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LOS ANGELES, March 9 (Xinhuanet)-- A rodent
discovered last year in Laos may actually be a survivor of a group believed to
have been extinct for 11 million years, an international group of scientists
reported on Thursday.
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| The rodent
discovered last year in Laos
[NationalGeographic.com] | The squirrel-like animal, called Laonastes
aenigmamus, was interpreted as the sole member of a new family, Laonastidae,
when scientists first witnessed its skeleton in 2005. It looks apparently
different from other living rodents.
But now, a team of U.S., French and Chinese
researchers said it belongs to the family of Diatomyidae, an extinct early
rodent that lived from early Oligocene to late Miocene in Asia.
By comparing the similarities of teeth, mandible,
dentition, vertebrae and head between the Lao rodent and the Diatomyidae fossil,
researchers concluded that the squirrel-like animal shouldbe a direct descendant
of the Diatomyidae found in Shandong Province, China.
The team led by Mary Dawson at the Carnegie Museum of
Natural History published its findings in the March 10 issue of the journal
Science. Chuan-kui Li, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, is also
a member of the team.
"Our phylogenetic analysis of morphological data from
various living and extinct rodents identifies Laonastes as a member of
Diatomyidae, being more closely related to Diatomys (found in Shandong)," the
researchers wrote in the Science paper. "We therefore synonymize Laonastidae
with Diatomyidae."
The discovery of the living diatomyid rodent
Laonastes offers a rare case of the so-called "Lazarus effect," which refers to
the re-appearance of a species after a lengthy blank in the fossil record, the
researchers said.
"Uniquely among placental mammals, Laonastes pertains
to a clade (Diatomyidae) that was formerly believed to have been extinct for
more than 11 million years," they wrote in the paper.
"Diatomyids join tree shrews, flying lemurs, and
tarsiers as examples of ancient and formerly widerranging mammalian taxa that
are currently living with relictual distributions in southeast Asia."
Such a phenomenon shows that Southeast Asia's
prehistoric "zoo" can offer invaluable insights regarding past and present
biodiversity.
"If it can be preserved, the Paleogene zoo that
survives today in southeast Asia can offer invaluable insights regarding past
and present biodiversity," the scientists said.
"Efforts to conserve Laonastes,
the sole survivor of a morphologically distinctive family of rodents with deep
evolutionary roots in Asia, should be given the highest priority," they wrote.
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