sign in a cave in Laos
Showing posts with label gecko. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gecko. Show all posts

27 December 2022

Caribbean Union Island gecko

 Not related to southeast Asia, but interesting as it is about protecting an endangered gecko, and of course there are many endemic and some endangered geckos in Asian caves. 

BBC news on 26 Dec 2022 featured a tiny gecko that lives in just one part of an eastern Caribbean island. This is Union Island, part of the nation of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. 

"Army of islanders to protect gecko the size of a paperclip". The article says how the Union islanders are

"on a mission to protect one of the world's tiniest species - one so rare it exists in just 50 hectares (123 acres) in a remote corner of one of the smallest islands in the Caribbean.

The Union Island gecko is the size of a paperclip, critically endangered and facing an insidious enemy - poachers.

Following its official discovery in 2005, the unique creature quickly became a coveted curio by collectors enthralled by its gem-like markings, earning it the dubious distinction of the most trafficked reptile in the Eastern Caribbean."

Since 2017 the islanders have trained as wardens and now patrol the dense forests to look for intruders. As a result the gecko population has soared " from 10,000 in 2018 to around 18,000 now - outnumbering the island's human population six-fold".

International conservationists are involved including Fauna and Flora International (FFI). The gecko has been protected by international treaty CITES since 2019.

The gecko is very pretty and changes colour when brought into the light from dark brown to multi-coloured. Photo by FFI/J BOCK from BBC :


See more on the Union Island gecko.

The gecko has been listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. 

25 September 2012

Merapoh 2012 - pt 8, cave fauna

During the caving expedition in Merapoh we saw a variety of cave fauna. Here are a few of the critters that we found. Frogs and toads were quite common.
These are all Phrynoides aspera

This pretty frog is Hylarana labialis

We saw cave racers in 3 caves. One had more of a yellow colour than the other two. Two were coiled up on ledges so it was not easy to get photos.

Normally crickets are common in Malaysian caves, but these caves in Merapoh had very few of the common Diestrammena crickets. This is a large species
Whip spiders (Amblypygids) were quite common.


Gua Jinjang Pelamin had quite a lot of scorpions, probably a Lychas species
The one above is eating a cockroach and the one below is eating a newly moulted spider

There were long legged centipedes, Thereuopoda
Huntsman spiders, this one is missing a leg
and this one is sitting on an egg sac
A web spider, probably Psechrus

There were very few millipedes


Of course there were bats in most of the caves. The majority were insect eating bats.


There were goat droppings in several caves (above). And in Gua Gajah Merah we saw elephant droppings -
Termite trails going around one cave entrance
and these tunnels seem to be made by ants, not termites

I saw lots of gecko eggs, but no geckoes
A (bird) nest


Outside one cave we saw bear prints in the soil

There were lots of yellow shells outside the caves, Amphidromus atricallosus perakensis (thanks to Reuben Clements for ID)


© Liz Price
No reproduction without permission

7 January 2012

Geckos in Malaysian caves

I sometimes see gecko eggs in caves in Malaysia, and much less often, see the actual gecko.

Geckos are commonly seen in houses in Malaysia, where they are called cicaks, due to the call that they make.

The cave geckos belong to the genus Cyrtodactylus, commonly known as bent-toed geckos.

These geckos were seen in caves in Perlis
Eggs

This one in Perak
and some eggs


These photos were taken in Dark Cave at Batu Caves


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Update :

3 new species of gecko have been found in and around Merapoh caves by Dr Lee Grismer. See article in The Star on 3 Sept 2013, "In search of herps".

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© Liz Price
No reproduction without permission

8 August 2010

Perlis cave fauna

Some of the creatures seen on my recent caving trip to Perlis.

It was rainy season, July, but there were less leeches than I expected. And sadly we saw no live snakes, just the dead one. As usual in this part of Perlis, I heard gibbons calling every morning but only managed to see them once when I went out early to track them. We did see some macaques and some dusky langurs, and one night a mouse deer ran in front of my car.
bat in flight
cave centipede
cave crab
Tree gecko with new tail growing
dead snake
millipedes

monkey skeleton

monkey skull


cave spider

cave cricket


snail

cave crab

cave toad

spider eating long legged centipede
leech feeding on my leg

macaque at Gua Kelam

half a scorpion






beetles mating
Millipedes
ant eating -
Beetle -
Moths


© Liz Price
No reproduction without permission