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New Rodent is 'Living Fossil'

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New rodent is 'living fossil'
By Helen Briggs
BBC News science reporter

A squirrel-like rodent discovered in Laos is the sole survivor of a group that otherwise died out 11 million years ago, according to fossil data.

The animal made headlines in 2005 when it was hailed as the only new family of living mammals to be found in 30 years.

But scientists now believe it is a "living fossil", the relic of a group of prehistoric rodents once widespread in South East Asia and Japan.

Writing in Science magazine, they say efforts must be made to conserve it.

The rodent, Laonastes aenigmamus , was found by scientists at a hunter's market in Laos in early 2005.

Robert Timmins, from the Wildlife Conservation Society, saw it on sale next to some vegetables.

"I knew immediately it was something I had never seen before," he said at the time.

While previously unknown to the worldwide scientific community, it is familiar enough to local people to have a name, the kha-nyou.

The creature has dark-grey fur and is about the size of a red squirrel. It has short legs, a hairy tail and a long snout.

After the kha-nyou was discovered, specimens were sent to London's Natural History Museum, to compare with material in its vast research collections.

Based on differences in the skull, teeth, bones and other body features together with DNA analysis, scientists said it was an entirely new rodent family more closely related to rodents in Africa and South America than in Asia.

But when a particularly impressive fossil of a long-extinct rodent was unearthed in China last summer, a US-led team wondered whether the kha-nyou might be a living member of the long-gone family.

They went back through the fossil evidence and found that the kha-nyou's skull, teeth, lower jaw-bone and other skeletal characteristics were a striking match to the fossil.

They believe it belongs in the same group - the otherwise extinct rodent family Diatomyidae.

Chief author Mary Dawson, of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, said it was extremely rare for a mammal to reappear after such a long gap in the fossil record.

"A new family of living mammals does not crop up every day," she told the BBC News website.

"When we have a living fossil it opens up a way of looking at past biodiversity on the molecular level that we don't ordinarily have."

Laonastes lives in a rocky limestone area dotted by small patches of forest.

It is thought to be nocturnal but has yet to be observed by biologists in the wild.

Dr Dawson said efforts to conserve Laonastes should be given the highest priority.

"We don't know what its status is - whether there are a lot of them around or just a few," she said.

"This animal better be protected while it is (still) around."

The area of South East Asia where the rodent was found is regarded as one of the richest "hotspots" of biological diversity in the world.

Several other new mammals have been found there in recent years, including a new species of bat, a mouse-like rodent and a hedgehog-like mammal.

"It is highly likely that there are more exciting and unusual animals to be found in South East Asia," said Paula Jenkins, of London's Natural History Museum, who carried out the original analysis of Laonastes .

The latest evidence is described in the current issue of the journal Science, by authors from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, US; Montpellier University, France; and the Institute of Vertebrate Palaeontology and Palaeoanthroplogy in Beijing, China.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/sci/tech/4782352.stm
 
Extinct Laotian Rock Rats? We're Overrun With 'em, Mate...

New pictures of 'living fossil'

A rodent that "came back from the dead" after supposedly going extinct millions of years ago appears to be more common than previously thought.


The Laotian rock rat, known locally as the kha-nyou, was identified as a species new to science in 2005.

It was spotted at a hunter's market in Laos by researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS).

A return visit has uncovered more specimens, suggesting the squirrel-like animal may not be that rare.

The creature was originally thought to belong to an entirely new rodent family more closely related to rodents in Africa and South America than in Asia.

However, after a detailed search through the fossil records of the Natural History Museum in London, the mammal is now believed to be the sole survivor of an ancient group of rodents that died out 11 million years ago.

"The Laotian rock rat ( Laonastes aenigmamus ), described last year by the Wildlife Conservation Society scientists in Laos, is certainly new to science and a genetically distinct species, while also representing the lone survivor of an ancient family," the WCS said.

"However, it may not be that rare. On a recent visit to a hunter's market in Laos, WCS conservationist Peter Clyne found the rats to be quite common, photographing several specimens."

The conservation status of the species is unknown, and it has never been observed by biologists in the wild.


Story from BBC NEWS:

Published: 2006/04/06 17:23:08 GMT

© BBC MMVI
 
Judging by the picture accompanying that BBC report, it's gone back to the dead, too.
 
First photos obtained of 'living fossil' in Laos

The Associated Press

The first pictures showing a live specimen of a rodent species once thought to have been extinct for 11 million years have been taken by a retired Florida State University professor and a Thai wildlife biologist.

They took video and still photographs of the "living fossil," which looks like a small squirrel or tree shrew, in May during an expedition to central Laos near the Thai border.

Known as Diatomyidae, scientists have nicknamed it the Laotian rock rat. The creature is not really a rat but a member of a rodent family once known only from fossils.

The pictures show a docile, squirrel-sized animal with dark dense fur and a long tail but not as bushy as a squirrel's. It also shows that the creature waddles like a duck with its hind feet splayed out at an angle _ ideal for climbing rocks.

"I hope these pictures will help in some way to prevent the loss of this marvelous animal," said David Redfield, a science education professor emeritus.

He and Uthai Treesucon, a bird-watching colleague, befriended hunters who captured a live rock rat after four failed attempts. They returned the animal, which the locals call kha-nyou, to its rocky home after photographing it.

The long-whiskered rodent was branded as a new species last year when biologists first examined dead specimens they found being sold at meat markets. But they had never seen a live animal until Redfield and Treesucon photographed it.

"These images are extremely important scientifically, showing as they do an animal (with) such markedly distinctive anatomical and functional attributes," said Mary Dawson, curator emeritus of vertebrate paleontology at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.

Dawson and colleagues in France and China first reported the rock rat's true identity in the March 10 edition of the journal Science after they compared the bones of present-day specimens with fossils found in Asia.

source

Streaming video footage here.

It's very cute!
 
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