Sunday, 27 October 2013
On 14:06 by Asveth Sreiram No comments
Oct. 25, 2013 — At least 441 new species of animals and plants have been discovered over a four year period in the vast, underexplored rainforest of the Amazon, including a monkey that purrs like a cat.
Found between 2010 and 2013, the species include a flame-patterned lizard, a thumbnail-sized frog, a vegetarian piranha, a brightly coloured snake, and a beautiful pink orchid, according to World Wildlife Fund (WWF).
Discovered by a group of scientists and compiled by WWF, the new species number 258 plants, 84 fish, 58 amphibians, 22 reptiles, 18 birds and one mammal. This total does not include countless discoveries of insects and other invertebrates.
"These species form a unique natural heritage that we need to conserve. This means protecting their home -- the amazing Amazon rainforest -- which is under threat from deforestation and dam development," said Claudio Maretti, Leader of Living Amazon Initiative, WWF.
Some of the most remarkable species outlined in the report include:
• Flame-patterned lizard: This beautiful lizard was found from the hatchlings of eggs collected by scientists in the Colombian Amazon. An elusive species, Cercosaura hypnoides, has not been seen in the wild since the original eggs were collected, raising the prospect that it could potentially be endangered.
• Thumbnail-sized frog: This amphibian is already believed to be highly endangered. In fact, its Latin name, Allobates amissibilis, meaning "that may be lost," alludes to this as the area where it thrives could soon be opened to tourism. This is now the third Allobates species found in Guyana.
• Vegetarian Piranha: This new species of piranha, Tometes camunani, can span 20 inches wide and weigh up to 9 pounds, and is strictly herbivorous. The freshwater fish inhabits rocky rapids associated with seedlings of plants that grow among the rocks, its main source of food. Tometes is described from the upper drainages of the Trombetas River basin, Para, Brazilian Amazon.
• A brightly coloured snake from the "Lost World": Found in the mountains of Guyana, this brightly-colored snake species was named Chironius challenger after Arthur C. Doyle's fictional character Professor George Edward Challenger in the novel, The Lost World.
• A beautiful pink orchid: Among the new plant species are a large number of new orchid species, including this splendid pink species, Sobralia imavieirae, officially described by scientists from Roraima in the Brazilian Amazon.
• Caqueta titi monkey: This new species, Callicebus caquetensis, is one of about 20 species of titi monkey, which all live in the Amazon basin. The babies have an endearing trait, "When they feel very content they purr towards each other," explained scientist Thomas Defler.
Many of the new discoveries are believed to be endemic to the Amazon rainforest and are found nowhere else in the world. This makes them even more vulnerable to rainforest destruction that occurs every minute across the Amazon.
"Compiling and updating data on new species discovered in the vast extension of the Amazon over the last four years has shown us just how important the region is for humanity and how fundamentally important it is to research it, understand it and conserve it. The destruction of these ecosystems is threatening biodiversity and the services it provides to societies and economies. We cannot allow this natural heritage to be lost forever," Maretti said
.
.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
Popular Posts
-
What you'll need: Baking Soda (make sure it's not baking powder) Vinegar A container to hold everything and avoid a big mess...
-
What you'll need: A plastic comb (or an inflated balloon) A narrow stream of water from a tap Dry hair Instructions: Tu...
-
Nov. 18, 2013 — Why do the faces of some primates contain so many different colors -- black, blue, red, orange and white -- that are mixe...
-
Jan. 8, 2014 — Today the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) Collaboration announced that BOSS has measured the scale of the u...
-
Aug. 29, 2013 — It's a fiercely debated question amongst palaeontologists: was the giant 'terror bird', which lived in Europ...
-
Nov. 20, 2013 — A computer program called the Never Ending Image Learner (NEIL) is running 24 hours a day at Carnegie Mellon University, ...
-
Sep. 18, 2013 — NASA satellites may have missed more than 50% of the phytoplankton in the Southern Ocean, making it far more difficult to...
-
What is the unit of force? The SI unit of force is newton(N)
-
Sep. 17, 2013 — Human influences have directly impacted the latitude/altitude pattern of atmospheric temperature. That is the conclusion ...
-
Oct. 17, 2013 — Supermassive black holes: every large galaxy's got one. But here's a real conundrum: how did they grow so big? ...
Recent Posts
Sample Text
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(421)
-
▼
October
(35)
- Smart Neurons: Single Neuronal Dendrites Can Perfo...
- New Kit Predicts Most Common Lung Cancer Survival
- Bee Sting Allergy Could Be a Defense Response Gone...
- Fungus That Causes White-Nose Syndrome in Bats Pro...
- Monkey That Purrs Like a Cat Is Among New Species ...
- Ghostly Shape of 'Coldest Place in the Universe' R...
- Scientists Solve Mystery of Odd Patterns of Oxygen...
- Bees Underwent Massive Extinctions When Dinosaurs Did
- Unprecedented Arctic Warming: Average Summer Tempe...
- Need Different Types of Tissue? Just Print Them!
- Astronomers Discover the Most Distant Known Galaxy...
- Gilding the Gum Tree: Scientists Strike Gold in Le...
- How Did Supermassive Black Holes Grow So Big?
- Scientist Uncovers Internal Clock Able to Measure ...
- Gravitational Waves Help Us Understand Black-Hole ...
- Curiosity Confirms Origins of Martian Meteorites
- Extinct 'Mega Claw' Creature Had Spider-Like Brain
- New Light On Star Death: Super-Luminous Supernovae...
- Glowing Neurons Reveal Networked Link Between Brai...
- Software Uses Cyborg Swarm to Map Unknown Environs
- ALMA Probes Mysteries of Jets from Giant Black Holes
- How the Largest Star Known Is Tearing Itself Apart
- Astronomers Find Clues to Decades-Long Coronal Hea...
- World Ocean Systems Undermined by Climate Change b...
- Scientists Unravel Mechanisms in Chronic Itching
- Surprisingly Simple Scheme for Self-Assembling Robots
- Astronomers Discover Large 'Hot' Cocoon Around a S...
- Climate Puzzle Over Origins of Life On Earth
- Sieving Through 'Junk' DNA Reveals Disease-Causing...
- Discovery of Charged Droplets Could Lead to More E...
- New Fossils Push the Origin of Flowering Plants Ba...
- Breakthrough in Photonics Could Allow for Faster a...
- Better Protein Creation May Be Secret of Longevity...
- First Cloud Map of a Planet Beyond Our Solar System
- Cold, Salty and Promiscuous: Gene-Shuffling Microb...
-
▼
October
(35)
0 comments:
Post a Comment