The
tiny island of St Helena has been dubbed the Galapagos of the South
Atlantic because its animals and plants have evolved in isolation from the rest
of the world
Thursday
4 February 2016
When
a British entomologist was sent to the tiny island of St Helena to search for a
cranefly feared extinct for decades, it might have sounded like a Herculean
task.
So
Liza Fowler, of the Bugs on the Brink project, was somewhat taken aback
when one flew in the window of her car and landed on her, The Daily
Telegraph reported.
The
island has been dubbed the Galapagos of the South Atlantic because its animals
and plants have evolved in isolation from the rest of the world, resulting in
more than 400 invertebrate animals which are found nowhere else.
Basilewsky’s
cranefly, which looks a bit like a mini daddy long legs, had not been seen for
nearly 50 years – until Ms Fowler arrived to carry out an audit of the island’s
insect life..
“Capturing
the Basilewsky’s cranefly was a real stroke of luck, one flew into the car at
High Peak and landed on me,” she said.
However,
Ms Fowler also found a large number of alien species on St Helena, where
Napoleon Bonaparte spent his last days after defeat at the Battle of Waterloo.
“Unfortunately
most of the new bugs are not such good news to the island as they are invaders
from other places and may turn out to be detrimental to the indigenous bugs,
flora or crops, but it is good that we now know about them,” she said.
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