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The Caribbean
1. Anguilla. Seventeen indigenous and
eight introduced species of amphibian and reptile.
2. British Virgin Islands. Thirty-one indigenous and six
introduced species of amphibian and reptile.
3. Cayman Islands. Twenty-four indigenous and fourteen
introduced species of amphibian and reptile.
4. Montserrat. Fifteen indigenous and three introduced species
of amphibian and reptile.
5. Turks and Caicos Islands. Fifteen indigenous and two
introduced species of amphibian and reptile.
The Atlantic
6. Bermuda. Five indigenous and eight
introduced species of amphibian and reptile.
7. Ascension Island. Four indigenous and four introduced
species of amphibian and reptile.
8. St. Helena. Two indigenous and two introduced species of
amphibian and reptile.
9. Tristan da Cunha. No herpetofauna recorded.
10. Falkland Islands. No herpetofauna recorded.
11. South Georgia and the Sandwich Islands. No herpetofauna
recorded.
Antarctica
12. British Antarctic Territory. No
herpetofauna recorded.
Europe and the Mediterranean
13. Isle of Man. Crown Dependency. Three
indigenous species of amphibian and reptile.
14. Balliwick of Guernsey. Crown Dependency. Four indigenous
and one introduced species of amphibian and reptile.
15. Balliwick of Jersey. Crown Dependency. Eight indigenous and
one introduced species of amphibian and reptile.
16. Gibraltar. Twenty-two indigenous and nine introduced
species of amphibian and reptile.
17. Cyprus Sovereign Base Areas. Up to thirty indigenous and
two introduced species of amphibian and reptile.
The Indo-Pacific
18. British Indian Ocean Territory. Three
indigenous and six introduced species of amphibian and reptile.
19. Pitcairn Islands. Three indigenous and four introduced
species of amphibian and reptile.
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