Bartsch's iguana,
Cyclura carinata bartschi, was first described by
American herpetologist Doris M. Cochran in 1931. It has some minor morphological characteristics which differ from the
Turks and Caicos rock iguana,
Cyclura carinata. Its
specific name,
carinata, means "keeled" and refers to the animal's scalation. Its
subspecific name,
bartschi, was given in honor of
Silesian-
American zoologist Paul Bartsch. Further
phylogenic study of
mtDNA haplotypes by scientists at
Utah Valley State College in 2007, determined that this animal should not be considered a valid subspecies merely upon population isolation and slight morphological differences, but rather that it is genetically, very similar to the Turks and Caicos rock iguana (
Cyclura carinata) and that subspecies status should be revoked to include this population in conservation and intra-species breeding. Morphological and genetic data indicate that the closest living relative of
C. carinata is
C. ricordi of
Hispaniola. ==Anatomy and morphology==