Scientists find new species of dragonfly, grasshopper and a fluorescent spider

(Reuters) — Wildlife experts found eight new species of dragonfly, three unknown grasshoppers and some 60 new butterflies and ​moths in vivid hues during a trip to Angola’s ‌Lisima plateau in February, a conservation group said on Wednesday.

The Wilderness Project visited the waters that flow through the plateau and which feed four ​of Africa’s major rivers: the Congo, Okavango, Zambezi and Cuanza.

New ​species included an armored, predatory cricket, a previously undescribed ⁠species of copper caterpillar and its adult butterfly, and a ​crowned crab spider that fluoresces under ultraviolet light.

Experts also found a ​new blood orange-hued species of ladybird orb-web spider which mimics ladybirds in signaling to predators with a bright color — normally a darker red — that it ​is too bitter or toxic.

“The armored crickets are very cool…very fierce-looking,” expedition leader Rob Taylor told Reuters. “As a defense mechanism, they can ‌actually ⁠squirt fluid onto whoever’s trying to attack them.”

Scientists the world over are frantically trying to record species as they reckon with a global ecological crisis that has put a million plant and ​animal species on ​the brink of extinction. ⁠They estimate there are 8.7 million species in the world, of which science has identified only ​1.5 million.

Many are fast disappearing because of human ​activity, with ⁠more than 800 animal species going extinct since around 1500.

Taylor said wildlife in the Lisima plateau was threatened by “tree-felling, deforestation and…the ⁠artisanal ​diamond mining industry,” as well as by ​slash-and-burn agriculture, which razes natural forests to use the soil for planting, only to ​see the nutrients wash away.

Trending

Weekly Poll

Latest E-edition

Please login to access your e-Edition.

+