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    NEW DELHI (AP) — Since before the age of dinosaurs it has burrowed unbothered beneath the monsoon-soaked soils of remote northeast India — unknown to science and mistaken by villagers as a deadly, miniature snake.

    But this legless amphibian's time in obscurity has ended, thanks to an intrepid team of biologists led by University of Delhi professor Sathyabhama Das Biju. Over five years of digging through forest beds in the rain, the team has identified an entirely new family of amphibians — called chikilidae — endemic to the region but with ancient links to Africa.

    Their discovery, published Wednesday in a journal of the Royal Society of London, gives yet more evidence that India is a hotbed of amphibian life with habitats worth protecting against the country's industry-heavy development agenda.

    It also gives exciting new evidence in the study of prehistoric species migration, as well as evolutionary paths influenced by continental shift.

    "This is a major hotspot of biological diversity, but one of the least explored," Biju said in an interview with The Associated Press. "We hope this new family will show the importance of funding research in the area. We need to know what we have, so we can know what to save."

    His first effort in conserving the chikilidae was to give it a scientific name mirroring what the locals use in their Garo language. The chikilidae is a caecilian, the most primitive of three amphibian groups that also include frogs and salamanders.

    "We hope when the locals see the name, and their language, being used across the world, they will understand this animal's importance and join in trying to save it," Biju said. "India's biodiversity is fast depleting. We are destroying these habitats without mercy."

    The chikilidae's home in long-ignored tropical forests now faces drastic change under programs to cut trees, plant rice paddy, build roads and generate industry as India's economic growth fuels a breakneck drive in development. More industrial pollutants, more pesticides and more people occupying more land may mean a world of trouble for a creature that can be traced to the earliest vertebrates to creep across land.

    Biju — a botanist-turned-herpetologist now celebrated as India's "Frogman" — has made it his life work to find and catalog new species. There are too many cases of "nameless extinction," with animals disappearing before they are ever known, he said. "We don't even know what we're losing."

    Amphibians are particularly vulnerable, and have drastically declined in recent decades. The same sensitivity to climate and water quality that makes them perfect environmental barometers also puts them at the greatest risk when ecological systems go awry.

    Biju, however, is working the reverse trend. Since 2001, he has discovered 76 new species of plants, caecilians and frogs — vastly more than any other scientist in India — and estimates 30-40 percent of the country's amphibians are yet to be found.

    Within the chikilidae family, the team has already identified three species, and is on its way to classing three more, he said.

    The chikilidae's discovery, made along with co-researchers from London's Natural History Museum and Vrije University in Brussels, brings the number of known caecilian families in the world to 10. Three are in India and others are spread across the tropics in Southeast Asia, Africa and South America. There is debate about the classifications, however, and some scientists count even fewer caecilian families.

    Because they live hidden underground, and race off at the slightest vibration, much less is known about them than their more famous — and vocal — amphibious cousins, the frogs. Only 186 of the world's known amphibious species are caecilians, compared with more than 6,000 frog species — a third of which are considered endangered or threatened.

    Even people living in northeast Indians misunderstand the caecilians, and rare sightings can inspire terror and revulsion, with farmers and villagers chopping them in half out of the mistaken belief that they are poisonous snakes.

    In fact, the chikilidae is harmless, and may even be the farmer's best friend — feasting on worms and insects that might harm crops, and churning the soil as it moves underground.

    Much remains to be discovered in further study, Biju said, as many questions remain about how the creatures live.

    So far, Biju's team has determined that an adult chikilidae will remain with its eggs until they hatch, forgoing food for some 50 days. When the eggs hatch, the young emerge as tiny adults and squirm away.

    They grow to about 4 inches (10 centimeters), and can ram their hard skulls through some of the region's tougher soils, shooting off quickly at the slightest vibration. "It's like a rocket," Biju said. "If you miss it the first try, you'll never catch it again."

    A possibly superfluous set of eyes is shielded under a layer of skin, and may help the chikilidae gauge light from dark as in other caecilian species.

    DNA testing suggests the chikilidae's closest relative is in Africa — with the two evolutionary paths splitting some 140 million years ago when dinosaurs roamed what was then a southern supercontinent called Gondwana, since separated into today's continents of Africa, Antarctica, Australia, South America and the Indian subcontinent.

    Biju's team worked best during monsoon season, when the digging is easier and chikilidae lay eggs in waterlogged soils. Gripping garden spades with blistered hands, the researchers along with locals they hired spent about 2,600 man hours digging for the elusive squigglers, usually found about 16 inches (40 centimeters) deep.

    "It was backbreaking work," said research fellow Rachunliu Kamei, who even passed out in the forest once, and some days found not even one specimen.

    "But there is motivation in knowing this is an uncharted frontier," said Kamei, lead researcher and main author of the study paper.

    ___

    Follow Katy Daigle on Twitter at http://twitter.com/katydaigle

     
    • El  •  3 mths ago
      Yikes... Just for clarification; an amphibian is in no way a: worm, insect, reptile (it's not a snake), fish, or bird (really? 'flightless'?). If you don't know the difference between all of the above, it's time to read a book and learn the difference.
    • ncf  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      that's so completely awesome
    • James  •  New York, New York  •  3 mths ago
      Andrew Zimmer, here's your next assignment.
    • SaysWho  •  3 mths ago
      Its not a new species, its a newly discovered species. Really, a very OLD species that was lucky enough to survive all these years without human scrutiny. Poor thing, its in for it now.
    • flash  •  3 mths ago
      "There are too many cases of "nameless extinction," with animals disappearing before they are ever known," Man thats one hell of a statement.
    • M  •  3 mths ago
      Thumbs down to all who insert politics into every #$%$ article.
      • Rick 3 mths ago
        M, YOU obviously cannot take, or even understand, a JOKE!!!
      • Knyd Gudholl 3 mths ago
        Obama inserted into a sentence does not make a joke Rick.
      • Chuck C 3 mths ago
        All of this is politics, just another way to suppress human development, and keep millions of humans in poverty. All across America there are malls with wetlands behind them, that support whole mini ecocultures of wildlife.
    • Otto Pilot  •  Spring Branch, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      It's just a matter of time before it's on some menu there.
      • J. 3 mths ago
        It already is in the Philippines.
      • Damn You 3 mths ago
        The chinese eat ANYTHING!!
    • TK3  •  3 mths ago
      Hats off to biologists led by University of Delhi professor Sathyabhama Das Biju !
      • Damn You 3 mths ago
        Throw him a bar of soap while your at it!?!?!
      • ThaBullDawg 3 mths ago
        Chak De Biju-Ji!!!!
    • antoine  •  3 mths ago
      my only question about this article is in the opening line
      "Since before the age of dinosaurs it has burrowed unbothered beneath the monsoon-soaked soils of remote northeast India — unknown to science and mistaken by villagers as a deadly, miniature snake"

      ....how would they know how old the species is if they were just found? Other than that, great find! keep it up
      • Joe 3 mths ago
        Reptiles and amphibians are different.
      • antoine 3 mths ago
        Joe, I am fully aware of that.
      • goodtobehappy 3 mths ago
        The fossil record has comparable species... which gives scientists a pretty good estimate of when the species age.
    • Jillian Crawford  •  Denver, Colorado  •  3 mths ago
      Wow the veins on the eggs are so cool! It looks like their wrapped in see-through leaves or something. I love nature's creativity!
    • Tom O  •  Ridley Park, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      just goes to show how we are all in this together and have to work together and get along together
    • Jeanatan  •  3 mths ago
      Is the singular "chikilida" or "chikiladae"? That's my question for this fascinating discovery. Caecilians are fascinating but underrepresented creatures; it's nice to know they're still discovering more species of them.
      • B-flies 3 mths ago
        Yay! Thank you for an intelligent comment.
      • Larry 3 mths ago
        No singular form. It's the name for the that Family of amphibians. The Family can have more than one Genus, and Species so it can't be singular.
      • Jeanatan 3 mths ago
        Oh, okay, thanks. And you're welcome.
    • ghost2010  •  3 mths ago
      If it weren't for the egss, I'd pass it off as just another worm.
    • hookedonharley  •  3 mths ago
      something else for the french to eat
    • BrianD  •  3 mths ago
      I'm waiting for the Mongolian death worm to be authenticated...
    • Tom  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Glad they got rid of the "horrifying creatures" comment and added the pics. They're actually very cute... probably see them at PetCo before the year's out.
    • Hans J.  •  3 mths ago
      Looks like family of the Kardasians.
    • tortuga  •  3 mths ago
      nice discovery.. i hope they make it and we leave them alone.....
    • ARCHANGEL  •  3 mths ago
      Need to study the india bed bug that you find in the indian hotels,they are mutant,and hard to kill!!!!!!
    • F. M.  •  3 mths ago
      I have kept caecilians as pets- very cool & the ones I had gave birth to live young. They get pretty big- 18 inches for mine, some get several feet long.
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