Phymaturus is a genus of iguanian lizards of the family Liolaemidae, a family which was traditionally included in the Iguanidae as a subfamily, but more recently was proposed to warrant family status in the Liolaemidae. Phymaturus is the mid-sized genus of its family, with 50 species altogether known as of 2021;
Species of the genus Phymaturus are found in the Andes region south to Patagonia and inhabit a variety of habitats. Their habits are mostly conserved from the ancestral iguanians, in that Phymaturus are generally inhabitants of rocky ground, feed on plants, and give birth to fully developed young.
- Phymaturus somuncurensis <small>Cei & Castro, 1973</small>
- Phymaturus spurcus <small>Barbour 1921</small>
- Phymaturus tenebrosus <small>Lobo & Quinteros, 2005</small>
- Phymaturus videlai
- Phymaturus yachanana <small>Ávila, Perez, Minoli & Morando, 2014</small>
- Phymaturus zapalensis <small>Cei & Castro, 1973</small>
More species which may or may not belong to the aforementioned species groups:
References
- (2011). "Two new mountain lizard species of the Phymaturus genus (Squamata: Iguania) from northwestern Patagonia, Argentina". Zootaxa 2924: 1-21. (in English with Spanish abstract). PDF abstract.
- (1838). "Beiträge zur genaueren Kenntniss einiger Eidechsgattungen ". Nova Acta Academiae Caesareae Leopoldino-Carolinae 18: 712-784 + Plates LIV-LVI. (Phymaturus, new genus, pp. 749–750). (in German).
- (2008). "When starvation challenges the tradition of niche conservatism: On a new species of the saxicolous genus Phymaturus from Patagonia Argentina with pseudoarboreal foraging behaviour (Iguania, Liolaemidae)". Zootaxa 1786: 48-60. (in English with Spanish abstract). PDF abstract.
