This is a list of amphibians and reptiles found on Barbados, a Caribbean island-nation in the Lesser Antilles. Barbados is largely flat and has been intensively cultivated for over 300 years. This has left little natural vegetation on the island, leaving most species found there restricted to narrow habitats such as wooded gullies.[1]
Amphibians
There are two species of amphibians on Barbados, at least one of which was introduced.
Least Concern. Introduced in the 1830s to control insect pests of sugarcane. Abundant and widespread, particularly in rural areas.
Reptiles
Including marine turtles and introduced species, there are 18 reptile species reported on Barbados, though two are possibly extinct. The Barbados leaf-toed gecko (Phyllodactylus pulcher) and the Barbados threadsnake (Leptotyphlops carlae) are endemic, as were the probably extinct Barbados racer (Liophis perfuscus) and Barbados skink (Alinea lanceolata). A fifth species, the Barbados anole (Anolis extremus), was endemic to Barbados but has been introduced to other islands.
The only Kentropyx species found in the Eastern Caribbean. Only females are known to exist; the species as a whole is believed to consist only of unisexual clones.[6] Primarily found in central parishes; reported as locally common in St. Thomas and St. George.[7]
^Conservation status, where available, is from the IUCN Red List and is indicative of the status of the species as a whole, not just populations on Barbados.
^Fields, A. & Horrocks, J. A. 2009. An Annotated Checklist of the Herpetofauna of Barbados. Journal of Barbados Museum & Historical Society 55: 263-283
^Fields, A. & Horrocks, J. A. 2011. The Herpetofauna Of Barbados: Anthropogenic Impacts And Conservation Status. pp. 89–104. In: Conservation of Caribbean Island Herpetofaunas Volume 2: Regional Accounts of the West Indies. Editors: Adrian Hailey, Byron Wilson, and Julia Horrocks. Brill. ISBN978-90-04-19408-3
^Powell, R., Henderson, R.W., Farmer, M.C., Breuil, M.,
Echternacht, A.C., van Buurt, G., Romagosa, C.M., & Perry, G. 2011. Introduced amphibians and reptiles in the greater Caribbean: patterns and conservation implications. Conservation of Caribbean Island Herpetofaunas 1: 63–144.
^Powell & Henderson 2005, p. 73. Government of Barbados 2002, p. 55 states that it was likely introduced by accident thirty years ago from Saint Vincent, and that an "incomplete specimen" was confused for L. perfuscus. Reported in Malhotra & Thorpe 1999, p. 98 only as "a new species of the genus Mastigodryas.".
References
Note: All species listed above are supported by Malhotra & Thorpe 1999 and Government of Barbados 2002, unless otherwise cited.
Cole, Charles J.; Dessauer, Herbert C.; Townsend, Carol R.; Arnold, Margaret G. (1995), "Kentropyx borckiana (Squamata, Teiidae): a unisexual lizard of hybrid origin in the Guiana region, South America.", American Museum Novitates (3145), New York, N.Y: American Museum of Natural History.
Fields, Angela and Julia A. Horrocks, "An Annotated Checklist of the Herpetofauna of Barbados". Journal of the Barbados Museum & Historical Society, Vol 55 pp. 263–283 2009