Saturday 26 August 2017

New Species of Prehistoric Dolphin Slurped Up Its Prey

A skull fossil found in South Carolina has revealed a new ancient dolphin species that slurped its food instead of chewing on it.
The fossilized species had a short snout and was toothless, according to a paper published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, and the fossil shows holes in the creature’s bones that could indicate enlarged lips or whiskers. Instead of catching prey by tearing and grasping it with their teeth before swallowing the pieces whole—the way modern dolphins typically prefer to eat—this ancient creature sucked up prey from the sea floor in a method known as suction feeding.
Scientists think the dolphin (named Inermorostrum xenops) may be the earliest toothless offshoot from the toothed whale suborder Odontoceti, ultimately leading to many different kinds of modern feeding behavior among the group.
This evolutionary divergence happened within the Oligocene Epoch, one of the most important periods of whale evolution, during the Paleogene Period. The fossil is about 30 million years old, dating to a time when -read more

MYSTERIOUS AMAZON ANIMAL SEEN FOR FIRST TIME IN 80 YEARS

If anyone was going to find the elusive monkey with gold-colored legs, it would be Laura Marsh. She's the director of the Global Conservation Institute and one of the world's leading experts on saki monkeys, a New World species that can be found throughout the Amazon and parts of South America.
In 2014, Marsh identified five new species of saki, also referred to as "flying monkeys," living elusively in the region. Earlier this summer, she set out to find one elusive species in particular. The Vanzolini bald-faced saki, named for Brazilian zoologist Paulo Vanzolini (its scientific name is Pithecia vanzolinii). The monkey hadn't been seen alive in 80 years.
To find the missing monkey, Marsh and a team of scientists, photographers, conservationists, and local guides set out on a four-month-long expedition into a little-explored part of the western Amazon. They set sail in a small, two-story houseboat and headed up the Eiru River, near Brazil's Peruvian border.-read more

The bizarre purple pig-nosed frog that only ventures above ground in the mountains on India to mate

When scientists first discovered an unusual purple frog in India’s Western Ghats mountain range back in 2003, the strange-looking creature was said to be unlike any other.
Now, however, researchers conducting field visits in the region have spotted a second, equally-bizarre member of the family.
The new species, dubbed Bhupathy’s purple frog, has a bulbous body covered in purple skin, blue-ringed eyes, and a pig-like nose – and, perhaps unsurprisingly, the experts say it spends most of its life underground.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4824450/Pig-nosed-frog-PURPLE-skin-discovered-India.html#ixzz4qD4P3ub8
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New species of gigantic, long necked dinosaurs found

A file photo of a long-necked dinosaur. Representational image.
A file photo of a long-necked dinosaur. Representational image.
New York: Scientists have discovered a new species of long-necked titanosaurian dinosaur in Tanzania that lived about 70 to 100 million years ago.
The new species named Shingopana songwensis is a member of the gigantic, long-necked sauropods. Its fossil was discovered in the Songwe region of the Great Rift Valley in southwestern Tanzania.
“There are anatomical features present only in Shingopana and in several South American titanosaurs, but not in other African titanosaurs,” said Eric Gorscak, -read more

Saturday 19 August 2017

New species of spider and goby fish found in Okinawa Prefecture

New species of spider and goby fish have been found in Okinawa Prefecture. Okinawa is known worldwide as a location that fosters abundant biological diversity.
This discovery of new species once again reaffirms the idea that Okinawa still holds many species that have yet to be discovered and researched.

Former Professor at the University of the Ryukyus and Doctor of Science Matsuei Shimojana and Researcher Hirotsugu Ono from the Department of Zoology at the National Museum of Nature and Science discovered the “Daitou Cicurina spider,” a spider endemic to Minamidaitou Island.
This spider is a new species that is part of the genus Cicurina and this is the first reported case of this spider being found anywhere in the world.read more

Ancient Giant Sloth Fossil Found in Underwater Cave

The jungle of the Yucatán in Mexico is not typically known as a great place to find fossils. The humid environment has destroyed most traces of bone of the animals that lived here over thousands of years, but there is one place where they remain less disturbed—in caves.
After diving 100 feet underground in a limestone cave in 2009, underwater cave explorer Vicente Fito came upon an incredibly well-preserved fossil sloth. It was recently confirmed as previously unknown to science. Fito deposited the bones with the National Institute of Anthropology and History in Mexico and they were recently pieced together and described.
The new species of sloth, called Xibalbaonyx oviceps, is represented by a nearly flawless skull and many other bones. It likely died in the cave when sea level was lower and it was dry. As the cave flooded around 10,000 years ago, the already dried out skeleton was well preserved as it lay undisturbed for thousands of years. (Watch divers find sloths in an underwater cave.)
Researchers are not sure exactly how big Xibalbaonyx was yet, but it was at least 500 pounds. Sloths have run the gamut of body sizes over their evolutionary history, ranging from modern two-toed sloths at around 10 -read more

Octopus's garden: New shrimp species found in the den of a 'Super Star' cephalopod

shrimp-page-2017-8-18.jpeg
'Super Star' (nicknamed by local divers) in the den she shares with the tiny mysid shrimp (Heteromysis octopodis). Image: Craig Foster
Documentary filmmaker Craig Foster has worked with countless researchers throughout his career, but Cape Town University marine biologist Charles Griffiths has become a mentor to his efforts as a citizen scientist. So when Foster happened upon these double den-dwellers, he knew exactly who to call. 
Along with a team of collaborators, Griffiths has been studying mysid (or "opossum") shrimp near Miller Point in False Bay, where Super Star's underwater abode also happens to be located. The region has produced several new species in recent years, so after hearing about Foster's find, Griffiths encouraged him to collect some samples on his next dive. With the help of Austrian crustacean expert Karl Wittman, the team was able to confirm that the tiny animals – which can perch comfortably on a fingertip – are new to science. 
Griffiths has described over 100 new species, but collaborating with local divers on this project has been especially rewarding. -read more

2 New Earthworm Species Found In Kerala

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM:  Scientists have discovered two new primitive species of earthworm in the Western Ghats mountain ranges in Kerala.

Researchers at Mahatma Gandhi University in Kerala and Shoolini University in Himachal Pradesh named the new earthworm species Drawida polydiverticulata and Drawida thomasi.

For Drawida polydiverticulata, its multiple lobes, also called diverticulums - an organ located in the front of its body - are unique amongst the members of the genus. This species was found to be widespread in the protected shola grasslands of the Munnar region, including Eravikulam National Park, Pampadun Shola National Park and Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary, researchers said.

The second new earthworm, Drawida thomasi, was collected at the Kozhippara Waterfalls near Kakkadampoyil, at the border between Malappuram and Kozhikode, they said.

In addition to the new species belonging to the primitive family Moniligastridae, the scientists also report the occurrence -read more

The algae that terraformed Earth

A planetary takeover by ocean-dwelling algae 650 million years ago was the kick that transformed life on Earth.
That's what geochemists argue in Nature this week, on the basis of invisibly small traces of biomolecules dug up from beneath the Australian desert.
The molecules mark an explosion in the quantity of algae in the oceans.
This in turn fuelled a change in the food web that allowed the first microscopic animals to evolve, the authors suggest.
"This is one the most profound ecological and evolutionary transitions in Earth's history," lead researcher Jochen Brocks told the BBC's Science in Action programme.
The events took place a hundred million years before the so-called Cambrian Explosion, an eruption of complex life recorded in fossils around the world that puzzled Darwin and always hinted at some kind of biological prehistory.-read more

Saturday 12 August 2017

New mosquito species found on Guam

The Division of Environmental Health of the Department of Public Health and Social Services has been conducting mosquito surveillance around the island. The surveillance program discovered the previously unrecorded mosquito species with the assistance of an entomologist from the zika emergency and preparedness project. The mosquito was identified as Wyeomyia Mitchelli through both morphological identification and DNA analysis. Although the female of this species of mosquito does suck the blood of warm blooded animals, it’s not known to transmit diseases to humans. This species has traveled to places like Tahiti via illegal bromeliad imports from Hawaii. Department of agriculture entomologist Dr. Russell Campbell says that although his department inspects legal imports of bromeliads from both the Philippines and Hawaii it’s possible that the mosquito arrived here on smuggled plants. It’s not yet clear how widely distributed the species is on Guam yet as the specimens were all found at one location. According to a release from Public Health this is a reminder that Guam is highly vulnerable to the introduction of invasive species. Although this species of mosquito is not known to transmit disease there are other species that do transmit diseases that can just as easily make their way to Guam. The public can do its part to prevent the spread of mosquitos-read more

Remarkably well-preserved 13 million-year-old infant skull of a new species of primate sheds new light on the African origins of humans and apes

The baby skull of a new species of primate that lived 13 million years ago could shed new light on the great mystery of how apes became human.
The skull, nicknamed Alesi, dates to Miocene epoch - around the time when apes were beginning to expand their range into Eurasia. 
The infant creature is not related to living apes and humans, but may have looked similar to our long-extinct ancestor. 
Scientists described the creature, found in Kenya, as being like a non-acrobatic baby gibbon with a small snout. 


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4775152/13-million-year-old-skull-new-species-baby-primate.html#ixzz4pXfke2fH
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New species of grass snake discovered in the UK grows to more than a metre long and sports dark bands along its spine

A new species of wild grass snake discovered in the UK grows up to a metre (3.3ft) long and sports dark bands along its spine.
The barred grass snake, Natrix helvetica, is now recognised as a species in its own right distinct from the common or eastern grass snake.
The non-venomous serpent brings the nation's total wild snake species count to four.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4771048/New-grass-snake-discovered-England.html#ixzz4pXfMbvkW
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Yoda' fruit bat officially recognised as new species

A bat from the rainforests of Papua New Guinea affectionately known as 'Yoda' has been given official recognition as a new species.
The mammal gained its nickname due to a likeness to the Star Wars character, but a University of York biologist has named it the hamamas tube-nosed fruit bat after the Papuan word for 'happy'.
It has a rounder jaw than similar fruit bats, giving the impression of a grin.
The recognition follows a study of 3,000 specimens by a team of experts.-read more

First 'winged' mammals flew over dinosaurs

Fossils of the first "winged" mammals, from 160 million years ago, have been discovered in China.
They reveal that mammal ancestors evolved to glide between trees in a similar way to some mammals today.
This adds to evidence that mammals were more diverse during the age of dinosaurs than previously realised.
The work is published by an international team of scientists in this week's Nature.
The two new fossil species exhibit highly specialised characteristics, including adaptations that allowed them to climb trees, roost on branches and glide.
This means that the ability of mammals to glide evolved much earlier than previously thought. Prof Zhe-Xi Luo, from the University of Chicago, US, said: "These Jurassic mammals are truly the first to glide.
"In a way, they got the first 'wings' among all mammals," he told BBC News.
The wings are the preserved remains of a skin membrane that stretches, parachute-like, between fore and hind limbs, allowing the creatures to glide.read more

Saturday 5 August 2017

Incredibly well-preserved dinosaur from 110 million years ago turns out to be new species

The discovery itself was amazing.

A dinosaur was found in Canada around 110 million years after it died. National Geographic covered the accidental discovery in its June issue and created a 3-D rendering to show how well-preserved the dinosaur fossils were in an ancient river bank. 
The discovery was back in 2011. Since then, researchers have determined the armored beast that weighed almost 3,000 pounds is a new species of nodosaur. 
It's called Borealopelta markmitchelli, according to a study released Thursday in the journal Current Biology.
The new species, which once roamed what is now Alberta, Canada, is from the Early-read more

Three new frog species found in Peruvian Andes with more to come

  • Few biological surveys have been conducted in the Pui Pui Protected Forest in the decades since it was established in 1985, and “the potential for additional discoveries is enormous,” according to one researcher who helped discover the three new frog species.
  • The three new species all belong to a family of land-breeding frogs called Craugastoridae whose embryos hatch as froglets rather than going through a tadpole stage, which allows them to survive in a wide array of habitat types with sufficient moisture.
  • The researchers say they will describe three more new frogs as well as two new lizards they’ve discovered in the Pui Pui Protected Forest in future papers.
Three new frog species have been discovered in the montane forests and Andean grasslands of Peru’s Pui Pui Protected Forest.
Rudolf von May, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Michigan and one of the authors of a paper describing the three new species that was published in the journal Zootaxa late last month, said in a statement that there are many more species discoveries to be made in the region — and teased the fact that he and his colleagues might soon be announcing further new finds of their own, including frogs and lizards.
Few biological surveys have been conducted in the Pui Pui Protected Forest in the decades since it was established in 1985, and “the potential for additional discoveries is enormous,” von May added.
“Our team has now described five new species of frogs from this region, with several more to -read more

Armoured tank-like dino used camouflage to hide

A new species of mega-herbivore dinosaur discovered in Alberta, Canada, preserves incredible details of its skin, scales and spines.
The exquisite specimen is a type of amour-plated nodosaurid ankylosaur.
It was camouflaged which suggests that, despite its tank-like appearance, it hid to avoid predation.
That such a large creature needed camouflage indicates the presence of even larger, keen-eyed meat-eating theropod dinosaurs.
A new species of dinosaur named Borealopelta markmitchelli has been discovered from an oil sand mine in Alberta, Canada, and is described this week in Current Biology.
The dinosaur is a nodosaurid ankylosaur and is perhaps the best preserved of its type ever found, as Dr Jakob Vinther, University of Bristol, UK, who co-authored the study describes: "This dinosaur is so complete it looks like it's asleep and we would just need to gently cough to wake it up," he said.-read more

Friday 4 August 2017

ORIGIN OF FLOWERS HAS BEEN DISCOVERED.

Flowering plants emerged on the planet over 160 million years ago - but it has never been entirely clear how these angiosperms came from their predecessor, gymnosperm ferns. New genetic analysis of the Amborella, a shrub with deep evolutionary roots, shows that there was a genomic doubling around 200 million years ago. The results were published today in Science from the Amborella Genome Project, which is a collaboration between scientists at various international universities, the National Science Foundation, and is hosted by Penn State University. There are over 300,000 known species of flowers alive today, but their evolutionary history hasn’t been overly obvious. They essentially exploded, leaving hardly any fossil evidence about the transition period. Charles Darwin actually described the wildly successful emergence of angiosperms an “abominable mystery.” The Amborella is a shrub found in the biodiversity wonderland of New Caledonia. It occupies the understory of the forest and has been described as the most basal angiosperms, as it is the closest relative of the first flower and has undergone very little evolutionary change since its emergence. Because of these factors, it is very desirable for evolutionary biologists and the Amborella Genome Project (AGP) was formed to sequence and learn more about its evolutionary history. Once the flower was fully sequenced, the researchers compared the genetic code to that of more than twenty other plants. The AGP has yielded evidence that around 200 million years ago, some extant seed plants experienced a genomic doubling, which gave them twice as many genes. The research team believes the product of this was the first angiosperm, from which all others would come. Over the course of their evolution, flowering plants gained about 1179 novel genes that are not found in any other species of plant. With a wealth of new genes and gene families, the plants were able to make unique structures, such as vessel elements. These are dead cells that form channels to draw water up through the xylem. Though some of the most ancestral flowers have 21 groups of transcription factors (known as MADS-Box genes) that encode for the actual flower, the Amborella was discovered to have 36. Most of the results confirmed previous suspicions that the researchers had about the evolution of the flower, but there was a big surprise in the mitochondrial DNA, which is about six times larger than any other plant’s mtDNA genome, at 3.8 million base pairs long and divided into five chromosomes. Researchers found an explanation for the length when they found complete mtDNA sequences of three types of green algae, one moss, and individual genes from other flowering plants. Even more strangely, none of that information seems to function within the plant. The researchers suspect that when the plant becomes injured, it is able to take up foreign mtDNA from other nearby plants and integrate it with its own. However, since it doesn’t seem to have much of a purpose, they aren’t sure why this happens. It is possible that many plants do this, but don’t spare the resources to keep anything that is nonfunctional. If this is the case, then Amborella is still very unique in that regard. Because Amborella is the oldest common ancestor for all plant life on Earth today, including much of what we eat, gaining a better understanding of how its genomic function will allow us a clearer picture of the evolutionary past, and we could also apply the information to other plants whose histories are not as well understood.