Hello life: most interesting new species discovered in 2008
June 8th 2009 23:40
A sea horse the size of a pea, the world's smallest snake and a bacterium that lives in hairspray were amongst the wonderful and the weird species discovered on Planet Earth in 2008. The following list, comprising the most wonderful and most weird, was compiled by the International Institute for Species Exploration at Arizona State University and an international committee of taxonomists. The top 10 list was chosen from thousands of species found across the globe last year.
Institute director Quentin Wheeler said the annual top 10 list helped draw attention to biodiversity, taxonomy and the importance of natural history museums and botanical gardens.
The 2008 list also commemorated the anniversary of the birth in 1708 of Swedish scientist Carolus Linnaeus, who initiated the modern system of plant and animal names and classifications. About 1.8 million species have been described since Linnaeus initiated the modern classification system. We have a way to go — scientific consensus is that there are about 10 million species on earth.
Scientists are still classifying the species found in 2008. Of the 2007 list of 18,516 species named, 75.6 percent were were invertebrate animals, 11.1 percent were vascular plants and 6.7 percent were vertebrates.
1. Satomi's Pygmy Seahorse
The smallest known seahorse was found by a Japanese scuba diving guide in waters off Indonesia. The guide, Satomi Onishi, actually found three new pygmy seahorse species. The smallest, with a standard length of 13.8mm (0.54 inches) and a height of about 11.5mm (0.45 inches), was named after its finder.
2. Barbados Threadsnake
The world's smallest known snake, with a total length of 104mm (4.1 inches), was found under a rock at Bonwell, Barbados, Lesser Antilles.
3. Phobaeticus chani
The world's longest insect, with a body length of 35.6cm (14 inches) and a overall length of 56.7 cm (22.3 inches), was found at Ulu Moyog, in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo.
4. Tahina Palm
A gigantic species and genus of palm with fewer than 100 individual specimens was found in northwestern Madagascar. This plant produces a huge, spectacular terminal inflorescence with countless flowers. After fruiting, the palm dies and collapses. The Tahina Palm is unrelated to any other of the 170 plus palms of Madagascar. Its closest known relatives are in Afghanistan, Thailand, Vietnam and China.
5. Ghost Slug
The well-cultivated and tended gardens of Cardiff, Wales, are not places one expects to find a new species. But find one they did, a white slug which has blade-like teeth.
6. Opisthostoma vermiculum
Found at Gunung Rapat, Perak, Malaysia, this species represents a unique evolution in its manner of shell twisting. Most gastropod shells tightly coil according to a logarithmic spiral and have an upper limit of three coiling axes. But the shell of O. vermiculum has four separate coiling axes, the most of any known gastropod.
7. Deep Blue Chromis
This fish made the top 10 list through circumstances of its finding — it represented the first taxonomic act of 2008, and was the first act registered in the newly launched taxonomic database Zoobank. The discovery of the new species also highlighted how little is known of deep-reef biodiversity.
8. Mother Fish
Found at Fitzroy Crossing, Western Australia, this 380-million year-old fossilized fish is giving birth, making her the oldest known life-bearing vertebrate. The mother fish was given the Latin generic name Materpiscis attenboroughi, in honour of Sir David Attenborough.
9. Charrier Coffee
A caffeine-free coffee plant found in Cameroon, this is the first record of a caffeine-free species from Central Africa. Cameroon is a center of diversity for the genus Coffea and such wild species are potentially important in breeding naturally decaffeinated beans.
10. Microbacteriaceae
Perhaps the weirdest discovery of 2008 was a bacterium found in hairspray. We tried to get a picture but it refused to smile.
Institute director Quentin Wheeler said the annual top 10 list helped draw attention to biodiversity, taxonomy and the importance of natural history museums and botanical gardens.
The 2008 list also commemorated the anniversary of the birth in 1708 of Swedish scientist Carolus Linnaeus, who initiated the modern system of plant and animal names and classifications. About 1.8 million species have been described since Linnaeus initiated the modern classification system. We have a way to go — scientific consensus is that there are about 10 million species on earth.
Scientists are still classifying the species found in 2008. Of the 2007 list of 18,516 species named, 75.6 percent were were invertebrate animals, 11.1 percent were vascular plants and 6.7 percent were vertebrates.
1. Satomi's Pygmy Seahorse
The smallest known seahorse was found by a Japanese scuba diving guide in waters off Indonesia. The guide, Satomi Onishi, actually found three new pygmy seahorse species. The smallest, with a standard length of 13.8mm (0.54 inches) and a height of about 11.5mm (0.45 inches), was named after its finder.
2. Barbados Threadsnake
The world's smallest known snake, with a total length of 104mm (4.1 inches), was found under a rock at Bonwell, Barbados, Lesser Antilles.
3. Phobaeticus chani
The world's longest insect, with a body length of 35.6cm (14 inches) and a overall length of 56.7 cm (22.3 inches), was found at Ulu Moyog, in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo.
4. Tahina Palm
A gigantic species and genus of palm with fewer than 100 individual specimens was found in northwestern Madagascar. This plant produces a huge, spectacular terminal inflorescence with countless flowers. After fruiting, the palm dies and collapses. The Tahina Palm is unrelated to any other of the 170 plus palms of Madagascar. Its closest known relatives are in Afghanistan, Thailand, Vietnam and China.
5. Ghost Slug
The well-cultivated and tended gardens of Cardiff, Wales, are not places one expects to find a new species. But find one they did, a white slug which has blade-like teeth.
6. Opisthostoma vermiculum
Found at Gunung Rapat, Perak, Malaysia, this species represents a unique evolution in its manner of shell twisting. Most gastropod shells tightly coil according to a logarithmic spiral and have an upper limit of three coiling axes. But the shell of O. vermiculum has four separate coiling axes, the most of any known gastropod.
7. Deep Blue Chromis
This fish made the top 10 list through circumstances of its finding — it represented the first taxonomic act of 2008, and was the first act registered in the newly launched taxonomic database Zoobank. The discovery of the new species also highlighted how little is known of deep-reef biodiversity.
8. Mother Fish
Found at Fitzroy Crossing, Western Australia, this 380-million year-old fossilized fish is giving birth, making her the oldest known life-bearing vertebrate. The mother fish was given the Latin generic name Materpiscis attenboroughi, in honour of Sir David Attenborough.
9. Charrier Coffee
A caffeine-free coffee plant found in Cameroon, this is the first record of a caffeine-free species from Central Africa. Cameroon is a center of diversity for the genus Coffea and such wild species are potentially important in breeding naturally decaffeinated beans.
10. Microbacteriaceae
Perhaps the weirdest discovery of 2008 was a bacterium found in hairspray. We tried to get a picture but it refused to smile.
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Comment by Elisabeth Fraser
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Was it having a 'bad hair day'?
Sorry, just couldn't resist, I won't do it again
I did enjoy this list, the world is really fascinating.
Lis.
Comment by Chris Champion
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I think it was just grumpy. Must have gotten out of the wrong side of the can this morning.
Comment by Morgan Bell
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Comment by Chris Champion
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Are you referring to the sea horse or the bacterium with the bad hair?
Comment by Morgan Bell
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and im also quite fond of that gastropod shell and the mini threadsnake
Comment by Wilson Pon
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Honestly, I don't mind to keep the Barbados Threadsnake as a pet, if I allowed to do so... LOl
Comment by Chris Champion
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You're forgiven, although I notice that both you and the stick insect are Malaysian, so I think you should visit Sabah next weekend and collect a few
Comment by Lilla
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A riveting read, will email to a few people.
they are all fascinating to my mind, but I got particularly hooked on that shell and was left wondering if this is evolution or mutation? Spooky, when one considers the standard fibonacci spiral ratios . . these shells are so bizarre, although my guess is that the growth process is still along the fibonacci mean? I will look into it more. .
And a slug with teeth . . What*s with that? Things must be getting dog eat dog there in the leaf litter world?
truly fascinating stuff . . thanks for sharing.
Lilla ..
Comment by Carolyn Cordon
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Comment by Chris Champion
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The point is, ummm, ummm, ummm ....