Goggia rupicola, also known as the Namaqua dwarf leaf-toed gecko or the Namaqua pygmy gecko, is a southern African leaf-toed gecko first described by Vivian FitzSimons from a specimen collected on the 23 August 1937[2] where it was found in cracks of rocks of small outcrops in the arid Namakwaland in South Africa and Namibia.
Rupicolous refers to inhabiting rocks and stones.\\ On the dorsal (upper) sideG.
A thin black streak runs from the nostril through the eye to just above ear-opening.
It is related to Goggia essexi from which it can be distinguished mainly by the dorsal and ventral scaling and the colour markings.
[3] The three elliptical-shaped eggs originally collected in 1937 between Okiep and Springbok averaged 7.8 x 6.0 mm.