E. groi is found in central Panama and in northwestern Colombia.[1][2]
Habitat
The preferred natural habitat of E. groi is forest, at altitudes of 600–900 m (2,000–3,000 ft).[1]
Description
The tail of E. groi is covered with small spines. Males are reddish-brown with dark brown transverse bands across the back, reaching to the middle of the sides and then breaking up into small, irregular dark spots. Small white spots occur between the dark bands above the first longitudinal row of tubercles. The neck is red, with an incomplete white collar three to five scales wide, extending somewhat obliquely from just ahead of the forearm upward to the scapular region; the collar is edged on both sides by dark brown. The head is reddish and the chin and infralabial region scarlet red. The gular area is dark grayish-brown, the chest is pale chrome orange, and the belly is dirty white. Adult females are essentially the same color, lacking the scarlet red in the infralabial region, and the belly is yellow.[citation needed]
Behavior
E. groi lives in burrows it excavates itself, especially under fallen logs.[citation needed]
^Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN978-1-4214-0135-5. (Morunasaurus groi, p. 109).
Dunn ER (1933). "Amphibians and Reptiles from El Valle de Anton, Panama". Occasional Papers of the Boston Society of Natural History8: 65–79. (Morunasaurus, new genus, pp. 75–76; Morunasaurus groi, new species, pp. 76–77).
Köhler G (2008). Reptiles of Central America, 2nd Edition. Offenbach, Germany: Herpeton Verlag. 400 pp. ISBN978-3936180282. (Morunasaurus groi, p. 82).
Torres-Carvajal, Omar; Werneck, Fernanda P.; Fernandes, Igor Yuri; de Queiroz, Kevin (2023). "Spiny tails and clades: A fully sampled phylogeny of hoplocercine lizards (Iguanidae/ Hoplocercinae) and its taxonomic and nomenclatural implications". Bulletin of Phylogenetic Nomenclature1 (1): 8–28. (Enyalioides groi, new combination).