Posted on 09/18/2024 9:42:30 AM PDT by Red Badger
A first-of-its-kind for habitat selection.
Image courtesy of Miguel Vences
Rejoice! There’s a new tiny chameleon on the block. Hailing from Madagascar, it joins other miniature chameleons in the Brookesia genus, subgenus Evoluticauda. At little bigger than the end of your forefinger, it was a remarkable spot in what’s presently a highly threatened habitat in Madagascar.
The new-to-science species has been named Brookesia nofy after the forest it was found in, known as Ankanin’ny Nofy. Sitting at about sea level, it’s a littoral forest making this the first of the mini chameleons to be found in this kind of habitat. It’s also a popular spot for tourists, which contributed to its discovery.
Photos posted on social media alerted a team of scientists to the fact that a new-to-science species may be wandering in their midst. Remarkably, when they went out to search for it, they were successful in finding it. A task surely comparable to looking for a moving needle in a haystack.
They’re not easy to track down, but as Mark D Scherz told IFLScience following another mini-chameleon discovery, you get better at it. “It takes a lot of patience and an eye for it. With practice, one can get relatively good at it, but we often work with local guides who are particular experts in finding these tiny chameleons as well.”
brookesia nofy tiny chameleon on a branch
"We often work with local guides who are particular experts in finding these tiny chameleons."
Image courtesy of Miguel Vences
The Brookesia genus is home to some truly remarkable leaf chameleons, so named for their coloration. Some are very ornamental, like B. perarmata, and others are very small, like B. micra. At around 33 millimeters long, B. nofy is not quite the world’s smallest. That title, for now, goes to B. nana, a name that becomes all the more fitting when you learn it’s got famously large genitals.
Nothing like that to shout about when it comes to the latest Brookesia recruit, but it does stand out for its choice of habitat.
“While Brookesia nofy has no conspicuous or spectacular external features, it is one more example of the large diversity of miniaturized chameleons on Madagascar, most of which appear to be restricted to very tiny distribution ranges,” study author Miguel Vences told IFLScience. “This species in particular is the only mini-chameleon in Madagascar known to occur in littoral forest, one of the most threatened habitat types.”
“Furthermore, it is striking that the only apparent safe haven for the species is a privately-owned forest used for ecotourism, while the few remaining natural forest patches around it are under heavy pressure as we speak by slash and burn agriculture.”
A tricky spot to navigate as a tiny chameleon, then, and it’s the study authors’ hope that B. nofy’s discovery can emphasize the importance of conserving Madagascar’s last remaining fragments of littoral forest.
The study is published in ZooTaxa.
ping
Not new. Maybe newly discovered, but not new.
“B. nana, a name that becomes all the more fitting when you learn it’s got famously large genitals”
That’s my street name, B Nana.
L
The Chinese will grind it to powder for hard on pills. Like everything else.
It does crazy stuff with its tongue, too.
So the genus name has something to do with the shape of the tail, and nothing to do with Charles Darwin.
Have no idea how they taste but too small to be served in a sub.
No picyures of the Mexican Staring Frog of Shri Lanka
Miniature humans have also been observed in Madagascar fighting the huge chameleons.
Awwwww!
So stinkin cute!!
God I hope not
( they sure seem to have a lot of “ problems “ down there)
Fishing bait.
Thanks Red Badger.
Mini-mini-mini-chameleon
You come and go
But no one knows...
Because you are so tiny
It is hard to see you there
You are quite cute
For a lizard at least...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.