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Bizarre species discovered in recent years (Photo Gallery)

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Gaborn

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About 15,000 new species are still discovered every year, from psychedelic fish to pink millipedes, and from lungless frogs to the Dracula fish. Take our tour of some of the strangest species to be discovered in recent years
dracula.jpg


Dracula fish

Discovered: Burma
Documented: 2009

It's not big and it's not pretty, but Danionella dracula is certainly unique.

The transparent 17-millimetre-long "Dracula fish" is the only member of the 3700-strong Cypriniformes group to have vampire-like fangs on its top and bottom jaws, which the males use to impress each other and to settle squabbles over territory.

The discovery of these fangs was something of a surprise because the Cypriniformes lost their teeth about 50 million years ago, says Danionella expert Ralf Britz of the Natural History Museum in London.

So did the Dracula fish manage to keep its teeth while all around were losing theirs? Er, no. Instead, it evolved something new.

What look like teeth are actually bone which has grown into curved spikes that poke through the skin.

By comparing the Dracula fish's DNA with that of zebrafish and other members of the family, Britz estimates that the bony fangs evolved within 30 million years of the family losing its true teeth.

(Image: The Natural History Museum, London)
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The world's smallest snake

Discovered: Barbados
Documented: 2008

If you shuddered at the discovery of a fossilised 13-metre, 1-tonne boa constrictor earlier this year, perhaps Leptotyphlops carlae is more up your street.

At only 100 millimetres long and no thicker than a strand of spaghetti, it is the world's smallest snake, able to curl up on a British 10 pence coin or an American quarter.

Blair Hedges of Pennsylvania State University, University Park, found the diminutive snake under a rock in Barbados last year.

Also known as the Barbados threadsnake, it belongs to a group of snakes that burrow into the ground in pursuit of ants and termites, which they suck dry before spitting out the husk.

Threadsnakes tend to be small - the previous record holder was the Lesser Antillean threadsnake, at 110 millimetres. But Hedges believes L. carlae is as small as it gets.

Thanks to their tiny body cavity, females only manage to lay a single, very elongated egg. Any smaller and a snake would be unable to reproduce at all, he says.

(Image: S. Blair Hedges)

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Psychedelic frogfish

Discovered: Indonesia
Documented: 2009

When the psychedelic frogfish, Histiophryne psychedelica, turned up at a popular dive site off Ambon Island, Indonesia, in January 2008, it posed something of a mystery. How had a brightly coloured, 8-centimetre-long fish managed to stay hidden for so long in such well-trodden waters?

Then, in June, it caused another stir, when all of the 12 or so individuals disappeared without trace. But not before a team led by Theodore Pietsch from the University of Washington in Seattle had noted several brand new behaviours (Copeia, 2009, no 1, p 37)
.

Perhaps the oddest was that it seems to dislike swimming. Like other frogfish, it "walks" along the reef on its long, leg-like pectoral fins, but when startled it does something unique.

While other species swim to safety, H. psychedelica escapes by jet propulsion, squirting water out of gill-like openings towards the back of its body as it pushes off the bottom with its fins. This, says one diver who observed it, makes it look rather like "an inflated rubber ball bouncing along the bottom".

The new species also hunts differently. All the other 325 known species of anglerfish, the group to which frogfish belong, sit in the open and attract prey with a lure.

H. psychedelica has no lure. Instead, it hunts by squeezing itself into tiny crevices where small fish hide.

Finally, while other species of frogfish change colour to match the coral they are sitting on, H. psychedelica stays true to its name whatever the background, sporting mind-bending swirls of orange, white and blue.

The psychedelic frogfish is still missing, presumed hiding.
With diving companies desperately seeking what was briefly their star attraction, we may yet find out where it came from and why it has taken such a different evolutionary path from its cousins.

(Image: David Hall / Seaphotos.com)

millipede.jpg


Pink cyanide millipede

Discovered: Thailand
Documented: 2007

It's bright pink, smells of almonds and goes by the slightly camp name of "Mangkorn chomphoo" but you wouldn't want to mess with this beast.

Discovered in central Thailand in 2007, Desmoxytes purpurosea is a large, spiny "dragon millipede" that oozes hydrogen cyanide to ward off predators - hence the almond-like smell.

The shocking pink is probably intended as another warning to leave well alone, says co-discoverer Henrik Enghoff of the Natural History Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen. Potential predators seem to get the message: D. purpurosea spends its days hanging out in the open on leaves and rocks in its humid jungle habitat (Zootaxa, vol 1563, p 31).

Mangkorn chomphoo - Thai for "shocking-pink dragon millipede" - is the latest addition to the dragon millipede family, whose members are found in south-east Asia and Australia. These creatures are often large, spiny and colourful, but Mangkorn Chomphoo takes the biscuit.

At about 3 centimetres in length, it is one of the largest, one of the spiniest and definitely the most lurid of them all.

(Image: Somsak Panha / WWF-UK)

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Mammals galore

Discovered: Tanzania
Documented: 2008

Of all the world's biodiversity hotspots, the Udzungwa mountains of central Tanzania are among the hottest. Over the past decade, several new species have turned up here, including a partridge and even a monkey.

The latest discovery is a sengi, or elephant shrew. It is not actually a shrew, but a member of the afrotheres, a group that includes elephants, hyraxes, aardvarks and sea cows.

Sengis are considered living fossils as the 15 known species are almost identical to their fossilised ancestors of 23 million years ago.

The new sengi, Rhynchocyon udzungwensis, weighs 700 grams and is the size of a large rabbit, which makes it a giant among elephant shrews (Journal of Zoology, vol 274, p 126).

The giant sengi joins an astonishingly long list of recently discovered mammals: 1 in 10 known mammal species were discovered in the past 15 years.

The most important of these new arrivals is generally agreed to be the Laotian rock rat, Laonastes aenigmamus, a squirrel-sized rodent discovered in Laos in 2005 that is so different from any other known creature that a whole new family had to be devised to describe it.

(Image: Mason's News Service / Rex)

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Flesh-eating ghost slug

Discovered: Wales
Documented: 2008

Proving that the gardens of suburban Wales are just as mysterious as the rainforests of Borneo, the "alien, flesh-eating ghost slug" first appeared in a domestic garden in 2006, but was only officially named Selenochlamys ysbryda last year.

According to Bill Symondson, an invertebrate ecologist at Cardiff University in the UK, who described the slug along with Ben Rowson of the National Museum of Wales in Cardiff, the ghost slug is "such a brilliant white it almost glows".

It lives underground and hunts earthworms or other slugs by stretching itself into a long, worm-like shape and sneaking down earthworm burrows. Then it uses sensitive receptors on its antennae to sniff out its prey.

When it finds a worm or slug it stabs its victim with its many sharp, spiny mouthparts (in close-up, left, with a single tooth inset) before sucking the rest of it - alive - into its mouth.

Since its closest relatives are found in the Caucasus region in south-west Asia, Symondson speculates that the species evolved in a cave system there, and was perhaps brought to the UK in bat guano that was exported as fertiliser.

Luckily, the species doesn't seem to be taking its ghoulish title too seriously. "They are at quite low densities, so we don't think they are a threat to earthworm populations," says Symondson.

(Image: Ben Rowson & Bill Symondson / National Museum Wales)

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Blonde-ginger bat (flying fox)

Discovered: Philippines
Documented: 2008

This blonde/ginger fruitbat has striking stripes on its face that make it look rather like a fox.

It is known as the Mindoro stripe-faced fruit bat, or Styloctenium mindorensis.

The species' closest relative lives some 1,200 kilometres away on an island in Indonesia.

(Image: Harvey John D. Garcia)

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Brown eelpout

Discovered: Antarctica
Described: 2006

Pachycara cousinsi is known from a single 41-centimetre-long specimen.

The specimen was caught at a depth of 4.5 kilometres, during a British research expedition to the remote Crozet Islands, in the Indian Ocean between Antarctica and Africa.

The fish has "watery, jelly-like flesh, probably due to their sluggish lifestyle and as an adaptation to pressures exerted on their bodies."

(Image: Nicola J. King)

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Old species, new insights

It's not only new species that can amaze scientists. These creatures, discovered decades ago, are only now giving up their secrets.

The fish with a cockpit head

Discovered: California, 1939
Described: 2009

The 15-centimetre-long deep-sea barreleye fish Macropinna microstoma was discovered 70 years ago off the California coast. Until recently, though, little was known about it, as all known specimens were dead and damaged after being brought up in fishing nets.

This year, however, Bruce Robison from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California has collected the first footage of a live M. microstoma, filmed 600 to 800 metres down. They also collected a live specimen to study on the surface.

For the first time, researchers were able to see a delicate, transparent, fluid-filled dome on the fish's head, which completely encloses its bright green eyes.

The eyes were already known to face upwards to search for food through the gloom, but the live specimens revealed that once it has spotted food, it can swivel its eyes forward and swim straight upwards to catch it.

(Image: 2004 MBARI)

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The only known lungless frog

Discovered: Borneo, 1978
Described: 2008

The Bornean flat-headed frog, Barbourula kalimantanensis, was discovered in Indonesian Borneo in 1978, but it was only in 2008, when two more populations were found, that scientists finally dissected a specimen and discovered it to be the only known frog species without lungs.

David Bickford of the National University of Singapore, who studied the frogs, believes that losing the buoyancy of the lungs allowed them to stay put on the bed of fast-flowing streams, where the higher oxygen content of the water allows them to get all they need through their skin.

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Photosynthetic sea slug

Discovered: 1870
Described: 2009

It has long been known that Elysia chlorotica, a bright-green sea slug found off the east coast of the US, eats algae and harnesses their ability to make energy through solar power.

But it was only this year that Mary Rumpho at the University of Maine in Orono discovered how it does it. As well as stealing the algae's chloroplasts to add to cells in its gut, the solar-powered beast also incorporates some of the algae’s genes into its own DNA.

No one yet knows how it achieves this, especially as DNA that jumps species is usually non-functional.

(Image: Mary Tyler, University of Maine)

Gallery Here

Quick note, this gallery is from 2009, a fact I did not notice until after I finished formatting the whole thing. It is currently the "top gallery" on this page which is why I assumed it was new. I still say these are extremely interesting animals, some I've seen before some I have not.
 

Zoe

Member
For the first time, researchers were able to see a delicate, transparent, fluid-filled dome on the fish's head, which completely encloses its bright green eyes.

The eyes were already known to face upwards to search for food through the gloom, but the live specimens revealed that once it has spotted food, it can swivel its eyes forward and swim straight upwards to catch it.

So the things that look like eyes aren't actually eyes?
 

Bentendo

Member
Wait I'm confused. The fish the transparent head -- those green things inside itself are the eyes? Then what are those two eye-looking things up front?

EDIT: Yeah what he said.
 
The "eyes" on the face are probably fused-over openings from farther back in genetic history, when this creature's ancestor had normal eyes.
 

gutshot

Member
There was a thread on the transparent-headed fish a while back, if I remember correctly the eye-looking things are actually its nose.
 

Borgnine

MBA in pussy licensing and rights management
I don't want to alarm anyone but that quarter snake is probably going to get in your peehole and lay its elongated egg.
 

Jasoneyu

Member
Oh god that transparent fish head thing is so creepy. I can just imagine it now swivelling its green eyes foward.. brrr
 
How unique does an animal have to be to be considered a different species? For example, why are pit bulls and chihuahua the same species, yet that elephant screw is a different species from other shrews?
 

Gaborn

Member
How unique does an animal have to be to be considered a different species? For example, why are pit bulls and chihuahua the same species, yet that elephant screw is a different species from other shrews?

The definition of a species is a slippery thing. One definition is that if you breed the two animals you'll get another animal with certain similar morphological features. Dogs have similar bone structure, generally have tails, and are generally capable of breeding with each other (size differences such as a greyhound and a chihuahua aside, and even there it's been done). Whereas, to take a slightly different example, a tiger and a lion are more morphologically distinct and have distinctive characteristics unique to their species. I acknowledge though sometimes it's more subtle and I'm not a biologist so I'm not going to be TOO much more helpful than that.

One other point though which is related. Back in 2010 I posted a thread about the discovery that there are actually 3 separate species of killer whale . In that case they confirmed it genetically, but the major clue to look for it was the 3 species have different dietary preferences.

So I suspect the answer to your question is an amalgam of all of the above. Essentially it's a matter of breeding and distinct morphologies but ALSO behaviors exclusive to one particular subset and not another, with the final clue being distinctive DNA.
 

Woorloog

Banned
"But it was only this year that Mary Rumpho at the University of Maine in Orono discovered how it does it. As well as stealing the algae's chloroplasts to add to cells in its gut, the solar-powered beast also incorporates some of the algae’s genes into its own DNA.

No one yet knows how it achieves this, especially as DNA that jumps species is usually non-functional. "

Holy... A real life Zerg! (or some other similar fictive species)

Very interesting stuff
 
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