
A rare worm lizard has been rediscovered by scientists after a landmine clearance team spotted the elusive animal in Somaliland.
A subspecies of the Somali sharp-snouted worm lizard (Ancylocranium somalicum parkeri) was first reported by scientists in 1931 in the region that is now Somaliland, an unrecognised state that has broken away from the rest of Somalia. There were then no official sightings of the lizard over the following nine decades.
Last month, at the HALO Trust, a landmine clearance charity, and his colleagues were in Somaliland, near the Ethiopian border.
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鈥淥ne day, one of our minefield supervisors, Hassan Du鈥檃le, called me over to show me something interesting,鈥 says Spicer. 鈥淚鈥檓 following him, we鈥檙e both wearing PPE [personal protective equipment] and he did a bit of scrambling around in the earth and produced a worm lizard.鈥
Spicer took a photograph of the animal and sent it to at Mendel University in Czechia, who confirmed it was a subspecies of the Somali sharp-snouted worm lizard.
The photograph of the worm-like lizard matched its description from the early 1930s 鈥 pink in colour and measuring around 20 centimetres long. It also had a distinctive sharp snout.
A. s. parkeri is a subspecies of Ancylocranium somalicum, which聽lives along the coast of southern Somalia, including in the country鈥檚 capital city, Mogadishu.

鈥淚t鈥檚 quite easy to look at this part of the world and think of conflict,鈥 says Spicer. 鈥淭here鈥檚 more to Somalia than that, including biodiversity.鈥
鈥淲omen and men in the minefields find all sorts of interesting stuff that never gets recorded,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 probably scientifically interesting biodiversity seen on a regular basis; we just need more ways to capture them.鈥