Thousands of New Species Found in New Guinea
The damselfish Chrysiptera
cymatilis is
one of 1,060 new species found on or near the island of New Guinea (see map) between
1998 and 2008, according to a new report. Earth's largest tropical island is
divided between Indonesia in the west and Papua New Guinea in the
east.
The "striking" blue
fish, found in 1999, lives in the pristine Coral Triangle, a region that
supports the most diverse marine ecosystems on Earth, according to the report Final Frontier: Newly
Discovered Species of New Guinea (1998—2008), by the conservation organization WWF.
"If you look at New
Guinea in terms of biological diversity, it is much more like a continent than
an island," Neil Stronach, program representative for WWF Western Melanesia, said in
a statement.
"Scientists found an
average of two new species each week from 1998 [to] 2008—nearly unheard of in
this day and age." (See pictures of more new species found
in Papua New Guinea, including a "Yoda bat.")
However, poorly planned and
unsustainable development on New Guinea—for example, logging and agriculture—is
jeopardizing the future of many of these species, the report emphasized.
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