IberiaNature A guide to the natural history of Spain
By Nick Lloyd - Home - Contact
 

Reptiles in Spain

There are at least 45 species of land and freshwater reptiles in Spain (the number is under debate). click here for a Checklist of reptiles in Spain and the Canaries (65 species in total)

In comparsion with many other European countries the status of reptiles in Spain is relatively healthly. However, half of Spanish reptiles are to varying degrees threatened. Along with amphibians their numbers have declined mostly in arable and livestock farming areas through habitat loss, leading to numerous and well-documented local extinctions. In contrast, populations in mountainous and heavily forested areas are in better condition, often coincidently backed by some form of protection. Historical deforestation and the more recent use of pesticides since the 1960's have eliminated reptiles and amphibians directly, and indirectly through loss of prey. Other factors include widespread drainage of wetlands, fall of groundwater levels, rerouting and damming of rivers, the removal of countless mini-water holes, and fire and general desertification. In the case of snakes their historical and continual persecution has undoubtedly decimated their number in many areas.

Several species of Spanish reptiles are considered endagered at a European level (Annex II Habitats Directive):

  • Spur-Thighed Tortoise threatened by fire (BBC)
  • Hermann's tortoise
  • European pond terrapin
  • Stripe-necked terrapin (endemic)
  • Schreiber's green lizard (endemic)
  • Pyrenean rock lizard (endemic)
  • Iberian rock lizard (endemic)
  • Ibiza wall lizard (endemic)

Venomous snakes in Spain

There are a total of 13 snakes present in Spain of which five are venomous. These are:

Seoane's viper (Vipera seoanei - víbora de Seoane)
Asp viper (Vipera aspis - víbora áspid)
Snub-nosed or Lataste's viper (Viborade lataste - vibora hocicuda)
False smooth snake (Macroprotodon cucullatus - culebra de cogulla)
Montpellier Snake (Malpolon monspessulanus - culebra bastarda or de Montpellier) (see article)

See also Spanish snakes quiz (new)

Seoane's viper lives in Galicia, León, the Cantabrian coastal strip (Cornisa Cantábrica) and the Basque Country. Confusingly some authors class Seoane's viper as a subspecies of the common viper or adder (Vipera berus - víbora europea) and, more confusingly still, some experts believe both exist in northern Spain. However, since 1976, they are considered to separate species, with the latter absent from Spain.

By far the commonest of the vipers, Lataste's viper, is present throughout the rest of the Peninsula, though nowhere is it common. It is grey, short (around 50cm) and is distinguished by its triangular head and the zigzag pattern on its back. It lives in dry, rocky areas, away from humans and is timid, but don't go sticking your hands in holes and crevices and be careful when collecting firewood as viper bites can be fatal.

The other two snakes are not so dangerous, but watch out for the 2-metre long Montpellier snake. It is blue with a white underbelly -don't go picking one up to check- and has prominent ridges over the eyes. However, the position of its venom fangs means that you would be unlucky to have poison injected into you, and if you are, its venom is much weaker then the vipers.

If you are bitten by a snake, remain calm and seek medical attention immediately. Bites only occur in the spring and summer as snakes hibernate. Of the estimated 50 snakebite deaths a year in Europe, only 3-6 occur in Spain, so don't worry too much. 1-2 are reckoned to occur in Catalonia. More people die from bee and wasp stings. The Canaries are snake-free, and only the milder False smooth snake is found in the Balearics, probably introduced there by the Romans.

Snakes in Spain list

Snake in Castilian is 'serpiente' though zoologically the animal is either a culebra or a víbora.

Culebra bastarda

Malpolon monspessulanus

Montpellier Snake (see article)

Culebra de cogulla

Macroprotodon cucullatus

Hooded Snake

Culebra de collar

Natrix natrix

Grass Snake

Culebra de escalera

Elaphe scalaris

Ladder Snake

Culebra de Esculapio

Elaphe longissima

Aesculapian Snake

Culebra de herradura

Hemorrhois hippocrepis

Horseshoe Whip Snake

Culebra lisa europea

Coronella austriaca

Smooth Snake

Culebra lisa meridional

Coronella girondica

Southern Smooth Snake

Culebra verdiamarilla

Coluber viridiflavus

Western Whip Snake

Culebra viperina

Natrix maura

Viperine Snake (see article)

Víbora aspid

Vipera aspis

Asp Viper

Víbora de Seoane

Vipera seoanei

Seoane's Viper

Víbora hocicuda

Vipera latastei

Snub-Nosed Viper

 

Tradition of eating lizards in Spain

(Many thanks to Stephen Daly of Andalusian Guides for the photo of an ocellated lizard)

In some parts of rural Spain , there is (or was) a tradition of eating lizards, always the larger lagartos (often ocellated). I had a student in Zaragoza who would eat them once a year as part of his village's festivities. The Barcelona author Juan Goytisolo mentions the custom in his 1959 'Campos de Nijar', a description of his travels around a poverty stricken Almeria . Here he is sharing the back of a lorry with gold miners:

"The road crosses a stream of stones. We drive up the slope and up again, the landscape is almost lunar. Parched white land, scrub and screes follow each other until they disappear over the horizon. The floor is covered in stone fragments. In summer the stones retain the heat and bake until cracking. In various kilometres around there's not a single tree to be seen.

-Look

The man with the rope points out a lizard of more than half a metre long: It sits still on the edge of the road and seems unconcerned by our passing.

-If we'd stopped for a moment, I'd've caught it. The people round eat them.

I tell him that in some villages in Catalonia the farmers often eat them roasted.

- We eat them cooked in tomato, with spot of garlic and parsley. They're delicious.

The toad-like Spanish gourmet Nestor Luján enjoyed lizard recommending the Extramaduran recipe in a salsa verde with white wine. He claimed they tasted of the country, of thyme, of rosemary, and though unable to precise a flavour to describe them proclaimed they were delicious.

Times have changed however. The late-great Marxist gourmet and thriller writer Manuel Vázquez Montalbán noted in his culinary 'Diccionario Indispensable para la Supervivencia' (2003) that " given the rarity of this simpatico animal, it would better not to eat it, but to give it things to eat ."

Just in case you get any bright ideas, OCELLATED LIZARDS ARE NOW PROTECTED!

 

List of reptiles in Spain

Camaleón común

Chamaeleo chamaeleon

Mediterranean Chameleon

Culebra bastarda

Malpolon monspessulanus

Montpellier Snake

Culebra de cogulla

Macroprotodon cucullatus

Hooded Snake

Culebra de collar

Natrix natrix

Grass Snake

Culebra de escalera

Elaphe scalaris

Ladder Snake

Culebra de Esculapio

Elaphe longissima

Aesculapian Snake

Culebra de herradura

Hemorrhois hippocrepis

Horseshoe Whip Snake

Culebra lisa europea

Coronella austriaca

Smooth Snake

Culebra lisa meridional

Coronella girondica

Southern Smooth Snake

Culebra verdiamarilla

Coluber viridiflavus

Western Whip Snake

Culebra viperina

Natrix maura

Viperine Snake

Culebrilla ciega

Blanus cinereus

Iberian Worm Lizard

Eslizón ibérico

Chalcides bedriagai

Bedriagai's Skink

Eslizón tridáctilo

Chalcides striatus

Western Three-toed Skink

Galápago americano

Trachemys scripta

 

Galápago europeo

Emys orbicularis

European Pond Terrapin

Galápago leproso

Mauremys leprosa

Mediterranean Pond Terrapin

Geco magrebí

Saurodactylus mauritanicus

North African Gecko

Lagartija balear

Podarcis lilfordi

Lilford's Wall Lizard

Lagartija cenicienta

Psammodromus hispanicus

Spanish Psammodromus

Lagartija colilarga

Psammodromus algirus

Spanish Sand Racer

Lagartija colirroja

Acanthodactylus erythrurus

Fringe-Fingered Lizard

Lagartija de Bocage

Podarcis bocagei

Bocage's Wall Lizard

Lagartija de Carbonell

Podarcis carbonelli

Carbonell's Wall Lizard

Lagartija de las Pitiusas

Podarcis pityusensis

Ibiza Wall Lizard

Lagartija de Madeira

Podarcis dugesii

Podarcis dugesii

Lagartija de Marruecos

Lacerta perspicillata

Moroccan Rock Lizard

Lagartija de turbera

Lacerta vivipara

Viviparous Lizard

Lagartija de Valverde

Algyroides marchi

Valverde Lizard

Lagartija ibérica

Podarcis hispanica

Iberian Wall Lizard

Lagartija italiana

Podarcis sicula

Italian Wall Lizard

Lagartija pirenaica

Lacerta bonnali

Pyrenean lizard

Lagartija roquera

Podarcis muralis

Wall Lizard

Lagartija serrana

Lacerta monticola

Iberian Rock Lizard

Lagarto ágil

Lacerta agilis

Sand Lizard

Lagarto atlántico

Gallotia atlantica

Atlantic Lizard

Lagarto de Lehrs

Gallotia caesaris

Boettger's Lizard

Lagarto gigante de El Hierro

Gallotia simonyi

Hierro Giant Lizard

Lagarto Gigante de Gomera

Gallotia gomerana

Gomera Giant Lizard

Lagarto gigante de Gran Canaria

Gallotia stehlini

Grand Canary Giant Lizard

Lagarto gigante de Tenerife

Gallotia intermedia

Tenerife Giant Lizard

Lagarto ocelado

Lacerta lepida

Ocellated/Jewelled/Eyed Lizard

Lagarto tizón

Gallotia galloti

Tenerife Lizard

Lagarto verde

Lacerta viridis

Green Lizard

Lagarto verdinegro

Lacerta schreiberi

Schreiber's Green Lizard

Lisa dorada

Chalcides viridanus

West Canary Skink

Lisa variable

Chalcides sexlineatus

Grand Canary Skink

Lisneja

Chalcides simonyi

Eastern Canary Skink

Lución

Anguis fragilis

Slow worm

Perinquén de Boettger

Tarentola boettgeri

 

Perinquén de Delalande

Tarentola delalandii

Tenerife Gecko

Perinquén gomero

Tarentola gomerensis

La Gomera Gecko

Perinquén majorero

Tarentola angustimentalis

East Canary Gecko

Salamanquesa común

Tarentola mauritanica

Moorish Gecko

Salamanquesa rosada

Hemidactylus turcicus

Turkish Gecko

Tortuga boba

Caretta caretta

Loggerhead Turtle

Tortuga carey

Eretmochelys imbricata

Hawksbill Turtle

Tortuga golfina

Lepidochelys kempii

Kemp's Ridley Turtle

Tortuga laúd

Dermochelys coriacea

Leatherback Turtle

Tortuga mediterránea

Testudo hermanni

Hermann's Tortoise

Tortuga mora

Testudo graeca

Spur-Thighed Tortoise

Tortuga verde

Chelonia mydas

Green Turtle

Víbora aspid

Vipera aspis

Asp Viper

Víbora de Seoane

Vipera seoanei

Seoane's Viper

Víbora hocicuda

Vipera latastei

Snub-Nosed Viper

 

 

 

Pyrenees snakes - snakes in the Pyrenees

 

 

 

bbc - wiki - wikipedia