NP Rank:
Some Strange Species Discovered Last Year
by jjenet | May 28, 2009 at 09:11 pm
422 views | 25 Recommendations | 3 comments
There are lots of living and non-living things aound us which are still undiscovered or seen. A underwater world is a live example of it. It has countless living creatures which are unknown by us or our science. Here are some of the live examples discovered and known to our science recently.
Every year, biologists brave the world’s deserts, jungles and industrial ecosystems looking for new species.
And what wonderful things they find. It turns out that the real world is totally like the internet: If you look hard enough, you can find just about anything. This year, scientists found caffeine-less coffee plants, tiny seahorses and a 23-inch long bug that looks like a branch, not to mention a strange white slug no one had ever described that was found in a Welsh garden.
Below, you’ll find the top 10 species found and described in 2008, according to The International Institute for Species Exploration at Arizona State University.
At the top of the page you see the world’s tiniest seahorse, Satomi’s Pygmy Seahorse, aka Hippocampus satomiae. Found in Indonesian waters, it’s the reigning champ of lilliputian seahorses, floating around at half an inch tall. (In Wired Science’s informal Cutest Thing Ever rankings, it came in right behind the slow loris.)
Deep Blue Chromis aka Chromis abyssus
The deep reefs of the Pacific Ocean are home to a variety of strange creatures that are just beginning to be described. Named in honor of the BBC program that funded the trip on which it was discovered, this small blue fish was found in Palau, which is hundreds of miles from anywhere.
Ghost Slug aka Selenochlamys ysbryda
This member of the family Trigonochlamydidae was found in a “domestic garden in Canton,” a town in Wales. It’s nocturnal and creepy looking.
Phobaeticus chani
That’s not a stick, it’s the world’s longest insect, measuring in at 22.3 inches total and with a body length of 14 inches. You can find it in Borneo, although we’d rather not.
Barbados Threadsnake aka Leptotyphlops carlae
The world’s tiniest, quarter-wrapping snake made the rounds of the internet last year and made the ASU’s species list this year. It’s only found in Barbados.
Mother Fish aka Materpiscis attenboroughi
The mother fish is only known from the fossil above, which shows the animal giving birth 370 million years ago. It’s the oldest-known vertebrate to have birthed offspring live.
Opisthostoma vermiculum
This strange Malaysian gastropod has a shell that defies the standard laws of shell twisting. It coils along four separate axes, not three like most of its relatives. It’s no tiny seahorse, but you can’t hold that against it.
Last but not the least we should make a small effort to live and let others live by being friendly to our environment and ecosystem.
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (3)
at 21:59 on May 28th, 2009
Amazing!!
at 02:47 on May 29th, 2009
Good post. Just do not highlight the whole article please, only a fraction of it. Thank you for the post.
at 03:35 on May 29th, 2009
Thank you for this. Very interesting article.