by David Nield, 2/1/18 Science
Alert
Orange dwarf crocodiles living in
the caves of central Africa could be evolving into a new and separate species,
say scientists, giving us a fascinating look at animal adaptation happening
before our very eyes.
These creatures, discovered in
Gabon in 2008, are already strange enough – living in the darkness, feeding off
bats and crickets, and with an orange sheen to their scales that isn't the hue
you first think of when you think of a crocodile.
The dimness of their dwelling and
the other conditions in which they live is what's causing this rapid mutation
and evolution, say the international team of researchers, and a new round of
genetic testing suggests a new species could have been created.
"As a result of that
isolation and the fact that few individuals come in or go out, they're in the
process of [becoming] a new species," one of the team, herpetologist
Matthew Shirley from Florida International University, told Sarah Gibbens at National
Geographic.
"Whether that happens soon
or not is anyone's guess.”
Since they were first discovered,
scientists have been studying the movements and breeding patterns of these
African dwarf crocodiles, comparing them with close neighbours living on the
outskirts of the cave network.
The diet of bats and crickets
that the orange crocs prefer is different to what crocodiles eat outside the
caves - mainly fish and crustaceans.
And the cave-dwelling reptiles
are also changing colour, being turned orange as they get older by
the presence of the bat excrement or "guano" in the water
in which they live.
"Bat guano is largely
comprised of urea,"
Shirley told National
Geographic. "When they're sitting in this bat guano slushie, we
think the highly basic pH water is tanning their skin.”
But it's the DNA analysis of
around 30-40 cave crocs that really has experts excited. It showed up a unique haplotype not
found in the animals outside the cave – a group of genes being passed down
together.
"We could say that we have a
mutating species, because [the cave crocodile] already has a different
[genetic] haplotype," one of the researchers, Richard Oslisly from the The
French Research Institute for Development, told Jeremy Hance at The
Guardian.
"Its diet is different and
it is a species that has adapted to the underground world."
That brand new species
distinction has yet to be confirmed, and the team is working on a new paper to
report its latest findings. If these are now a completely different kind of
crocodile, however, there's one mystery left to explain – how they're breeding.
While researchers have spotted
younger crocs leaving the caves to mate and produce young, it's not clear
whether the older reptiles still have the means or the motivation to trundle
out into the light.
And if they are sticking to the
caves once they reach a certain age, they must have found a way of laying eggs
without the rotting vegetation usually needed to incubate them.
The team thinks some outside
crocodiles still make their way into the caves with every passing generation,
something which may have been going on for thousands of years since the
cave-dwelling crocs first ventured into the darkness.
And as well as a potential new
species, this study is teaching us more about how crocodiles can adapt in
various environments. In fact, the caves aren't that different to a croc's
normal habitat, reaching 22 degrees Celsius (71.6 degrees Fahrenheit).
Now there are plans to turn the
area into a wildlife sanctuary so we can take a closer look at these strange
beasts.
A paper on the latest research
will be out in several weeks, but the team has published earlier findings in
the African
Journal of Ecology.
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