Showing posts with label extinct species. Show all posts
Showing posts with label extinct species. Show all posts

Monday, November 7, 2011

Ancient monster crocodile sported a shield on its skull

Excavated in Morocco, it was an enormous beast, with head size of probably 6 feet

By Stephanie Pappas
7 November 2011

LAS VEGAS — A newly described species of ancient crocodile with a strange, shield-like skull may have chowed on 13-foot (4-meter) -long fish in Cretaceous-era rivers.

The croc is known by a chunk of skull excavated in Morocco and acquired by the Royal Ontario Museum of Canada from a collector. Only now, however, have paleontologists examined the skull and determined that it belonged to a new — and enormous — species.

"It looks like the animal probably had a head size of two meters (6 feet)," said study researcher Casey Holliday, a professor of anatomical sciences at the University of Missouri who analyzed the specimen.

Even more intriguingly, Holliday said, the animal had a shield-like structure on the top of its skull that would have supported skin and blood vessels much like the frills of horned dinosaurs such as triceratops. It's likely that "shieldcroc," as the new fossil is known, would have used this structure for display, Holliday said.

Giant crocodiles
Other specimens of species closely related to shieldcroc have been described, but not since the 1920s, Holliday said. And because those specimens were found by German archaeologists, they ended up getting blown up in the bombings of World War II.

The newly surfaced chunk of crocodile skull reveals that shieldcroc was a member of a group called the eusuchians, a lineage that includes modern crocodiles and alligators. Shieldcroc, which lived about 100 million years ago in the late Cretaceous Period, is the first confirmed eusuchian ever found in Africa.

"There's an argument as to where modern crocs really evolved," Holliday said. "This kind of pulls that equation closer to the Europe/Mediterranean region."

Extrapolating from the size of shieldcroc's braincase suggests that the animal grew to lengths of 50 to 60 feet (15 to 18 meters), a size that Holliday called "pretty ridiculous." More likely, he said, those proportions are off and shieldcroc was closer to 30 to 36 feet (9 to 11 meters) long.

That's comparable to another ancient African giant, " SuperCroc," or Sarcosuchus imperator, a 40-foot (12 meter) bruiser discovered in Niger.

Shieldcroc's relatively delicate, duck-like jaws were likely not equipped for any ultra-dramatic feats like fighting T. rex, Holliday said. But the crocodile was still pretty fearsome, said study researcher Nick Gardner, an undergraduate at Marshall University in West Virginia. Shieldcroc shared the river with lungfish and ancient fish called Coelacanths that could have grown to be 13 feet (4 m) long. It's very possible that shieldcroc considered these monster fish to be prey, Gardner told LiveScience.

"These (fish) are big," Gardner said. "They're not pushovers."

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45193564/ns/technology_and_science-science/#.TrhKmHK0Nic

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Snake and shrimp declared extinct

Endangered Species Review too late to save South Florida Rainbow Snake & Florida Fairy ShrimpOctober 2011. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have announced that two species endemic to Florida, the South Florida rainbow snake and the Florida fairy shrimp, have been declared extinct. The finding came in response to a petition filed by the Center for Biological Diversity in 2010 seeking Endangered Species Act protection for the rainbow snake, fairy shrimp and more than 400 aquatic species in the south-eastern United States.

"It's heart-wrenching to learn that these two unique Florida species have been lost forever. Like most species that go extinct, these two were not protected under the Endangered Species Act, which is the most powerful tool we have for saving our nation's plants and animals from disappearing," said Tierra Curry, a conservation biologist with the Center.

South Florida rainbow snake
The South Florida rainbow snake was known only from Fish Eating Creek, which flows into the west side of Lake Okeechobee. The beautiful snake was iridescent bluish-black with red stripes on its back and sides, red and yellow patches on its belly and throat, and a yellow chin. Adults were more than four feet long. It was last seen in 1952.

Florida Fairy shrimp
The Florida fairy shrimp was known from a single pond just south of Gainesville. The pond was destroyed by development, and the species hasn't been detected elsewhere.

"The government has to determine quickly whether the 114 other Florida species it is reviewing will get protection so that more of Florida's heritage isn't erased by extinction," said Curry. "The wellbeing of human society is deeply linked to the health of the natural systems we need to sustain life. In the end, saving species will help save us."

The south-eastern United States is home to more unique species of freshwater animals than anywhere else in the world, including mussels, snails and crayfish. Tragically, many of the region's animals have already been lost to extinction.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Dingoes Didn't Run Tasmanian Tigers Out of Australia

Though highly similar in their skull anatomy, specialized for a carnivorous diet, the thylacine, front, and the dingo very likely had different hunting styles. Researchers analyzing skeletons of the forelimbs found important differences
CREDIT: Carl Buell
by Jennifer Welsh, LiveScience Staff Writer
Date: 03 May 2011 Time: 07:01 PM ET

The extinct thylacine, more commonly known as the "Tasmanian tiger" or "marsupial wolf," hunted more like a cat than a dog, meaning the tiger moniker may be the more appropriate nickname.

The thylacine had the striped coat of a tiger, the body of a dog and like other marsupials (including kangaroos and opossums) carried its young in a pouch. These carnivores were last seen in Australia 3,000 years ago, having died out after the introduction of dingoes by humans. The last remaining populations were sheltered by their isolation on the island of Tasmania, surviving until the 1900s, when a concentrated eradication effort wiped the thylacine out.

Researchers hypothesized that the dingoes were a main cause of the thylacine decline in Australia, because the two species were in direct competition -- using the same hunting strategies to hunt the same prey. [Top 10 Creatures of Cryptozoology]

"Dingoes are a species of wolves, they are runners," study researcher Borja Figuerido of Brown University said. "If the thylacines are ambushers, the hypothesis of the extinction of the thylacine outcompeted by dingoes is less probable."

Elbow joints connected to...

By looking at the elbow joint bones of the thylacine and 31 other mammals, the researchers noticed they resembled those of cats, which can rotate their paws upward to pounce and attack prey. Dogs and wolves don't have this rotation capability.

"These anatomical characters reveal something about the hunting strategies of the thylacine. They are more ambushers than previously suspected," Figueirido said. "Ambush predators usually manipulate the prey with the forearms, they have very good mobility. Running predators lack this ability, because the elbow is locked."

The limited rotation of their arm bones makes dogs and wolves (including dingoes) faster runners, which changed their hunting behaviors. Dogs and wolves hunt in packs, following their prey over longer distances. The researchers determined that the thylacine was more of a solitary, ambush-style predator, similar to cats.

Mammalian cousins

Marsupial mammals, found mainly in Australia and other areas of the Southern Hemisphere, are similar to placental mammals (such as humans, dogs and cats), but their evolution diverged from ours during the Cretaceous Period, the earliest example of a marsupial appearing about 125 million years ago.

The evolution of these two groups of mammals is an example of convergent evolution, where two separate groups in different locations evolve similar morphologies to deal with similar habitats. The thylacine was thought to be the marsupial equivalent, or ecomorph, of the wolf, with similar body size and eating habits.
Now, Figueirido said, "this designation will need to be revised."

The study was published today (May 3) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biology Letters.


http://www.livescience.com/14006-thylacine-hunting-behavior.html

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Federal researchers declare eastern cougar extinct

ALLENTOWN, Pa. – The "ghost cat" is just that.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday declared the eastern cougar to be extinct, confirming a widely held belief among wildlife biologists that native populations of the big cat were wiped out by man a century ago.

After a lengthy review, federal officials concluded there are no breeding populations of cougars — also known as pumas, panthers, mountain lions and catamounts — in the eastern United States. Researchers believe the eastern cougar subspecies has probably been extinct since the 1930s.

Wednesday's declaration paves the way for the eastern cougar to be removed from the endangered species list, where it was placed in 1973. The agency's decision to declare the eastern cougar extinct does not affect the status of the Florida panther, another endangered wildcat.

Some hunters and outdoors enthusiasts have long insisted there's a small breeding population of eastern cougars, saying the secretive cats have simply eluded detection — hence the "ghost cat" moniker. The wildlife service said Wednesday it confirmed 108 sightings between 1900 and 2010, but that these animals either escaped or were released from captivity, or migrated from western states to the Midwest.

"The Fish and Wildlife Service fully believes that some people have seen cougars, and that was an important part of the review that we did," said Mark McCollough, an endangered species biologist who led the agency's eastern cougar study. "We went on to evaluate where these animals would be coming from."

A breeding population of eastern cougars would almost certainly have left evidence of its existence, he said. Cats would have been hit by cars or caught in traps, left tracks in the snow or turned up on any of the hundreds of thousands of trail cameras that dot Eastern forests.

But researchers have come up empty.

The private Eastern Cougar Foundation, for example, spent a decade looking for evidence. Finding none, it changed its name to the Cougar Rewilding Foundation last year and shifted its focus from confirming sightings to advocating for the restoration of the big cat to its pre-colonial habitat.

"We would have loved nothing more than for there to be a remnant wild population of cougars on the East Coast," said Christopher Spatz, the foundation's president. "We're not seeing (evidence) because they're not here."

Others maintain that wild cougars still prowl east of the Mississippi.

Ray Sedorchuk, 45, an avid hunter and outdoorsman, said he got an excellent look at a cougar last June in rural Bradford County, in northern Pennsylvania. He was in his truck when a reddish-brown animal with a long tail crossed the road. He said he jammed on the brakes, and the cougar stopped in its tracks.

"I could see the body, the tail and the head, the entire animal, perfectly. It's not a bobcat, it's not a housecat, it's a cougar," he said. "It's a sleek animal. It ran low to the ground and stealth-like. It moved with elegance."

Sedorchuk, a freelance writer who spends copious amounts of time in the woods, said he'd always been skeptical of the eastern cougar's existence, even as two of his friends insisted to him that they had seen them in the wild.

And now?

"I believe that they're here, without even thinking twice about it," he said. "I believe there aren't that many, but there are enough where they can get together and breed."

Once widely dispersed throughout the eastern United States, the mountain lion was all but wiped out by the turn of the last century. Cougars were killed in vast numbers, and states even held bounties. A nearly catastrophic decline in white-tailed deer — the main prey of mountain lions — also contributed to the species' extirpation.

McCollough said the last wild cougar was believed to have been killed in Maine in 1938.

The wildlife service treated the eastern cougar as a distinct subspecies, even though some biologists now believe it is genetically the same as its western brethren, which is increasing in number and extending its range. Some experts believe that mountain lions will eventually make their way back East.

The loss of a top-level predator like the cougar has had ecological consequences, including an explosion in the deer population and a corresponding decline in the health of Eastern forests.

"Our ecosystems are collapsing up and down the East Coast, and they're collapsing because we have too many white-tailed deer," said Spatz. "Our forests are not being permitted to regenerate."

Cougars and wolves, he said, would thin the deer herd through direct predation while also acting as "natural shepherds," forcing deer to become more vigilant and "stop browsing like cattle."

Spatz's group would like the federal government to reintroduce cougars and wolves to the eastern United States, though he acknowledged any such plan would come up against fierce resistance.

The wildlife service said Wednesday it has no authority under the Endangered Species Act to reintroduce the mountain lion to the East.
___
Online:
http://www.fws.gov/northeast/ecougar/

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110302/ap_on_sc/us_eastern_cougar

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Japan: 'Extinct' trout species rediscovered (via Chad Arment)

The Yomiuri Shimbun


Kunimasu trout--long believed to have become extinct more than 60 years ago--have been found in Saiko lake in Yamanashi Prefecture, according to research conducted by Kyoto University Prof. Tetsuji Nakabo and TV personality Masayuki Miyazawa, who is widely known by the professional moniker Sakana-kun (Mr. Fish).

The trout, scientifically named oncorhynchus nerka kawamurae and originally known to inhabit only Lake Tazawa, the nation's deepest lake, in Akita Prefecture, has been designated as extinct by the Environment Ministry. The freshwater fish were last seen in Lake Tazawa in 1948.

The trout's environment in the lake was severely damaged by the introduction of highly acidic waters from a nearby river in 1948 to increase the volume of water for hydroelectric power generation.

The discovery of the "extinct" fish came when Sakana-kun, also a guest associate professor at Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, found nine blackish trout among rainbow trout caught in Saiko lake. Sakana-kun, who sports a fish-shaped cap when appearing on TV programs, asked his acquaintance Nakabo to examine the unusual fish. Nakabo and his Kyoto University team confirmed the fish as kunimasu trout by analyzing their DNA.


Nakabo said the nine kunimasu trout were descendants of those hatched in Saiko lake from about 100,000 eggs brought from Lake Tazawa in 1935.

The Environment Ministry plans to remove kunimasu trout from the list of extinct species when it reviews the list in fiscal 2012.

It will be the first time for the ministry to remove a vertebrate species from the list. Shellfish and fungi have been removed in the past.

"We should take this opportunity to think about the value of nature and living creatures, so as not to send any species to extinction," Sakana-kun said.

According to a fisheries cooperative association at Saiko lake, kunimasu trout have sometimes been caught there during net fishing for lake smelts. Fishermen in Saiko call the trout "black trout" because the color of their skin is blackish when compared with rainbow trout.


Yamanashi Prefectural Gov. Shomei Yokouchi said: "I am very surprised to hear that [kunimasu trout] were found in Saiko lake. I'll take steps to conserve them in consultation with the Environment Ministry."

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/features/science/T101215004146.htm

Japan: 'Extinct' trout species rediscovered (via Chad Arment)

The Yomiuri Shimbun


Kunimasu trout--long believed to have become extinct more than 60 years ago--have been found in Saiko lake in Yamanashi Prefecture, according to research conducted by Kyoto University Prof. Tetsuji Nakabo and TV personality Masayuki Miyazawa, who is widely known by the professional moniker Sakana-kun (Mr. Fish).

The trout, scientifically named oncorhynchus nerka kawamurae and originally known to inhabit only Lake Tazawa, the nation's deepest lake, in Akita Prefecture, has been designated as extinct by the Environment Ministry. The freshwater fish were last seen in Lake Tazawa in 1948.

The trout's environment in the lake was severely damaged by the introduction of highly acidic waters from a nearby river in 1948 to increase the volume of water for hydroelectric power generation.

The discovery of the "extinct" fish came when Sakana-kun, also a guest associate professor at Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, found nine blackish trout among rainbow trout caught in Saiko lake. Sakana-kun, who sports a fish-shaped cap when appearing on TV programs, asked his acquaintance Nakabo to examine the unusual fish. Nakabo and his Kyoto University team confirmed the fish as kunimasu trout by analyzing their DNA.


Nakabo said the nine kunimasu trout were descendants of those hatched in Saiko lake from about 100,000 eggs brought from Lake Tazawa in 1935.

The Environment Ministry plans to remove kunimasu trout from the list of extinct species when it reviews the list in fiscal 2012.

It will be the first time for the ministry to remove a vertebrate species from the list. Shellfish and fungi have been removed in the past.

"We should take this opportunity to think about the value of nature and living creatures, so as not to send any species to extinction," Sakana-kun said.

According to a fisheries cooperative association at Saiko lake, kunimasu trout have sometimes been caught there during net fishing for lake smelts. Fishermen in Saiko call the trout "black trout" because the color of their skin is blackish when compared with rainbow trout.


Yamanashi Prefectural Gov. Shomei Yokouchi said: "I am very surprised to hear that [kunimasu trout] were found in Saiko lake. I'll take steps to conserve them in consultation with the Environment Ministry."

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/features/science/T101215004146.htm