Tanzania: Discovery of 27 New Animal Species Reveals Unmatched Biodiversity

Author Topic: Tanzania: Discovery of 27 New Animal Species Reveals Unmatched Biodiversity  (Read 1018 times)

Offline ehsan217

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A STUDY by an international team of scientists coordinated by Italy's MUSE - Science Museum has updated knowledge on the faunal richness of the Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania and Kenya and revealed discovery of 27 new species.

The 23 amphibians and reptiles identified emphasise the area's exceptional biological importance and advocates for its candidature for the UNESCO's List of World Heritage Sites.

A study documenting the latest research findings on the faunal richness of the tropical moist forests of the Eastern Arc Mountains of Kenya and Tanzania was published on-line on Saturday on the Diversity and Distributions network.

The study summarises the last decade of biodiversity research in the Eastern Arc Mountains, including the discovery of 27 species that are new to science and 14 other species not previously known to exist in the area.

The results further reenforce the importance of the Eastern Arc Mountains as one of the top sites on earth for biological diversity and endemism.

The study was conducted by an international team coordinated by researchers of the Tropical Biodiversity Section at MUSEScience Museum in Italy.

The team includes several research and conservation agencies in Tanzania and across the world which were supported by the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund, a global partnership dedicated to providing funding and technical assistance to NGOs and private sector involved in the conservation of globally important biodiversity hotspots.

The biodiversity research that was supported by CEPF targeted the most remote and least-surveyed forests in the Eastern Arc Mountains. The Eastern Arc Mountains are geologically ancient.

The persistence of forest on these mountains, for several million years, has driven an extraordinary differentiation of living forms. The Eastern Arc Mountains comprise 13 blocks extending in an arc from southern Kenya to southcentral Tanzania.

"Our study shows how little we still know about the earth's biodiversity hotspots and how important targeted biodiversity inventories are in revealing the biological wealth of our planet," said Dr Francesco Rovero, Head of the Tropical Biodiversity section at MUSE-Science Museum and senior author of the publication.

"We can now rank the 13 Eastern Arc Mountain blocks by biological importance and we can better understand the forces that have caused such extraordinary patterns of biological richness.

These findings provide the governments of Tanzania and Kenya and other agencies involved in the protection of these forests, with management recommendations, among which is to revive the Eastern Arc Mountain's candidature to UNESCO's List of World Heritage Sites," continued Dr Rovero.

"The Eastern Arc Mountains were already known for the unusually high density of endemic species, however, we lacked comprehensive data from at least six of the 13 mountain blocks," said Prof Neil Burgess, a leading expert on Africa's biodiversity from the Centre for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate at the University of Copenhagen and UNEPWorld Conservation Monitoring Centre.

"The new findings affirm the importance of conserving as large an extent of forest as possible, particularly where a forest extends across different altitudes. Besides forest extent, forest elevational range and rainfall were found to be equally important drivers of richness of vertebrate species," continued Professor Burgess.

"The candidature of this area to UNESCO's List of World Heritage Sites would ensure greater international visibility and support for the long-term protection of these exceptional but highly threatened fragments of rainforest.

We are urging the government of Tanzania to embrace this new research as a basis for reviving Tanzania's application to UNESCO," said Charles Meshack, Executive Director of the Tanzania Forest Conservation Group.

"Twenty-three of the 27 new species that we reported in the study are amphibians and reptiles," said Michele Menegon, researcher with the Tropical Biodiversity Section at MUSE."

These results make the Eastern Arc the most important site in Africa for these two classes of vertebrate. Some of these species are up to 100 million years old and are evidence of the great age, forest stability and unique evolutionary history of these mountains."