Monday, December 29, 2008

Forgotten Mozambique forest yields 3 new species of butterfly and a new snake!


Until just three years ago the vast area of forest was known only to villagers nearby. The team 'found' Mount Mabu after looking at Google Earth maps in 2005 while trying to finding a site for a conservation project, looking at land above 1,600m where higher rainfall means there is likely to be forest.

Julian Bayliss, a locally-based conservationist, investigated the unexpected patch of green and used satellite photos to identify a large, unexplored forest. In October and November 2008 an international team of 28 scientists and support staff from the UK, Mozambique, Malawi, Tanzania, Belgium and Switzerland hiked into it.
Expedition leader, RBG Kew botanist Jonathan Timberlake said "The phenomenal diversity is just mind-boggling: seeing how things are adapted to little niches, to me this is the incredible thing. Even today we cannot say we know all of the world's key areas for biodiversity - there are still new ones to discover."

They found a wealth of wildlife including pygmy chameleons, Swynnerton's robin, butterflies such as the Small Striped Swordtail and Emperor Swallowtail as well as three new species, a previously undiscovered species of adder and many exotic plants, including a rarely seen orchid. The team brought back over 500 plant specimens and are looking forward to finding out more about the species they collected.

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