An agamid lizard capable of gliding from tree to tree found in China (SW Yunnan), E Thailand, W Malaysia, Myanmar (= Burma), Vietnam, India and Bangladesh. The species is named after William Thomas Blanford of the Geological Survey of India. The dewlap of D. indochinensis is widest at its base, decreases in width over its entire length, and terminates in a sharp point. In contrast, the dewlap of D. blanfordii is distally expanded with a basal constriction, and terminates in a rounded distal edge. Draco indochinensis also differs from D. blanfordii in the presence (in both sexes) of a thick, black transverse band that extends across the posterior gular region from one throat lappet to the other, and in the presence of dark radial bands on the dorsal surfaces of the patagia in both sexes rather than in females only.
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"Draco blanfordii".
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