The Guatemalan beaded lizard (Heloderma charlesbogerti), also called commonly the Motagua Valley beaded lizard, is a highly endangered species of beaded lizard, a venomous lizard in the familyHelodermatidae. The species is endemic to the dry forests of the Motagua Valley in southeastern Guatemala,[5] an ecoregion known as the Motagua Valley thornscrub.[6] It is the only allopatric beaded lizard species, separated from the nearest population (H. alvarezi) by 250 km (160 mi) of unsuitable habitat.[7] The Guatemalan beaded lizard is the rarest and most endangered species of beaded lizard, and it is believed that fewer than 200 individuals of this animal exist in the wild, making it one of the most endangered lizards in the world.[8] In 2007, it was transferred from Appendix II to Appendix I of CITES due to its critical conservation status.[9]
^"Appendices". CITES. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. 25 November 2023. Retrieved 29 March 2024. Listed as Heloderma horridum charlesbogerti.
^Ariano-Sánchez, Daniel; Salazar, Gilberto (2007). "Notes on the distribution of the endangered lizard, Heloderma horridum charlesbogerti, in the dry forests of eastern Guatemala: an application of multi-criteria evaluation to conservation". Iguana14: 152-158.
^Beck, Daniel D. (2005). Biology of Gila Monsters and Beaded Lizards (Organisms and Environments). Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 247. ISBN0-520-24357-9.