“…Access to newly-collected material from these regions has brought new opportunities to understand the evolutionary patterns of African herpetofauna, especially African gekkonids. This is particularly noteworthy in terms of the remarkable increase in knowledge of Angolan herpetofauna, with the description of 34 new species (Conradie et al 2012a(Conradie et al , b, 2013(Conradie et al , 2020a(Conradie et al , 2022aStanley et al 2016;Ceríaco et al 2018aCeríaco et al , 2020aCeríaco et al , b, c, 2021Branch et al 2019aBranch et al , 2021Marques et al 2019aMarques et al , b, 2020Marques et al , 2022aHallermann et al 2020;Nielsen et al 2020;Baptista et al 2021;Parrinha et al 2021;Wagner et al 2021) and several new country records (Branch and Conradie 2013;Conradie and Bourquin 2013;Ernst et al 2014Ernst et al , 2015Branch et al 2019b;Conradie et al 2020bConradie et al , 2021Lobón-Rovira et al 2022c) in the last decade. This increase has been especially evident within gekkonids, where the number of taxa has risen to over 45 recognised species for the country (Marques et al 2020;Ceríaco et al 2020a, b;Branch et al 2021;, 2022c) including two endemic leaf-toed gecko genera, Kolekanos (Heinicke et al 2004) and Bauerius (Lobón-Rovira et al 2022a).…”