Kinyongia vosseleri explained

Kinyongia vosseleri, also known commonly as the Usambara two-horned chameleon and Vosseler's blade-horned chameleon, is an endangered species of lizard in the family Chamaeleonidae. The species is endemic to Tanzania.

Taxonomy and etymology

K. vosseleri was already described as a species in 1913 by Fritz Nieden, with the specific name, vosseleri being in honor of German zoologist .[1] Subsequently, it was generally considered a synonym of K. fischeri. It was only in 2008 that it was verified that the two are separate species with fully separated distributions.[2]

Geographic range and habitat

K. vosseleri is only found in forests in the East Usambara Mountains of Tanzania, at an altitude of up to 1500m (4,900feet). Its range overlaps with the closely related K. matschiei, whereas K. multituberculata is found in the West Usambara Mountains.[2]

Appearance

K. vosseleri is a medium-large species in the genus Kinyongia at up to in total length, with the tail making up more than half of that. Females do not grow as large as males. Adult males have a large pair of converging horns on the nose. Uniquely in the "two-horned Usambara group", adult females of K. vosseleri entirely lack horns (in K. matschiei and K. multituberculata, adult females have small horns; however, juveniles are essentially hornless). The only close relatives where the adult female lacks horns are K. boehmei and K. tavetana, but they are not from the Usambaras.[2]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Beolens B, Watkins M, Grayson M (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. . (Kinyongia vosseleri, p. 277).
  2. Mariaux J, Lutzmann N, Stipala J (2008). "The two-horned chamaeleons of East Africa". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 152: 367-391.