Tag Archives: Mato Grosso

Wildlife Update : 10 new mammals discovered in past 10 years

English: DRC, orthographic projection.

English: DRC, orthographic projection. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: Pygmy Three-toed Sloth (Bradypus pygm...

English: Pygmy Three-toed Sloth (Bradypus pygmaeus) range (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

As a new monkey is identified in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, here are more recent discoveries of the last decade compiled by The Guardian.

As a new monkey is identified in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, here are more recent discoveries

Lesula monkey

The lesula – only the second new monkey found in Africa in 28 years. Photograph: Hart JA, Detwiler KM, Gilbert CC/PA

A new species of monkey has been identified in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The lesula, or Cercopithecus lomamiensis, described as shy and quiet, has excited conservationists because the identification of mammals new to science is rare. Here are some more discovered in the past decade.

Goodman's mouse lemursPhotograph: Thomas Marent/Minden Pictures/Corbis

A pair of nesting Goodman’s Mouse Lemurs (Microcebus lehilahytsara) photographed in Masoala national park, Madagascar. The species was discovered in August 2005.

A three toed pygmy sloth in a mangrove treePhotograph: Bill Hatcher/Corbis

The three-toed pygmy sloth (Bradypus pygmaeus), is endemic to Isla Escudo de Veraguas, a small island off the coast of Panama, and was identified as a distinct species in 2001.

A new species of Callicebus monkey discovered in Brazil in 2010Photograph: Julio Dalponte/Corbis

This previously unknown primate species was discovered during a WWF expedition into the rainforest in Mato Grosso in Brazil in 2010. The new species of the genus Callicebus monkey was found in an area of pristine Amazon rainforest.

This species of blossom bat was discovered in the Foja Mountains of Papua New Guinea in 2010Photograph: Tim Laman/National Geographic

Described by scientists as like the hummingbird of the bat world, this species of blossom bat was discovered in the Foja mountains of Papua New Guinea in 2010.

Tursiops Australis, a new species of dolphin discovered in 2011 in AustraliaPhotograph: EPA

A picture provided by Monash University in September 2011 shows anew species of dolphin in Victoria’s Port Phillip Bay, Australia. The dolphins, Tursiops Australis, which can also be found at Gippsland Lake, have a small population of 150 and were originally thought to be one of the two existing bottlenose dolphin species.

A saola photographed in the jungle of VietnamPhotograph: AP

Looking like a small deer, the saola was originally identified as a new species from remains discovered in Vietnam in 1992 but a live animal wasn’t discovered until 2010.

Mus cypriacus, the Cypriot mouse, which was identified in 2006Photograph: AP

new species of mouseMus cypriacus, was identified in 2006. The mouse, which has a bigger head, ears, eyes and teeth than other European mice, is found only on Cyprus.

A newly identified Sundaland clouded leopard, caught on camera for the first time in BorneoPhotograph: A Wilting/A Mohamed/AFP/Getty Images

An image grab taken on 15 February 2010 shows a newly identifiedSundaland clouded leopard, caught on camera for the first time, stalking through the Dermakot forest reserve in Malaysian Borneo’s Sabah state. The Sundaland clouded leopard was classified as a new species through genetic studies several years ago but this was the first time that this little-understood species of big cat had been filmed.

A new species of rat, Paucidentomys vermidax, discovered in SulawesiPhotograph: Kevin Rowe/PA

A newly discovered “toothless” ratPaucidentomys vermidax, was found in remote rainforest on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi in 2011. The animal has fang-like upper incisors which are useless for gnawing and no back teeth. It lives exclusively on earthworms.

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/sep/13/new-mammals-discovered-10-years

Slash and burn : Brazil rainforest catastrophe

The Independent reports on moves that could threaten South American forests… 

Brazil has taken a big step towards passing new laws that will loosen restrictions on the amount of Amazon rainforest that farmers can destroy, after its lower house of parliament voted in favour of updating the country’s 46-year-old forest code.

In a move described as “disastrous” by conservationists, the nation’s congress backed a bill relaxing laws on the deforestation of hilltops and the amount of vegetation farmers must preserve. The law also offers partial amnesties for fines levied against landowners who have illegally destroyed tracts of rainforest. The legislation, which must still be passed by the Brazillian Senate and approved by President Dilma Rousseff, aims to help owners of smaller farms and ranches compete with under-regulated rivals in countries such as the USA and Argentina.

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At present, under Brazil’s forest code passed in 1965, 80 per cent of all property in the Amazon basin is supposed to be left as untouched forest. In other parts of the country, that figure ranges from between 20 and 35 per cent, depending on the ecosystem of the particular region.

Farmers found to have breached the regulations have until now been required to pay large fines and plant sufficient trees to bring their landholdings up to required standards. But the system is scrappily enforced and only 10 per cent of landowners are currently believed to be in complete compliance with the rules.

Under the new code, forest that was illegally cleared between 1965 and 2008 will be exempted from regulation. In addition, farmers will, for the first time, be allowed to count land along rivers and lakes as part of their legal preserves. And strict rules governing deforestation of hilltops and slopes will be relaxed.

“It’s a disaster. It heightens the risk of deforestation, water depletion and erosion,” Paulo Gustavo Prado, head of environmental policy at Conservation International-Brazil, told Reuters. He believes that the new bill will result in the loss of roughly 10 per cent of Brazil’s remaining rainforest.

Philip Fearnside, of the government’s National Institute for Amazon Research, told the Associated Press that the “amnesty” for farmers who broke the law before 2008 will result in further illegal deforestation.

“The proposed amnesty upholds a long tradition in Brazil of legalising the illegal. People believe they can deforest illegally because sooner or later all will be forgiven.”

Supporters of the bill, who have been heavily lobbied by farming groups, say the old forest code was impossible to enforce, and argue that the more relaxed laws will help them achieve better compliance.

They also decided to veto the clause in the new forest code most feared by conservationists, which would have completely removed all limits on preserving trees for small farmers and ranchers.

About 20 per cent of Brazil’s rainforest has already been destroyed, and the battle to preserve the remainder arouses heated debate. Yesterday, it emerged that a green activist, José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva, had been shot and killed in the jungle state of Para in northern Brazil. He recently predicted that he would be murdered for criticising deforestation by local ranchers.

A watchdog group, which protects activists and small farmers in the region, said yesterday that the gunmen had cut off Mr Silva’s ear, probably so that they could prove to the people who hired them that they had carried out the hit.

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/slash-and-burn-brazil-shreds-laws-protecting-its-rainforests-2289107.html

Johann Hari‘s view….

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/johann-hari/johann-hari-a-turningpoint-we-miss-at-our-peril-2288915.html

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