Newly
described aquatic salamander Siren reticulata — reticulated siren — has a
spotted, eel-like body and no hind limbs.
A sinuous
swamp salamander with spots like a leopard and Christmas-tree-shaped fronds
growing from its head hid from scientists for decades. But researchers have
finally described this elusive and two-legged aquatic oddity.
Dubbed
Siren reticulata — reticulated siren — the animal bears a closer resemblance to
an eel
than a salamander, with a long body and no hind limbs. In fact, its body shape
and spotted pattern previously earned it the name "leopard eel,"
scientists reported in a new study.
Only
recently did researchers confirm that the slippery salamander is a new species.
Like other sirens (a group of aquatic salamanders) the newfound species is huge
— it measures up to 2 feet (60 centimeters) in length, and is one of the
largest animals with backbones described in the U.S. in more than a century,
according to the study.
Unlike
many other types of salamanders, sirens have extremely elongated bodies, are
entirely aquatic and only have front legs. Their heads are crowned with
branching external
gills — structures that help them extract oxygen from the
water, study co-author David Steen, a research ecologist with the Georgia Sea
Turtle Center, told Live Science.
Sirens
were first described in the 18th and 19th centuries, but they remain poorly
understood; the group has flown under the scientific radar for so long
primarily because they're tricky to detect and observe in the murky streams and
ponds of their swamp habitats
in the southeastern United States, Steen explained.Frond-like
structures in the siren's external gills help it to breathe underwater
To
determine if the spotted siren was indeed a new species, the researchers needed
specimens. Steen caught one in 2009, and it wasn't until 2014 when scientists
captured three more.
Evaluation
of these sirens — along with preserved museum specimens — enabled the study
authors to perform detailed analysis of the animals' DNA and body
structures, determining that they were genetically and
physically distinct from known siren species that live in the area: the greater
siren and the lesser siren.Patterns
of dark spots on the reticulated siren's back inspired the animal's previous
common name of "leopard eel," though it is "neither a leopard
nor an eel," according to the study authors.
Natural
predators for the reticulated sirens likely include snakes,
herons, egrets and predatory fish, Steen told Live Science. But the giant
salamanders face a more dire threat from human activity, such as development
that encroaches on their habitat. Because little is known about the extent of
the sirens' range, it's possible that wetlands where sirens lived are already
being drained, Steen said.
Identifying
this giant salamander also serves as a reminder that there are new
species to be discovered "right in our own
backyards," Steen said.
"This
is a big animal, and it's only being described in 2018. There's probably a lot
more species for us to learn about — and we should do it quick, before these
things disappear."
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