An amphibian with no legs?

Comment on this story


iol scitech feb 22 amphibian_youtube

youtube.com

The caecilians, said to superficially resemble earthworms, are one of the three categories of amphibians.

New Delhi - Researchers have discovered a new family of legless amphibians in north-east India that have ancient links with Africa, it was announced on Wednesday.

The discovery of the tailless burrowing caecilians was made by a team of international scientists led by Professor SD Biju from Delhi University, the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London reported.

The scientists conducted soil surveys at 238 sites, beginning in 2006.

The caecilians, said to superficially resemble earthworms, are one of the three categories of amphibians. They live hidden in the ground and are among the least explored orders of the amphibians.

“Scientists performed DNA analysis of the specimens and confirmed that it is an entirely new family,” Biju said.

The new family has been named Chikilidae and the new species, Chikila, derived from Garo, a tribal language spoken in the region.

Researchers estimate that the newly discovered caecilians evolved separately from other species of caecilians more than 140 million years ago.

The new family is of ancient lineage whose closest relatives occur in Africa, a relationship established hundreds of millions of years ago before India broke away from Africa and collided with Asia creating the Himalayan mountain range.

“The work is a significant contribution to the understanding of vertebrate evolution and biogeography,” Biju said.

Scientists also said the discovery highlighted north-east India as a poorly studied region likely to harbour additional ancient lineages of organisms found nowhere else on earth. - Sapa-dpa

Read about changes to IOL’s article comments

Hungry for more scitech news? Sign up for our daily newsletter

sign up

Share |  

Facebook icon

Facebook

Twitter icon

Twitter

Google icon

Google

Yahoo icon

Yahoo

Reddit icon

Reddit

del.icio.us icon

del.icio.us

Pinterest icon

Pinterest

Email

Print

  • Rate this article
  • Average reader rating (0 votes) 0 Stars

Comment Guidelines



  1. Please read our comment guidelines.
  2. Login and register, if you haven’ t already.
  3. Write your comment in the block below and click (Post As)

Join us on

IOL-Social networks IOL-Social networks
IOL-Social networks

Mobile
on m.iol.co.za

IOL-Social networks

Newsletters
Subscribe

IOL-Social networks

RSS feeds
Subscribe