Highly contiguous reference genome assembly of the endangered Orcés’ blue whiptail Holcosus orcesi
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Holcosus orcesi , the Orcés’ Blue Whiptail, is a Critically Endangered lizard endemic to the upper Jubones River basin in southern Ecuador. Restricted to a narrow elevational range within semi-arid Andean shrublands, it represents one of the few montane members of a predominantly lowland lineage. Here we present the first high-quality reference genome for H. orcesi , generated using Oxford Nanopore Technologies long-read sequencing. The assembly spans 1.68 Gb across only 91 contigs, with an N50 of 76.2 Mb and a BUSCO completeness of 96.8%, making it among the most contiguous and complete squamate genomes to date. Structural annotation predicted 25,682 genes, of which 85% showed homology to known proteins and 45% were assigned Gene Ontology terms. Repetitive elements accounted for 46.3% of the genome, with LINEs representing the predominant class. This genome provides a foundational resource for future evolutionary, comparative and conservation-genomic research of H. orcesi and other mountain reptiles, enabling studies of population genomics, local adaptation, and genomic erosion in isolated populations. By expanding the genomic representation of tropical montane reptiles, this work helps address longstanding phylogenetic and geographic gaps in global biodiversity genomics and provides a foundation for evidence-based conservation of H. orcesi and related taxa.