NEW SPECIES of monitor lizard discovered in the Philippines

Image by Joseph Brown

Image by Joseph Brown


Nowadays, discovering large vertebrates is a rare event. However, researchers recently described a new species of large monitor lizard from the Philippines that’s a fruit eater. More from the Christian Science Monitor:

The new species was discovered last summer on the main island of Luzon, when US researchers on a field trip purchased a unique-looking lizard carcass from a Philippine hunter for a few pesos.

“The hunter had caught it accidentally in a snare for wild pigs. We saw he had it and we were able to bargain with him for it,” says Luke Welton, one of the authors of an article published today in the peer-reviewed Royal Society journal Biology Letters announcing the finding.

Welton says he and fellow researchers from the University of Kansas and the Philippine government immediately knew this lizard was unique. It had longer nostrils, a golden coloration, and an uncommonly large size. The 22-pound, 6.5-foot-long Northern Sierra Madre Forest monitor lizard (Varanus bitatawa) feasts on fruits and snails and not meat, as do most species of monitor lizard and the close related Komodo dragon.

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CAN YOU SEE ME? | ANIMAL CAMOUFLAGE

A new species of gecko (Cnemaspis neangthyi) has been described from Cambodia.

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NEW SPECIES of chameleon discovered in Tanzania

Dr Andrew Marshall, from the Environment Department at the University of York, discovered an undescribed chameleon species—Kinyongia magomberae—when he disturbed a twig snake feeding on a specimen, which was subsequently “spat out.” He took a picture of the unfortunate creature, and a local specialist did not recognize the species. More from the York Press:

The tiny lizard came out of the mouth of a twig snake disturbed by Dr Andrew Marshall in Tanzania’s Magombera forest.

Dr Marshall, from the University of York, was in the threatened forest surveying monkeys.

He said: “I was out there doing conservation research when I came across this snake. It saw me and fled, and as it did so it spat out a chameleon.

“I took photos and showed them to a local herpetologist, who instantly recognised that it was a new species.”

The creature, small enough to sit in the palm of a hand, was named as Kinyongia magomberae by scientists writing in the African Journal of Herpetology.

Shortly after the first discovery, a second Kinyongia chameleon was found by one of Dr Marshall’s colleagues about six miles away.

Unlike the first specimen, this one was very much alive.

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NEW SPECIES of luminescent mushrooms described from Brazilian rain forest

Mycena luxaeterna, a new species of bioluminescent mushroom from Brazil, “glow[s] nonstop in the Brazilian rain forest.” The image is via National Geographic and courtesy of Eiji Nagasawa of the Tottori Mycological Institute.

Luminescent Mushroom2

More biolumescent fungi: M. chlorophos has been known since the 1800s. The image is via National Geographic and Cassius V. Stevani of the Chemistry Institute at the University of Sao Paulo.

Luminescent Mushroom

Panellus Stipticus displaying bioluminescence (via Wikipedia):

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NEW SPECIES of bird-eating fanged frog discovered from Southeast Asia

Khorat Big-Mouthed FrogCat Ba Leopard GeckoTiger-Striped PitviperA World Wildlife Federation report highlights some fascinating new species discoveries from Southeast Asia. In addition to various species of amphibians and reptiles, “a new wild banana and, even rarer, two new types of mammal” were described as well. Researchers also discovered “feathers in the frog’s faeces, proving that it eats small birds.” More from CBS News:

A gecko with leopard-like spots on its body and a fanged frog that eats birds are among 163 new species discovered last year in the Mekong River region of Southeast Asia, an environmental group said Friday.WWF International said that scientists in 2008 discovered 100 plants, 28 fish, 18 reptiles, 14 amphibians, two mammals and one bird species in the region. That works out to be about three species a week and is in addition to the 1,000 new species catalogued there from 1997 to 2007, the group said.

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Among the stars in the new list is a fanged frog in eastern Thailand. Given the scientific name Limnonectes megastomias, the frog lies in wait along streams for prey including birds and insects. Scientists believe it uses its fangs during combat with other males.

Another unusual discovery was the Cat Ba leopard gecko found on Cat Ba Island in northern Vietnam. Named Goniurosaurus catbaensis, it has large, orange-brown catlike eyes and leopard spots down the length of its yellowish brown body.

Lee Grismer, of La Sierra University in California, said he found a tiger-stripped pit viper in Vietnam described in the report while he was attempting to capture a second gecko species.

“We were engrossed in trying to catch a new species of gecko when my son pointed out that my hand was on a rock mere inches away from the head of a pit viper,” Grismer said in a statement. “We caught the snake and the gecko and they both proved to be new species.”

More at WWF

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