Mariana monitor
Varanus tsukamotoi, the Mariana monitor or Saipan monitor, is a species of lizard of the family Varanidae. It is endemic to the Northern Mariana Islands and Guam, and has been introduced to Japan in the Marshall Islands.
Etymology
It was named by Kyukichi Kishida after Dr. Iwasaburo Tsukamoto, who supported his expedition to the South Pacific. In the Chamorro language, it is known as hilitai.Taxonomy
Along with the closely related Bennett's long-tailed monitor, it was long considered a population of the mangrove monitor that had been introduced from the East Indies to smaller Pacific islands by Polynesians to provide a meat supply. However, other scientists maintained that this would not be likely, as the monitors would compete with humans for food, grow slowly, and yield little meat. The presence of a native Chamorro name for the species also indicates that it would have either been present on the islands when they arrived, or the Chamorro would have brought the species with them.Phylogenetic analysis has also affirmed monitors being native to Micronesia, having colonized the islands and diverged from the V. indicus species complex during the Late Pleistocene.
It's two closest relatives are Bennett's long-tailed monitor and the Lirung monitor.
Distribution
The Mariana monitor is native to the Mariana Islands of Alamagan, Anatahan, Cocos Island, Guam, Pagan, Rota, Saipan and Tinian, as well as Kosrae, in the Federated States of Micronesia. It is also known from the Marshall Islands, on Aur and Enewetak Atolls, and Japan; the species is thought to have found its way to the latter island via human introduction. An alleged record from the Bonin Islands in Japan is thought to be erroneous.For unknown reasons, this species is not present on Sarigan, in the Northern Marianas island chain, despite being present on adjacent islands; the monitor species on that island is instead thought to be Bennett's long-tailed monitor.