unilad homepage
  • News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • World News
    • Crime
    • Health
    • Money
    • Sport
    • Travel
  • Film and TV
    • Netflix
  • Music
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Celebrity
  • Politics
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • LADbible
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Archive
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content
Lizard thought to be extinct has just been found after 42 years since last sighting

Home> News> World News

Published 19:19 8 Nov 2023 GMT

Lizard thought to be extinct has just been found after 42 years since last sighting

The Lyon's grassland striped skink was last seen in 1981.

Niamh Shackleton

Niamh Shackleton

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover
Featured Image Credit: James Cook University/Conrad Hoskin

Topics: Animals, Australia, News, World News, Weird

Niamh Shackleton
Niamh Shackleton

Niamh Shackleton is an experienced journalist for UNILAD, specialising in topics including mental health and showbiz, as well as anything Henry Cavill and cat related. She has previously worked for OK! Magazine, Caters and Kennedy.

X

@niamhshackleton

Advert

Advert

Advert

A formerly feared extinct type of lizard has been discovered by researchers.

A team of researchers and experts from Queensland Museum and James Cook University, Australia, banded together in a bid to try track down the Lyon's grassland striped skink (also known as Austroablepharus barrylyoni).

The illusive lizard, that has an uncanny resemblance to a snake with legs, was last seen in 1981, sparking many to believe that the reptile had gone extinct.

The lizard was last seen in the 1980s.
Conrad Hoskin/James Cook University

Advert

But it turns out the skink is just particularly good at hide and seek and hasn't died out after all.

The team began their mission back in April, and set up traps on a farmland near Mount Surprise to see if they could find the lizard - as well as two other rare types of reptile.

Dr Andrew Amey, from Queensland Museum Network, said of the creatures: "These lizards are all hard to find and seldom seen.

"Two are part of a large group of skinks in the genus Lerista, which are only found in Australia and have adapted to sandy soils by reducing their limbs to essentially swim through the soil."

The Lyon's grassland striped skink lives in Queensland's grasslands.
Traceydee Photography/Getty

It's said that the skinks are largely active during the day, but the grasslands they usually live in make it difficult to locate them.

"It was an exciting moment to find all three skinks," he continued, as per Mail Online.

"But to find the Lyon's Grassland Striped Skink was an amazing discovery."

Amey went on to label woodlands and grasslands grazed by cattle as being key to hosting 'important biodiversity'.

However, with the small number of the lizards in mind and the tiny area that they cover, they could once again face extinction if the species faces events such as bushfires or a drought.

The Lyon's grassland striped skink is particularly of concern and was listed as Critically Endangered by the Queensland and Australian Governments.

The lizards aren't the only thing that are being brought back form extinction (in a way) - scientists have also predicted that they could bring back the wooly mammoth in just four years time.

Scientists are trying to bring back the wooly mammoth.
Aunt_Spray/Getty

The folks at US genetics firm Colossal Biosciences have funnelled USD$60 million (AUD$85.2 million, £48.7 million) in funding to push for a 'de-extinction' of the giant elephant, which shares 99.6 per cent of its DNA with a modern day Asian elephant.

As to why the want to try bring the animal back, Dr. Kenneth J. Lacovara said: "By bringing them back, we could help restore a world tipped out of balance by us humans."

The paleontologist added: "We have a chance now to begin to reverse the tide of destruction and to set ourselves on a pathway towards a renewed, regenerative world."

Watch this space!

Choose your content:

a day ago
  • Gilbert Carrasquillo/Getty Images
    a day ago

    Chuck Norris' family condemn AI videos claiming to know star's cause of death

    The family have repeatedly stated that any video making such claims is ‘entirely untrue’

    Celebrity
  • Randy Holmes via Getty Images
    a day ago

    Jack Black issues update on Tenacious D reunion after Kyle Gass’ Trump shooting controversy

    The Jumanji star gave an update regarding the band's future in a recent interview

    Celebrity
  • MS Now
    a day ago

    Pam Bondi's portrait spotted in Justice Department trash one day after Trump firing

    The President announced Bondi was being let go from her role on April 2.

    News
  • Dave Benett/Getty Images for dunhill
    a day ago

    Brian Cox slams Hollywood's biggest names as 'stupid' in brutal rant

    The Succession actor ranted about people he's worked with in the past, as well as big directors

    Celebrity
  • Scientists revealed first ever sighting of mysterious underwater creature people thought was a myth
  • Woman who thought she would die during shark attack describes the horrifying moments before she was bitten
  • Controversial reason Canada has just rounded up hundreds of ostriches and shot them dead
  • Astronomers discover half of the universe's hydrogen gas that's been unaccounted for since the Big Bang 13,800,000,000 years ago