More than 1,000 species discovered in Mekong: WWF
  • http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20081215/sc_afp/sciencethailandseasiawildlife_081215132156

    BANGKOK (AFP) – Scientists have discovered more than 1,000 species in
    Southeast Asia's Greater Mekong region in the past decade, including a
    spider as big as a dinner plate, the World Wildlife Fund said Monday.

    A rat thought to have become extinct 11 million years ago and a
    cyanide-laced, shocking pink millipede were among creatures found in
    what the group called a "biological treasure trove".

    The species were all found in the rainforests and wetlands along the
    Mekong River, which flows through Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand,
    Vietnam and the southern Chinese province of Yunnan.

    "It doesn't get any better than this," Stuart Chapman, director of
    WWF's Greater Mekong Programme, was quoted as saying in a statement by
    the group.

    "We thought discoveries of this scale were confined to the history books."

    The WWF report, "First Contact in the Greater Mekong", said that
    "between 1997 and 2007, at least 1,068 have been officially described
    by science as being newly discovered species."

    These included the world's largest huntsman spider, with a leg span of
    30 centimetres (11.8 inches), and the "startlingly" coloured "dragon
    millipede", which produces the deadly compound cyanide.

    Not all species were found hiding in remote jungles -- the Laotian
    rock rat, which the study said was thought to be extinct about 11
    million years ago, was first encountered by scientists in a local food
    market in 2005, it said.

    One species of pitviper was first noted by scientists after it was
    found in the rafters of a restaurant at the headquarters of Thailand's
    Khao Yai national park in 2001.

    "This region is like what I read about as a child in the stories of
    Charles Darwin," said Dr Thomas Ziegler, curator at the Cologne Zoo,
    who was involved in the research.

    "It is a great feeling being in an unexplored area and to document its
    biodiversity for the first time both enigmatic and beautiful," he said.

    The new species highlighted in the report include 519 plants, 279
    fish, 88 frogs, 88 spiders, 46 lizards, 22 snakes, 15 mammals, four
    birds, four turtles, two salamanders and a toad -- an average of two
    previously undiscovered species a week for the past 10 years.

    The report warned, however, that many of the species could be at risk
    from development, and called for a cross-border agreement between the
    countries in the Greater Mekong area to protect it.

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