By
Sabrina Richards | December 18, 2012, The Scientist
The
world's tiniest chameleon, Brookesia micra.FRANK GLAW and JÖRN
KÖHLERResearchers described roughly 15,000 to 18,000 new species in 2012,
making choosing the most noteworthy a monstrous task. “[It’s] worse than asking
me which of my children is my favorite,” quipped Quentin
Wheeler, an entomologist at Arizona State University, in an email to The
Scientist. Wheeler and his colleagues at the International Institute for
Species Exploration will eventually publish a top ten list of this
year’s new species, but the ranking criteria “are as diverse as the species
themselves,” he said.
Some
of this year’s new species were encountered by researchers deep in the field.
Others were recognized from museum specimens—long after the “new” species
themselves had gone extinct, noted Benoît Fontaine, a conservation biologist at
the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris. Even so, cataloging new
species is an important task, said Fontaine. “We know only small part of extant
biodiversity,” he noted. “It’s the tip of iceberg.”
In
celebration of biodiversity, here a few of 2012’s most exciting new species,
and a fond farewell to a few more.
Human
cousins
One
of the newly identified species of slow loris, Nycticebus kayan. CH'IEN C. LEE The discovery of primate species
that are new to science is quite rare, but this year researchers described at
least two. Researchers from the United States and United Kingdom stumbled
across a previously unrecognized species of slow loris (Nycticebus kayan), small nocturnal
primates related to lemurs, while surveying slow lorises in Borneo and the
Philippines. Like its relatives, the new species has endearingly wide eyes and
small statures—but extremely poisonous bites. Slow lorises lick a
toxin-secreting gland on their arm to create venomous saliva, which they use to
deter predators. Unfortunately, slow lorises are popular in the pet trade. To
keep future owners safe, their captors often remove the loris’s fangs, but this
usually ends in the primate’s death, as they can no longer feed properly.
A
lesula monkey, Cercopithecus lomamiensis.
JOHN HART The sleepy-eyed lesula (Cercopithecus lomamiensis) was also officially added to
the books in 2012. Well-known to locals near its Congo forest home, the lesula
is only the second monkey species in its genus. The animal is light in color,
making it easily distinguishable from its closest relations, the dark-furred
owl-faced monkeys. John Hart of the Lukuru Wildlife Research Foundation and the
Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, who described the species in PLOS ONE, said the first lesula example his team
studied was being kept as a pet by a schoolteacher’s daughter. When
investigating the nearby forest, the group “expected to find something unusual,
maybe a range extension [of a known species],” Hart explained. “But we were
never prepared to find a new species.”
Though
humans don’t farm or mine the forest, lesulas are threatened by the bush meat
trade. Having depleted richer sources of bushmeat, hunters will travel
“hundreds of kilometers” to hunt monkeys, Hart said. Smoked bushmeat is then
sold in urban centers, where many people have no other protein options. But recognition of the lesula as a new
species may aid conservation efforts, he added.
Distinctive
genitalia
Juvenile
Brookesia micra. FRANK GLAW and JÖRN
KÖHLERFor some animal species, their genitalia are the best way to identify
them. Scientists described a new species (Phallostethus
cuulong), belonging to the priapum fish family, whose penises erupt from
their chins. This bizarre method of identification is the best for Madagascar’s
miniature Malagasy leaf chameleons, which can be distinguished by subtle
differences in the shape of their hempenes, the reproductive organs held inside
their body until mating. But the newest—and tiniest—member, called Brookesia micra, can be easily identified without getting too
intimate. B. micra is about an inch
long with “a very, very short tail. The tail has even sometimes a reddish
color. It’s totally unique,” said Miguel Vences, a zoologist at the Technical University of
Braunschweig in Germany, who led the study identifying the miniscule critter.
Teeny
tiny fly
World's
tiniest fly, Euryplatea nanaknihali. INNA-MARIE
STRAZHNIK This year also saw the discovery of the world’s
tiniest fly, identified by entomologist Brian Brown at the Natural History Museum of Los
Angeles County. Nearly microscopic at less than half a millimeter in length, Euryplatea nanaknihali—named for a young
entomology enthusiast who often visits Brown’s museum—belongs to a group of
flies that parasitize ants. Brown, who first spotted the fly in an insect trap
in Thailand, knew at first sight that E. nanaknihali was unusual. It is a “very
odd” looking fly, said Brown, having “a rounded teardrop shape that makes it
hard to grab, and short stubby broad wings a smoky grey in color. . . . Most
people would probably think it’s a beetle.”
The
tiny fly belongs to a group that lays their eggs in an ant’s head. As the fly
larvae develop, they feed on the ant’s tissue until “the ant’s head falls off,
sometimes as its body is still walking around,” Brown said.
New
lion on the block
Addis
Ababa lion. JOERG JUNHOLD and KLAUS EULENBERGER, LEIPZIG ZOO In another boon
for biodiversity, researchers confirmed this year that a population of
Ethiopian lions with a unique dark mane are indeed genetically distinct from other lions in other areas.
Descended from a founder population collected by Emperor Haile Selassie in
1948, the lions are known to scientists from the Addis Ababa Zoo, though
reports of dark-maned lions in the wild also exist.
Researchers
used the sequence of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene and various
microsatellites to ascertain that the dark-maned lions are genetically separate
from other lions. The news has already given the lions a boost, said Susann
Bruche, a biologist at Imperial College London and first author of the paper.
Zoo officials have raised money for a better lion enclosure, based on natural
habitats, which will give the lions more space to breed and maintain their
population.
A
few goodbyes
Copper-striped
blue-tailed skink. CHRIS BROWN, USGS The International Union for Conservation of Nature, which puts
out the Red List assessing species’ extinction risks, lists 795 species as
extinct. But each year, often due to human encroachment, that list grows.
Hawaii, the poster child for the havoc wreaked by invasive species—and the
heroic efforts to combat them—announced the local extinction of the copper-striped
blue-tailed skink this year, possibly due to torment by predatory
ants. Luckily, blue-tailed skink populations persist on other Pacific Islands.
Japan
announced the extinction of the Japanese river otter, an iconic creature not seen for more
than 30 years. Japan’s Ministry of Environment also declared several other
species extinct, including the least horseshoe bat.
Lonesome
George. WIKIPEDIA, putnymark And finally, the Galápagos’s Lonesome George, the long-lived Pinta Island giant tortoise
believed to be the last of his kind, died this summer. More than 100 years old,
Lonesome George was introduced to several female tortoises in hopes of
producing hybrids, but the eggs laid never hatched. But amidst the sorrow of
his passing, some scientists retain hope. New work by evolutionary
biologist Adalgisa
Caccone at Yale University suggests that a few Pinta Island tortoises
may still exist—and be successfully hybridizing with the locals—at Volcano Wolf on nearby
Isabela Island. Caccone and her colleagues compared the DNA of more than 1,600
Volcano Wolf tortoises to a DNA database of extinct tortoises collected from
museum specimens, and discovered that 17, including some juveniles, had DNA
from C. abingdoni ancestors.
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