Adults of P. corvinus are melanistic, appearing plain brown to slate black, with a dark green to black ventral surface mottled with light blue.[3] The tail is sometimes spotted green. Males have brown flecks on the dorsal surface and browner heads. Males grow to 133 mm (5.2 in) snout-to-vent length (SVL), with females being considerably smaller.
It is superficially similar in coloration and scalation to P. atratus and P. corax, two other melanistic species also found on small, barren islands in the Caribbean. As the islands have similar habitats, this is likely the result of independent adaptation.[4]
Diet
The diet of P. corvinus includes the eggs of ground-nesting birds.
Conservation
The Sombrero ameiva is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List due to its limited distribution, an area less than 0.37 km2 (91 acres) in size.[1] A 1999 study estimated between 396 and 461 individuals, including adults and juveniles, based on mark-recapture data.[1] Although there are no permanent human settlements on Sombrero, increased rodent populations such as introduced mice may put pressure on the lizards.[1] Flooding and sea level rise may also threaten the species.[1] The population appeared to be thriving in the early 2000s, possibly due to its isolation from human activity[5], then crashed steeply to less than 100 individuals as of 2018 due to a combination of invasive species (primarily mice), severe hurricanes, and general environmental degradation. Mouse eradication and native plant restoration by conservation groups allowed the population to rebound to more than 1,600 individuals as of 2024.[6]
Cope ED (1861). "On the Reptilia of Sombrero and Bermuda". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia13: 312–314. (Ameiva corvina, new species, pp. 312–313).
Goicoechea N, Frost DR, De la Riva I, Pellegrino KCM, Sites J Jr, Rodrigues MT, Padial JM (2016). "Molecular systematics of Teioid lizards (Teioidea/Gymnophthalmoidea: Squamata) based on the analysis of 48 loci under tree-alignment and similarity-alignment". Cladistics32 (6): 624–671. (Pholidoscelis corvinus, new combination, p. 659).
Kuta, Sarah (2024). "This Once-Rare Lizard Bounced Back From the Brink of Extinction After 'Painstaking' Restoration Efforts in the Caribbean". Smithsonian (December).