Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Skip to main content
ScienceDaily
Your source for the latest research news
New! Sign up for our freeemail newsletter.
Science News
from research organizations

Beneath the scales: The secret bone armor that helped lizards survive Australia

Beneath the scales of Australia’s iconic monitor lizards (commonly known as goannas), scientists have discovered an unexpected secret: a hidden layer of bony skin structures known as osteoderms.

Date:
July 22, 2025
Source:
Museum Victoria
Summary:
Scientists have uncovered hidden bony armor—called osteoderms—beneath the skin of 29 goanna species across Australasia, a discovery that radically changes what we thought we knew about lizard evolution. Using museum specimens and advanced scanning, researchers found these structures are far more widespread than previously known, suggesting they may help with survival in harsh environments, not just offer protection. The revelation redefines how we understand lizard adaptation, ancient evolution, and the untapped potential of museum collections.
Share:
FULL STORY

Hidden Armor Discovered in Monitor Lizards
In this green tree monitor (Varanus prasinus UF 71411, MorphoSource), radiodensity heatmapping shows bone tissue, including osteoderms, in yellow to red. Credit: Roy Ebel

Beneath the scales of Australia's iconic monitor lizards (commonly known as goannas), scientists have discovered an unexpected secret: a hidden layer of bony skin structures known as osteoderms. These structures, which have been long overlooked, may hold the key to understanding how these ancient reptiles not only survived but thrived in one of the world's harshest environments.

The findings, published on July 21 in the prestigiousZoological Journal of the Linnean Society, mark the first large-scale global study of osteoderms in lizards and snakes. The international collaboration brought together researchers from Australia, Europe and the United States, who used cutting-edge micro-CT scanning to examine nearly 2,000 reptile specimens from major museum collections including those held at Museums Victoria's Research Institute.

'We were astonished to find osteoderms in 29 Australo-Papuan monitor lizard species that had never been documented before,' said Roy Ebel, lead author and researcher at Museums Victoria Research Institute and the Australian National University. 'It's a fivefold increase in known cases among goannas.'

Osteoderms are most commonly known from crocodiles, armadillos, and even some dinosaurs like Stegosaurus. But their function has remained something of an evolutionary mystery. While they may provide protection, scientists now suspect they may also support heat regulation, mobility and calcium storage during reproduction.

This new research reveals that osteoderms are far more widespread in lizards than previously thought, occurring in nearly half of all lizard species worldwide - an 85% increase on earlier estimates.

At the heart of this discovery lies the power of museum collections. Scientific institutions like Museums Victoria Research Institute play a critical role in preserving biodiversity through time, enabling researchers to study species long after they were collected. Many of the specimens used in this study were decades, and in some cases over 120 years old, but advances in imaging technology enabled scientists to uncover new insights without harming the original material. These collections are not just archives, they're active tools for scientific discovery.

'What's so exciting about this finding is that it reshapes what we thought we knew about reptile evolution,' said Dr Jane Melville, Museums Victoria Research Institute Senior Curator of Terrestrial Vertebrates. 'It suggests that these skin bones may have evolved in response to environmental pressures as lizards adapted to Australia's challenging landscapes.'

Until now, the presence of osteoderms in monitor lizards was considered rare and mostly confined to the famed Komodo dragon. But the discovery of their widespread presence across Australo-Papuan goannas opens up new questions about how these lizards adapted, survived and diversified across the continent.

This landmark study not only tells a new chapter in the story of Australia's goannas, it provides a powerful new dataset for exploring how skin, structure, and survival have intertwined across millions of years of evolution.


Story Source:

Materials provided byMuseum Victoria.Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Related Multimedia:


Journal Reference:

  1. Roy Ebel, Chris Broeckhoven, Edward L Stanley, Till Ramm, J Scott Keogh.Dermal armour in lizards: osteoderms more common than presumed.Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2025; 204 (3) DOI:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaf070

Cite This Page:

Museum Victoria. "Beneath the scales: The secret bone armor that helped lizards survive Australia." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 22 July 2025. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/07/250722035554.htm>.
Museum Victoria. (2025, July 22). Beneath the scales: The secret bone armor that helped lizards survive Australia.ScienceDaily. Retrieved February 17, 2026 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/07/250722035554.htm
Museum Victoria. "Beneath the scales: The secret bone armor that helped lizards survive Australia." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/07/250722035554.htm (accessed February 17, 2026).

Explore More

from ScienceDaily

RELATED STORIES

Jan. 28, 2026 — What looked like a pearl necklace on a tiny spider turned out to be parasitic mite larvae. Scientists identified the mites as a new species, marking the first record of its family in Brazil. The ...
Aug. 7, 2025 — Deep beneath the ocean's surface, a groundbreaking DNA study reveals that the deep sea is far more globally connected than once thought. By analyzing thousands of brittle stars preserved in ...
June 17, 2025 — A massive, extinct salamander with jaws like a vice once roamed ancient Tennessee and its fossil has just rewritten what we thought we knew about Appalachian amphibians. Named Dynamognathus ...
Dec. 22, 2021 — A new study shows how the brown anole lizard solves one of nature's most complex problems -- breathing -- with ultimate simplicity. Whereas human lungs develop over months and years into baroque ...
June 15, 2021 — The biological and historical diversity in museum collections is staggering, with specimens collected across centuries by some of the most famous scientists in history. In a new study, researchers ...
Mar. 24, 2021 — Usually scaled, the skin of fish can also be naked or made up of bony plates. Researchers have reconstructed the evolution of the skin structures in fish, going back to the common ancestor, more than ...

TRENDING ATSCITECHDAILY.com

The Oldest Minerals on Earth Are Rewriting the Planet’s Origin Story

Prehistoric Victory Celebrations Were Far More Brutal Than We Thought

A Massive Star Suddenly Vanished and Left a Black Hole Behind

This Unexpected Ingredient Makes Bread Much Healthier

 Print  Email  Share

Breaking

this hour

Trending Topics

this week

PLANTS & ANIMALS
New Species
Biotechnology
Biotechnology and Bioengineering
EARTH & CLIMATE
Climate
Earthquakes
Ecology
FOSSILS & RUINS
Ancient Civilizations
Early Humans
Human Evolution

Strange & Offbeat

 

PLANTS & ANIMALS
Life May Have Started as Sticky Goo Clinging to Rocks
A Bonobo’s Pretend Tea Party Is Rewriting What We Know About Imagination
Gut Bacteria Can Sense Their Environment and It’s Key to Your Health
EARTH & CLIMATE
Scientists Uncover the Climate Shock That Reshaped Easter Island
750-Year-Old Indian Poems Reveal a Landscape Scientists Got Wrong
Scientists Turn Carrot Waste Into Protein People Prefer
FOSSILS & RUINS
Ancient DNA Solves 12,000-Year-Old Mystery of Rare Genetic Growth Disorder
These 773,000-Year-Old Fossils May Reveal Our Shared Human Ancestor
A Century-Old Stonehenge Mystery May Finally Be Solved


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp