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Results tagged “salamanders” from NatGeo News Watch

A newly discovered salamander, which is the second-smallest salamander species in the U.S. and one of the smallest in the world at just two inches long, could change what scientists know about some amphibians, the University of Georgia Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources said today.

The new salamander is so distinct that it belongs in its own genus (a grouping of related species), according to Carlos Camp, Piedmont College professor who first recognized it as a news species. "It represents the first new genus of four-footed creature discovered in the United States in 50 years."

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Photo of new salamander courtesy UGA

Researchers weren't looking for anything new when they went exploring in the northeast part of Georgia. "But they ended up making a big discovery of a tiny animal," the University of Georgia said in a statement about the discovery.

The salamander is now under study by a diverse group of researchers from several U.S. colleges. The team is searching for more of the salamanders, which are described in a new paper appearing in the Journal of Zoology.

The initial discovery came in spring 2007 near Toccoa, Georgia, when University of Missiouri graduate student Bill Peterman and Warnell graduate student Joe Milanovich stumbled across it while collecting another species of salamander in Stephens County.

"They knew they'd found an animal not known in that region but did not yet know it was a new species," Warnell said in the statement.

Milanovich consulted John Maerz, a Warnell assistant professor of wildlife, who advised the students to take the salamander to Carlos Camp, professor at Piedmont College, who recognized it as a new species. Trip Lamb, a professor at East Carolina University, used genetics to confirm the new species and establish its relationship to other species in the region.

After the students found the first salamander, a female with eggs, in a creek, researchers went back repeatedly looking for others, Warnell said. "That is when Maerz's then 10-year-old son Jack and Milanovich found the first male specimen."

The research team has since found several individuals at the original site, including larvae, and they have found the new species at two other nearby locations in Georgia. Collaborators also found the species at a nearby site in South Carolina, Warnell added.

Evolution of Stream Salamanders

This discovery, according to Maerz, could yield exciting new information on the evolution of stream salamanders in this region.

"Whenever you find something new, it has the potential to change what we know about a range of related species," he said. There are more than 560 species of salamanders worldwide, and approximately 10 percent are found in Georgia."

But that's not the only reason Maerz is excited, Warnell added. "The new species was found in a well-traveled area in the middle of a creek right next to a road, almost hidden in plain sight."

"To make such a find in an area with extensive human activity proves that there are still things out there to discover. It makes you wonder, what else is out there?"

"To make such a find in an area with extensive human activity," Maerz said, "proves that there are still things out there to discover. It makes you wonder, what else is out there?"

With funding from The Environmental Resources Network (TERN), Milanovich and Camp are leading research efforts to describe the ecology of the tiny creatures.

"It is truly a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be involved in such a big find, particularly one right in our backyard," Milanovich said. "The fact that it is such a unique animal makes it all the better and gives us more opportunity to continue to learn about the species. One of the best parts of being involved with this project is the collaboration that has come out of the species description, so I am excited to continue working with the other coauthors as we keep unpeeling the onion of U. brucei."

Patch-nosed Salamander

The research team's suggested common name is patch-nosed salamander, based on the lighter coloring on the tiny salamander's nose. The formal Latin name is Urspelerpes brucei for Richard Bruce, professor emeritus at Western Carolina University and a well-respected, longtime salamander researcher who has connections to many members of the research team.

"Dr. Bruce has done much of the foundational work on stream salamander ecology in the region and on the evolution of miniaturization in salamanders, so naming this species after him is a good fit," Maerz said.

More from National Geographic News:

New Salamander Found -- One of World's Smallest

"Ugly" Salamander Lacks Lungs

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Biologists have discovered that amphibian diseases are spread by bait shops.

National Science Foundation illustration by Nicolle Rager-Fuller

Salamander larvae sold as live bait for freshwater fishing may be spreading amphibian diseases, including the chytrid fungus that is killing many of the world's frogs, the National Science Foundation says.

Waterdogs, as the larvae of tiger salamanders are called, are used to catch largemouth bass, channel catfish and other freshwater fishes.

Fishers may be in for more than they bargained for, the NSF said in a statement released yesterday. "Salamanders in bait shops in Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico are infected with ranaviruses, and those in Arizona, with a chytrid fungus called Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd)."

These diseases have spread with the global trade in amphibians, says James Collins, assistant director for biological sciences at the NSF. Collins is currently on leave from Arizona State University. "The commercial amphibian bait trade may be a source of 'pathogen pollution,'" he says in the NSF news release. Pathogens are disease-causing agents such as some viruses and bacteria.

Along with biologist Angela Picco of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Sacramento, California, Collins screened tiger salamanders in the western U.S. bait trade for both ranaviruses and Bd, and conducted surveys of anglers to determine how often tiger salamanders are used as bait, and how frequently the salamanders are let go in fishing waters.

bait-1-picture.jpgThe scientists also organized bait-shop surveys to determine whether tiger salamanders are released back into the wild after being housed in shops, the NSF says.

A majority of anglers--as high as 73 percent--in Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico uses waterdogs as bait.

Photo by Angela Picco, ASU

"We found that all tiger salamanders that ended up in the bait trade were originally collected from the wild," says Picco. "In general, they were moved from east to west and north to south--bringing with them multiple ranavirus strains."

Results of the research show that 26 to 73 percent of fishers used tiger salamanders as bait; 26 to 67 percent of anglers released tiger salamanders bought as bait into fishing waters; and 4 percent of bait shops put salamanders back in the wild after the waterdogs were housed with infected animals.

"The tiger salamander bait trade in the western U.S. is a good model for understanding the consequences of unregulated movement of amphibians and their pathogens," says Collins.

Examples of pathogen pollution are many and dramatic, the NSF statement says.

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Species of rain frog potentially new to science.

Conservation International-Colombia/Photo by Marco Rada

Ten amphibians believed to be new to science -- including a spiky-skinned, orange-legged rain frog, three poison frogs and three glass frogs -- have been found in Colombia's mountainous Tacarcuna area of the Darien, near the border with Panama, Conservation International announced yesterday.

The species were discovered during a recent Rapid Assessment Program (RAP) expedition in the area, the Washington, D.C.-based charity said in a news statement.

"This area of the Darien is isolated from the Andes Mountain range. It is recognized as a center of endemism and valuable for its high biological diversity," CI said. "Historically it has served as a bridge for flora and fauna exchange between North and South America."

Over a period of three weeks, the scientists identified some 60 species of amphibians, 20 reptiles and almost 120 species of birds, many of them apparently found no where else.

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Harlequin frog of the Atelopus genus potentially new to science.
Conservation International-Colombia/photo by Marco Rada

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Photo of Brady Barr with giant salamander courtesy National Geographic Channel

Brady Barr, we once reported in National Geographic News, is a man whose work bites.

"I've had so many bumps, bruises, and broken bones, it's sometimes hard to get out of bed in the morning," he told me earlier today.

He's also been bitten a few times -- including last year, when a 12-foot-long python plunged its fangs into his leg.

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Herpetologist Brady Barr (46) is the star of National Geographic Channel's "Dangerous Encounters." Four new episodes airing in the United States this month include encounters with sharks, giant salamanders, crocs, and 22-foot-long snakes.

Sometimes known as "Gator Doc," he's being doing this work for National Geographic for 21 years and has appeared in more than 70 National Geographic films, including in the earlier series "Reptile Wild With Dr. Brady Barr."

I asked Barr what he thought was the most dangerous moment in a career of wrestling crocs and catching giant snakes by the tail.

"It's a really tough question," he said, "because it always seems like the most recent experience was the most dangerous."

 

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Photo by James L. Amos/NGS

The United States is one of the great golfing nations of the world.

But the many thousands of golf courses that dot the urban landscape are not without their critics. Environmentalists have decried the amount of water sometimes required to keep fairways and greens lush, especially in places that are naturally arid.

In other instances perfectly good natural hazards such as wetlands or beach dunes are bulldozed and supplanted with an artificial landscape.

There has also been criticism of the amount of pesticides and fertilizer, required to keep golf courses verdant, that winds up in the nation's waterways and oceans.

But can golf courses offer havens for wildlife being squeezed out of urban areas?

"With more than 2.2 million acres of green space on U.S. golf courses, there is great potential for golf courses to serve as sanctuaries for many wildlife species," says Mark Mackey, a graduate student of the University of Missouri who is studying this issue. "Managing landscapes for human use and the preservation of biodiversity will create a win-win situation for stakeholders and wildlife."

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