IT WAS NOT until their final morning in camp, after
weeks of searching for mammals within the isolated rainforests of West
Sulawesi, Indonesia, that Museum Victoria's Dr Kevin Rowe and his team
were handed a new species, completely unknown to science.
"Three local Mamasa guides brought us a dead rat… to most people it
looked just like any other small, soft-furred rat but to a biologist it
was particularly interesting because it was specialised to an aquatic
lifestyle." Dr Rowe says.Dr Kevin Rowe and his colleagues from Indonesia and the US published their discovery last month in the journal Zootaxa . The new species is the first known water rat in Sulawesi.
The Sulawesi water rat has been given the scientific name Waiomys mamasae after the local Mamasa people who have known about the animal for centuries and have used it traditionally as a talisman to protect their houses from fire.
The species was discovered within the Mount Gandangdewata plateau, one of the last intact areas of old growth rainforest in West Sulawesi.
Sulawesi is a volcanic island in Indonesia that has been isolated from other land-masses for around 10 million years, allowing unique species of animals and plants to evolve.read more
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