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Thursday 28 June 2012

Latest top 10 New Species Found in 2012

On May 23rd, the International Institute for Species Exploration (IISE) published its 5th annual list of new species discovered during the previous year. Based out of Arizona State University, IISEs scientists collaborate with a committee of taxonomists across the globe to describe and classify new plant and animal species.
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Snub-Nosed Monkey


Snub-nosed monkeys are a group of Old World monkeys and make up the entirety of the genus Rhinopithecus. The genus occurs rarely and needs much more research. About 20,000 of the golden variety remain on Earth. Some 4,000 inhabit the mountainous region where Chinese officials set up the Zhouzhi National Nature Reserve to protect the species. Living bothin and out of reserve boundaries, Rhinopithecus roxellana, whose Latin name was allegedly inspiredby the snub-nosed concubine of a1500s sultan, has made great adaptations to survive, subsisting on low-protein lichens and bark when trees are bare. Large social networks help fend off predators,like clouded leopards.
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Bonaire Banded Box Jelly


Bonaire Banded Box Jelly is found near the Dutch Caribbean island of Bonaire. This -strikingly beautiful yet venomous jellyfish resembles a box kite, with its long, colorful tails, according to ASU. After a thorough scientific review in which the morphology of this jellyfish was carefully compared with the morphology of several close relatives, the Bonaire banded box jelly was officially given the species name Tamoya ohboya in a public naming contest organized by the Coalition of the Public Understanding of Science. Lisa Peck, a high school marine biology teacher, submitted the winning entry ohboya, as she explained in part,~I bet -Oh Boy is the first thing said when a biologist or layman encounters the Bonaire Banded Box Jellyfish.
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Wandering Leg Sausage


A giant millipede about the length of a sausage bears the common name -wandering leg sausage. The species (Crurifarcimen vagans) holds a new record as the largest millipede (about 6.3 inches) found in one of the worlds biodiversity hotspots, Tanzanias Eastern Arc Mountains. The new species is about 0.6 inch in diameter with 56 more or less podous rings, or body segments, bearing ambulatory limbs. Each ofthese segments has two pairs of legs.
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Sazimas Tarantula


Not only is this iridescent blue tarantula, Sazimas tarantula , breathtakingly beautiful, it is the first new animal species from Brazil to have made it to the Top 10. Brazil is one of the planet¡¯s most biologically diverse nations and is consistently a major source of species discoveries including much of Brazils Amazon basin, its Atlantic forest, the savanna ecoregion Cerrado, and the hotspots of Brazils tropical Andes.Survival of tarantula species can be at risk due to loss of habitat and over-collecting for the pet trade. Although Pterinopelma sazimai is not the first blue tarantula, it is one of the most striking and may be especially vulnerable because of its limited distribution in an -ecological island--a habitat high upon tabletop mountains which have a greater rainfall and different soilsthan the immediately surrounding area.
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Night-Blooming Orchid


A Night-Blooming orchid , the firstof its kind known to science, has been described by a team of botanists. Experts say the -remarkable- species is the only orchid known to consistently flower at night, but why it has adopted this behaviour remains amystery. The plant was discoveredby a Dutch researcher during an expedition to New Britain, an island near Papua New Guinea.
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Walking Cactus


Diania is an extinct genus of animal found in the Lower Cambrian Maotianshan shale of China, represented by a single species D. cactiformis. Known during its investigation by the nickname -walking cactus-, this organism belongs to a group known as the armoured lobopodians and has a simple worm-like body with robust, spiny, and apparently jointed legs. Its significance is that jointed legs are the defining character of the arthropods and Diania may thus be very close to the origins of the most diverse group of animals on the planet.
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Dive-Bombing Wasp


A tiny parasitic wasp from the region surrounding Madrid, Spainearned Top 10 recognition for herunusual means of laying an egg. Dive-bombing Wasps hunt for prey one centimeter above ground, scouting for unwary dessert ants. Dive-bombing Waspsstrike from behind, depositing a single egg in an unsuspecting host in less than 1/20 of a second, sealing the ant¡¯s fate as a moving feast for hungry wasp larvae.
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Nepalese Autumn Poppy


Many newly discovered species of Nepalese Autumn Poppies are small in size or secretive in habits,but not all. This beautiful and vibrantly colored poppy has remained unknown to science until now. This is no doubt due in part to the extreme environment where the flower lives at an elevation of 10,827 to 13,780 feet in central Nepal. It is also evidence of the paucity of botanists studying the Asian flora as specimens of Meconopsis autumnalis had been collected twice before, although not recognized as new---first in 1962by the storied Himalayan plant hunter Adam Stainton and again in 1994 by staff of the University of Tokyos Department of Plant Resources. The recent rediscovery of the poppy in the field was made by intrepid botanists collecting plants miles from human habitation in heavy monsoon rains.
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Devil Worm


Scientists digging 2.2 miles under South Africa didnot crack through the roof of Hell, but they did find the -devil worm - the deepest-living animal known. Halicephalobus mephisto, a newlydiscovered species named for Fausts Mephistopheles, is the firstnematode found beyond the 100-meter mark. Depths beyond that were thought to harbor only microbes. The nematodes live in abrownish fluid of bacterial biofilm, and have adapted comfortably to severe conditions marked by massive atmospheric pressure, and an ambient temperature that averages 98.6 Fahrenheit.
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Spongebob Squarepants Mushroom

Named after the cartoon character Spongebob Squarepants , this new species looks more like a sponge than a stereotypical mushroom and its fruiting body can actually be squeezed like a sponge and bounce back to its normal size and shape. This unusual mushroom is only the second species of the bolete fungus genus Spongiforma and according to the authors, -its unusual shape is unlike anything else known. Beyond having a shape that brings Spongebob Squarepants to mind, the authors note other similarities between the fungus and the cartoon personality. The mushrooms smells fruity and Spongebob lives in a pineapple; magnified, the texture of the fungus resembles the tube sponges covering the seafloor where Spongebob lives; and even the microscopic spores of the fungus appear spongelike. Although the species name was initially rejected by journal editors as -frivolous- the authors persisted and as a result, brought attention to a bizarre new speciesand to the biodiversity of the worlds forests

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