[1][2] The natural habitats of A. spinicauda are open stony and flat sandy places.
[1] A. spinicauda is oviparous, and the average clutch size is 8 eggs.
[1] The species A. spinicauda is considered "Critically Endangered" because of small geographic range, fragmented distribution within that range, and habitat loss.
After more than a century no individuals were ever discovered again until recently in 2015, a discovery was made by an Algerian zoological team (D. Boualem, 2016).
This lizard from family Lacertidae article is a stub.