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Kojiro Sasaki
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New lizard species found - on restaurant menu
Published Nov 14 2010

A scientific report has confirmed that it is a new species which reproduces by cloning
The new lizard, called Leiolepis ngovantrii, is named after scientist Ngo Van Tri of the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology who came across live specimens of the species stored in a tank in a restaurant in Ba Ria-Vung Tau Province. His suspicions were aroused by the fact that all the individuals he saw in the restaurant seemed to be female because similar lizards living in the region are known to exhibit a strong sexual dimorphism - males and females have distinct colour differences.

Specimens of the lizard are served up grilled in restaurants of the Mekong Delta in south-west Vietnam
They then hired motorbikes and spent two days riding to the restaurant where the owner said he had the lizards waiting for them. "When we finally got there, this crazy guy had gotten drunk and served them all to his customers," said Lee Grismer in an interview with National Geographic News.

Dr Lee Grismer and his son, Jesse Grismer (left) hired local boys to catch the lizards for them
It's not that they're not known, locals know all about them. It's just that they're not known to scientists," Dr Grismer said. DNA tests have confirmed that the lizards are all females and that they are related through the maternal line to another local species, Leiolepis guttata. The scientists believe that L ngovantrii probably arose as a new species as a result of being a hybrid between L. guttata and an as-yet unidentified species that acted as the male line.
The resulting offspring were unable to reproduce sexually but were still able to clone themselves from unfertilised egg cells, a process known as parthenogenesis. Several members of the reptile class are also known to engage in asexual reproduction, especially when placed under environmental stress.
The new species lives in an area that lies between two ecological habitats, scrub woodland and coastal sand dunes, which may have helped the hybrids to survive, Dr Grismer said. "Species that do really well in one habitat or the other will occasionally get together and reproduce to form a hybrid," he said.