Cyrtodactylus cattienensis, or the Cattien bent-toed gecko, is a gecko endemic to southern Vietnam. It is known from the ÃÂá»Âng Nai and BàRá»ÂaâÂÂVà ©ng Tàu provinces. Its type locality is within the Cát Tiên National Park, and the species was named after the park.
It is small in size, with a maximum snoutâÂÂvent length (SVL) of . A neck band is present, extending to the posterior margin of the eye; its trunk, tail and limbs bear irregularly-shaped bands: 4âÂÂ6 light bands on trunk and 4âÂÂ12 white bands on tail; it has 16âÂÂ22 irregular longitudinal rows of dorsal tubercles. Its lateral folds are weakly developed or absent, without enlarged tubercles. Males have 6âÂÂ8 precloacal pores in angular continuous series and there is a patch of enlarged precloacal scales present in both sexes. Males are on average smaller (55 mm SVL) than females (61 mm SVL).
Cyrtodactylus cattienensis inhabits lowland seasonal tropical forest. Most individuals were found on large leaves of scrub vegetation and young trees some 1 m above ground. Some specimens were also found during the day, under volcanic rocks or below the bark of rotten trees.
Males produce calls consisting of a long series of call groups. All individuals can emit "squeaks" as signal of discomfort and stress.