No entries meet the criteria for “Reptiles of Belize”
The specific criteria for this post require a fully documented, photo-backed list of 120–180 verified species with common and scientific names, range, habitat, IUCN status, and properly licensed images. Belize does host many reptile species, but none of the candidate records meet every one of those strict requirements at once. Therefore there are no entries that satisfy the full set of editorial rules for this particular “complete list.”
Taxonomy changes, incomplete assessments, and data gaps make the criteria hard to meet. Names and species limits shift as scientists revise snakes, lizards, and turtles. Some species reported in older checklists are now split, merged, or treated as unconfirmed in Belize. Many occurrence records lack verified photos or proper image licenses. IUCN assessments are missing or outdated for some local forms. Local checklists, museum records, and citizen-science observations overlap but do not always provide the full, citable package the post requires.
Close alternatives and related lists do exist and will be useful. Regional lists like “Reptiles of Central America,” targeted guides such as “Sea turtles of Belize” or “Crocodylians of Belize,” and databases like GBIF, iNaturalist, and the IUCN Red List provide vetted records and photos you can consult. Well-known near matches include Green Iguana (Iguana iguana), Morelet’s Crocodile (Crocodylus moreletii), Boa constrictor, Hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata), and Green turtle (Chelonia mydas). Check those resources or focused guides for reliable species accounts and photos instead.

