The smallest known reptile in the world can fit on your fingertip.
It's known as Brookesia nana, or "nano-chameleon," and it's a blotchy brown lizard that usually doesn't surpass an inch in body length. Before 2012, biologists didn't know it existed.
But are still stumped as to why it stays so small when most vertebrates grow in size as they mature.
Brookesia nana is different from any other vertebrate and other chameleon species. It can't change color, and it's more comfortable on the forest floor than in trees.
The unique chameleon is spotlighted in an article published last week in the journal Scientific Reports.
In 2012, leading herpetologist Frank Glaw and other German researchers traveled to the rainforests of Madagascar, one of the most biologically diverse areas on Earth, in search of previously unknown reptile and amphibian species.
What they found surprised them.
"We expected to find some new species, but not specifically the smallest chameleon," Glaw and Oliver Hawlitschek, study coauthor, said in an email to CNN.
Most male reptiles are larger than females, but the reverse is true with the ever-surprising Brookesia nana. While the male was just over 2 centimeters long -- a bit over ¾ inch -- the female was 2.89 centimeters, over an inch long. The females are likely larger than the males to accommodate the eggs they lay, Glaw and Hawlitschek said.