MarketKinyongia boehmei
Company Profile

Kinyongia boehmei

Kinyongia boehmei, the Taita blade-horned chameleon, Böhme's two-horned chameleon and Dwarf fischer's chameleon, is species of chameleon, a lizard in the family Chamaeleonidae, found only in the Taita Hills of southeastern Kenya. It is the smallest species in the East African "two-horned chameleon" group and until 2008 it was generally considered a part of K. tavetana.

Taxonomy and etymology
Kinyongia boehmei was first scientifically described in 2002, originally as a subspecies of K. tavetana. ==Geographic range and habitat==
Geographic range and habitat
K. boehmei is found only in the Taita Hills of southeastern Kenya, at altitudes of . It occurs in the canopy of forests, as well as in patches of trees and bushes in subsistence farms. ==Appearance==
Appearance
K. boehmei is the smallest of the "two-horned chameleon" group of Kenya and Tanzania. It is up to in total length, with the tail making up more than half of that. Females do not grow as large as males. Adult males have a pair of large, mostly parallel, flattened "horns" on the nose, whereas females essentially are hornless. The flattened shape of the male's "horns" separates it from male K. tavetana where they have a triangular shape. Both sexes of K. boehmei have several small elevated tubercles on the section of the ridge of the back (dorsal crest) nearest to the head, which are lacking in K. tavetana. ==Reproduction==
Reproduction
K. boehmei is oviparous. There are typically 2–11 eggs in a clutch. ==References==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com