Dec.
20, 2012 — In the rain forests of the Congo, where mammals and birds are
hunted to near-extinction, an impenetrable sound of buzzing insects blankets
the atmosphere.
Because
it is a fairly inaccessible region with political unrest, much of the Congo's
insect biodiversity remains largely undiscovered. In a new monographic book
published this week in Zootaxa, researchers at the University of Florida
and the Royal Museum of Central Africa in Belgium provide insect biodiversity
information for this area in Central Africa that increasingly undergoes habitat
destruction.
Focusing
on a group of leaf-mining moths, researchers name 41 new species, nearly
doubling the number previously known from the region. Leaf miners occur
worldwide and the biodiversity research is important because some species are
agricultural pests, while others help control unwanted invasive plant species.
Some are also known to delay plant aging.
"When
we began this project, we had no idea how many species would be out
there," said co-author Akito Kawahara, assistant curator of Lepidoptera at
the Florida Museum of Natural History on the UF campus. "In a two-week
field trip, we discovered nearly 50 potentially new species, which is really
surprising. There is still an enormous amount of life out there that we know
very little of."
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