New species of lizard found in Australia - Yahoo!7 News
Recently discovered lizards facing extinction - Yahoo!7 News
29 October 2012
Scientists announced Monday the discovery of a new species of lizard fighting to survive among the sand dunes outside Perth in Western Australia.
They fear it is only a matter of time before the six-centimetre (two-inch) long Ctenotus ora, or the coastal plains skink, will be extinct with urban sprawl rapidly closing in.
The discovery, detailed in the journal Zootaxa, took place during research south of the city to determine the levels of biological diversity in southwestern Australia.
"The discovery of a new species is a momentous occasion in science," said Geoffrey Kay, an ecologist from the Australian National University who found the lizard with colleague Scott Keogh.
"To find something as yet undetected, so close to one of the country's largest cities, demonstrates how much we've still got to discover."
But he warned of the real threat to the reptile.
"Although it's a fantastic discovery, it's poor cause for celebration. Our new lizard is under serious risk of being erased just as suddenly as it appeared to us," he said.
"Only a few of these lizards have ever been found in the wild, so while we know numbers are low, we are not sure of the exact size of the remaining population."
The small stretch of sand the brown and white skink calls home is steadily being concreted.
"Developments along the coastline near Perth need to consider this new lizard and potentially a large number of other species yet to be discovered in this diverse part of the world," added Kay.
Southwestern Australia is recognised as one of the top 25 biodiversity hotspots in the world, alongside places such as Madagascar, the tropical jungles of West Africa, and Brazil's Cerrado.
"We've known for a long time that the southwest has an outstanding diversity of plants, as exhibited by its stunning wildflowers," said Kay.
"But only now with this research are we seeing that the level of diversity in animals, in particular reptiles, is far deeper and more extreme than we previously imagined."
Recently discovered lizards facing extinction - Yahoo!7 News
30 October 2012
A species of lizard discovered recently in the South West is facing extinction as its habitat is destroyed by urban development.
The Coastal Plains Skink was classified as a new species in 2010 and is only found in a stretch of sand dunes between Dunsborough and Mandurah.
Scientists say the discovery has already been soured with the lizard under serious risk of being lost just as quickly as it was found.
Ecologist Geoffrey Kay, from the Australian National University, says residential development along the coast is posing a serious threat to the tiny reptile.
"The risk is that this animal which we've just described and realised occurs along the coastal plain is actually an area that's heavily developed and an area that's under some substantial threat of the ecosystem being modified," he said.
"We may not actually know what the effects might be on this animal before all the work of identifying it might become undone."
Geoffrey Kay says it is believed numbers of the lizard are already low, as only a few have ever been found in the wild.