Posted on 06/13/2013 2:19:25 AM PDT by beaversmom
Hes big. Hes slimy. And hes neon pink?! Meet Triboniophorus aff. graeffei, a new species of 8-inch-long (20-centimeter-long) slug thats found only on one Australian mountain.
Scientists already knew that a bright-pink slug lived on Mount Kaputar (map), thinking it was a variety of the red triangle slug, a species common along the east coast of Australia. But new research shows that the colorful critter is actually its own species, said Australias National Parks and Wildlife Service ranger Michael Murphy.
Recent morphological and genetics work by a researcher working on this slug familythe Athorcophoridaehas indicated the Kaputar slugs are a unique species endemic to Mount Kaputar and the only representative of this family in inland Australia, said Murphy, whos been stationed on Mount Kaputar for 20 years. (Also see Photos: Fiery Sea Slug Discovered, Lays Lacy Egg Case.)
The pink slug had gone unstudied for so long because Australian slug and snail researchersknown as malacologistsare far outnumbered by their koala-investigating brethren, Murphy said.
Their research on the new slug will likely be submitted for publication soon, he added.
Meanwhile, though, the Australian government has moved to protect this rosy rarity and other unique species by designating their mountain home in New South Wales as an endangered ecological area.
Quirk of Evolution
Tens of millions of years ago, Australia was part of a larger southern continent known as Gondwana, which included Australia, Papua New Guinea, India, and parts of Africa and South America. It was covered in rain forests similar to those of modern-day Papua New Guinea.
A volcanic eruption 17 million years ago on Mount Kaputar kept a small, four-square-mile (ten-square-kilometer) area lush and wet even as much of the rest of Australia turned to desert. This changing environment marooned the plants and animals living on Mount Kaputar from their nearest neighbors for millions of years, making the area a unique haven for species such as the pink slug.
Because the pink slugs live in beds of red eucalyptus leaves, Murphy suspects their color could potentially serve as camouflage, helping the animals blend in to their leafy habitat.
However, [the slugs] also spend a lot of their time high on tree trunks nowhere near fallen leaves, so it is possible that the color is just a quirk of evolution. I think if you are isolated on a remote mountaintop, you can pretty much be whatever color you like, Murphy noted.
Slug Fan
Murphy added that the slugs play important roles in their ecosystemsfor example, by recycling plant matter.
Im a big believer in invertebrates. People tend to focus on the cute and cuddly bird and mammal species like koalas. But these little behind-the-scenes invertebrates really drive whole ecosystems, Murphy told the Australian Broadcasting Service.
Besides the pink slug, researchers have also identified several other invertebrate species that are unique to Mount Kaputar, such as the Kaputar hairy snail and the Kaputar cannibal snail.
These finds, combined with Mount Kaputars uniqueness and the growing threat from global warmingtemperatures just a degree or two warmer would destroy Kaputars flora and faunaprompted the Australian governments proposal to preserve Kaputar.
They are a unique and colorful part of our natural heritage, and we should do everything we can to avoid causing their extinction, Murphy said.
The Schiaparelli Slug. ;o)
I had to look up that reference. See I post about a hot pink slug and learn something about fashion in the process. Very cool. :)
Democrats!!
Bet they would be great for bait
‘Em’s good eatin’...taste like bubble-gum!...;)
They are a unique and colorful part of our natural heritage, and we should do everything we can to avoid causing their extinction, Murphy said.
Breed them to sell as pets. You can put me on the waiting list.
If gobal warming (we are back to that from 'climate change' when it suits the narrative) is anywhere near the threat we are told it is, then that econsystem is doomed anyway, so why bother?
Global warming may threaten the d*** slugs?
Now that their location is revealed, kids with salt will be a far greater threat. Just sayin.
Okay, that takes Australia off my list. Yeeechh!
Billy, I think you are confusing these guys with leaches (the things that attach on our legs and suck blood). These are not leaches, slugs are sort of like snails without a shell and harmless. :)
Don’t lick the brown cane toads. The brown cane toads are bad.
He'd love Republicans in Congress.
Hey my dog has one of those.
Oh my, seeing your picture I can imagine hooking that slug and trolling for stripers.
Or better yet... texas rig it and sling it up against some riprap. Goodness a large mouth would tear that up!
>>...trolling for stripers.<<
Guess what I had for dinner last night? MMMMMMMMmmmmmmmmmmmmm...great! One of our faves from the early summer sea!
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