Genus Mokopirirakau | Phylum Chordata Scientific name Hoplodactylus kahutarae Rank Species | |
Similar Reptile, Scaled reptiles, Geckos, Hoplodactylus, Harlequin gecko |
The black-eyed gecko, Mokopirirakau kahutarae, is an alpine gecko, discovered in 1970, which inhabits high-altitude mountains in three areas of the South Island of New Zealand. It is the highest-altitude lizard species in New Zealand, living up to 2200 m above sea level.
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Description
The black-eyed gecko is a medium-sized lizard, olive or grey above and white below with 6–7 lighter bands across its body and speckled sides. It has very small body scales and narrow tapering toes, which more closely resemble those of an arboreal than a terrestrial gecko. It is most notable for its prominent eyebrows and unusually jet-black irises – all other related geckos have a light iris with a filigree pattern. When handled it makes chirruping calls or squeals.
This species is nocturnal and can be active at temperatures as low as 7℃. It sun-basks on boulders at the entrance to its retreat, but is very wary and flees rapidly if disturbed.
Initially classified in the genus Hoplodactylus, the black-eyed gecko is now placed in Mokopirirakau along with other narrow-toed alpine and forest geckos. The holotype specimen is in the collection of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.
Distribution
The first specimen collected was found in March 1970 in a colony of Hutton's shearwaters on Mt Tarahaka in the Seaward Kaikoura Range. It was immediately recognised as an undescribed species, but repeated searches from 1970 to 1981 in the Seaward Kaikouras failed to find any further individuals, until in 1983 four were collected in the Kahutara Saddle area, 30 km away from where it was first found. The specific epithet, kahutarae, is taken from the place where the type specimen was found.
The black-eyed gecko has since been found in the mountains of Nelson and in the Lewis Pass area, living on alpine bluffs and rocky outcrops between 1200 and 2200 m. It is able to survive in the sub-nival zone, where vegetation is patchy and snow-covered in winter.
It is possible that this species is not especially adapted to an alpine habit; rocks and bluffs may be its last retreat from the rats and mice common at lower altitudes.
Conservation status
In 2012 the Department of Conservation (DOC) classified this species as Nationally Vulnerable under the New Zealand Threat Classification System. This was based on it existing in just a few subpopulations, the largest of less than 500 individuals, predicted to decline. It was noted as being data-poor, and sparsely distributed with a restricted range.