The specific name, anzuetoi is in honor of Guatemalan naturalist Roderico Anzueto, who collected the holotype.[3][4]
Conservation status
The estimated extent of occurrence of A. anzuetoi is bewteen 17 km2 and 28 km2, and thus the species is considered Critically Endangered by the IUCN. Anthropogenic impact is minimized by the fact that its native habitat has many landmines, and surrounding coffee plantations have been abandoned.[1]
Habitat
A. anzuetoi is found at elevations from 1,219–2,286 m (3,999–7,500 ft) on Volcán de Agua, inhabiting cloud forests on the mountain.[1]
Behaviour
A. anzuetoi is a diurnal tree-dwelling lizard. Dominant males exhibit territorial behaviour.[1]
Campbell JA, Frost DR (1993). "Anguid lizards of the genus Abronia: revisionary notes, descriptions of four new species, a phylogenrtic analysis, and key". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History (216): 1–121. (Abronia anzuetoi, new species, p. 22). (in English with an abstract in Spanish).
Köhler G (2000). Reptilien und Amphibien Mittelamerikas, Band 1: Krokodile, Schildkröten, Echsen [= Central American Reptiles and Amphibians, Volume 1: Crocodiles, Turtles, Lizards]. Offenbach, Germany: Herpeton, Verlag. 158 pp. ISBN3-9806214-0-5. (Abronia anzuetoi, p. 38). (in German).