Walking catfish, demon bat among new Mekong species
Beelzebub's bat, a walking catfish and a frog that sounds like a bird
are among 126 species introduced to science in just a year in the
incredibly diverse Greater Mekong region of Southeast Asia, according to
a report released by the conservation group World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

Beelzebub's bat and walking catfish |
The walking catfish - one of the 10 discoveries from 2011 highlighted
in the report - doesn't exactly walk. But the fish (Clarias gracilentus)
can impressively wiggle across dry land like a snake while using its
pectoral fins to push itself upright. The fish, discovered in streams on
the Vietnamese island of Phu Quoc, often lives in stagnant waters. When
these pools dry up, it can walk away to a wetter home. Among other fish
found in 2011 were a rose-tinted, blind carp (Bangana musaei) that lives
in subterranean caves and a miniature fish (Boraras naevus) that's just
0.75 inches (2 centimetres) in length and marked by a large dark spot on
its vibrant body, the report says.
Researchers also discovered last year a tiny demonic-looking creature
appropriately named Beelzebub's tube-nosed bat (Murina beelzebub) .
"We chose the name Beelzebub to reflect the dark 'diabolic'
colouration of the new species and its fierce protective behaviour in
the field," Gabor Csorba, of the Hungarian Natural History Museum, said
in a statement. The bat is found only in the tropical forests of Vietnam
and is among two other tube-nosed bats identified in 2011.
And then there's Quang's tree frog (Gracixalus quangi) , whose calls
rival those of birds in their complexity, and the rare ruby-eyed green
pit viper (Trimeresurus rubeus) , which has striking red eyes and a very
limited range that includes Vietnam's Cat Tien National Park.
"Very few people in the world have seen this snake," Anita Malhotra,
a molecular ecologist at Bangor University, said of the species. "We
know very little about what it does."
Conservationists warn that the astonishing biodiversity of the region
is under threat because of shrinking habitats. According to the WWF
report, 30 percent of the Greater Mekong's forests have disappeared in
just four decades. Fish could be especially vulnerable, and the report
points to planned construction of the Xayaburi dam in Laos as a major
risk.
"The Mekong River supports levels of aquatic biodiversity second only
to the Amazon River," Nick Cox, manager of the WWF species program in
the region, said in a statement. "The Xayaburi dam would prove an
impassable barrier for many fish species, signalling the demise for
wildlife already known and as yet undiscovered."
- LiveScience.com
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