While this is the first new monitor from the Papua New
Guinea archipelago in 20 years, monitors in general turn up surprisingly often
for such large creatures. Interested researchers like German zoologist Wolfgang
Boehme have only recently documented just how widespread and diverse monitors are. A total of sixteen
species were from Indonesia and surrounding islands just between 1990 and 2006.
Australia’s count has also risen recently, approaching 30 species, with several
known but yet to be named.
Smaller monitors are popular as pets, a fact which has led
to several recent discoveries. A 1998
article by Jeff Lemm in Reptiles magazine discussed eight new types, all of
which have turned up in the pet trade.
Two species have been formally described, and there may be as many as
six more awaiting description. Lemm
wrote that some of these may prove to be subspecies or varieties rather than
species.
From the island of Halmahera came Varanus yowoni, the
black-backed mangrove monitor, which may be five feet long. The other described species Lemm mentioned
was the smaller, bright-yellow quince monitor, Varanus melinus. This lizard grows to almost four feet in
length and is reportedly a very tractable species in captivity. It was kept as a pet and even bred in the
United States for years before being identified as a species.
In 1999, Dr. Robert Sprackland described another species,
the peacock monitor Varanus auffenbergi.
This is a colorful animal, blue with turquoise and orange markings, plus
bright yellow spots on its limbs. Smaller than the other new monitors, it was
obtained from Roti island in Indonesia.
Some additional references:
Anonymous. 1997. “At Home
in the Rocks, a New Gecko Emerges,” National
Geographic, June.
Lemm, Jeff. 1998. “Year of the Monitor: A Look at Some Recently
Discovered Varanids,” Reptiles,
September, p.70.
Reptile Exotics. No
date. “Care Sheet – Varanus melinus,” http://www.reptileexotics.com/melinus.html.
Sprackland, Robert.
1999. “A new species of monitor
from Indonesia,” Reptile Hobbyist,
February.
Sweet, Samuel., and Eric Pianka.
2003. “The Lizard Kings,” Natural History, November, p.40... .
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