Post by steveinthecity on Aug 25, 2020 3:15:45 GMT -8
Adorably weird elephant-shrew rediscovered after 50 years lost to science
The tiny Somali sengi is related to aardvarks, elephants and manatees.
The scientific community knew Somali sengi elephant-shrews once roamed parts of Africa. There were examples -- some gathered hundreds of years ago -- in museum collections. It's just that no scientist had logged one in the wild since the late 1960s.
Good news for elephant-shrews: The Somali sengi is alive and well in Djibouti, and there's plenty of proof.
Conservation group Global Wildlife Conservation (GWC) announced the rediscovery of the "romantically monogamous" Somali sengi on Tuesday. The elephant-shrew was on the organization's 25 Most Wanted Lost Species list.
GWC released the first scientific documentation of a live Somali sengi in the form of a photo showing the mouse-like animal standing on some rocks. The insect-eater has a trunk-like nose and is more closely related to elephants than actual shrews.
The research team caught an elusive Somali sengi in a trap baited with peanut butter, oatmeal and yeast.
"It was amazing," Duke University Lemur Center research scientist Steven Heritage said in a statement. "When we opened the first trap and saw the little tuft of hair on the tip of its tail, we just looked at one another and couldn't believe it,"
Association Djibouti Nature research ecologist Houssein Rayaleh was aware the Somali sengi was still out there. "For us living in Djibouti, and by extension the Horn of Africa, we never considered the sengis to be 'lost,'" he said in a Q&A with GWC. "But this new research does bring the Somali sengi back into the scientific community, which we value."
Linky
The tiny Somali sengi is related to aardvarks, elephants and manatees.
The scientific community knew Somali sengi elephant-shrews once roamed parts of Africa. There were examples -- some gathered hundreds of years ago -- in museum collections. It's just that no scientist had logged one in the wild since the late 1960s.
Good news for elephant-shrews: The Somali sengi is alive and well in Djibouti, and there's plenty of proof.
Conservation group Global Wildlife Conservation (GWC) announced the rediscovery of the "romantically monogamous" Somali sengi on Tuesday. The elephant-shrew was on the organization's 25 Most Wanted Lost Species list.
GWC released the first scientific documentation of a live Somali sengi in the form of a photo showing the mouse-like animal standing on some rocks. The insect-eater has a trunk-like nose and is more closely related to elephants than actual shrews.
The research team caught an elusive Somali sengi in a trap baited with peanut butter, oatmeal and yeast.
"It was amazing," Duke University Lemur Center research scientist Steven Heritage said in a statement. "When we opened the first trap and saw the little tuft of hair on the tip of its tail, we just looked at one another and couldn't believe it,"
Association Djibouti Nature research ecologist Houssein Rayaleh was aware the Somali sengi was still out there. "For us living in Djibouti, and by extension the Horn of Africa, we never considered the sengis to be 'lost,'" he said in a Q&A with GWC. "But this new research does bring the Somali sengi back into the scientific community, which we value."
Linky