has now added another great observation of the same monitor species with five stills from a video taken in 2019: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/51476082

Publicado por rupertclayton mais de 3 anos antes

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