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Unseen in the canopies of tall trees in
the Philippines for more than 112 years, a greater dwarf cloud rat has
been found and captured in the island nation's Mount Pulag National
Park. (File Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
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BEIJING, May 6
(Xinhuanet) -- Unseen in the canopies of tall trees in the Philippines for more
than 112 years, a greater dwarf cloud rat has been found and captured in the
island nation's Mount Pulag National Park.
The fist-sized mammal has dense, soft, reddish-brown
fur, a black mask around large dark eyes, small rounded ears, a broad and blunt
snout, and a long tail covered with dark hair.
"This beautiful little animal was seen by biologists
only once previously ¡ª by a British researcher in 1896 who was given several
specimens by local people, so he knew almost nothing about the ecology of the
species," said Lawrence Heaney, curator of mammals at the Field Museum and
leader of a team that rediscovered the rat.
"Since then, the species has been a mystery, in part
because there is virtually no forest left on Mount Data, where it was first
found," Heaney added.
The dwarf cloud rat (Carpomys melanurus) is a smaller
relative of giant clouds rats, spectacular animals found only on Luzon Island in
the Philippines, but widespread and comparatively well known.
The dwarf cloud rat was captured by Danilo Balete of
the Philippine National Museum, in a patch of mature mossy forest (also called
cloud forest) high on Mount Pulag, at about 7,700 feet (2,350 meters) above sea
level. It was in the canopy of a large tree, on a large horizontal branch
covered by a thick layer of moss, orchids and ferns, Balete said.
"We had suspected from its broad, hand-like hind feet
that it lived up in big trees, but this is the first evidence to confirm that,"
Balete said.
Since this is the first time the dwarf cloud rat has
been seen in its natural habitat, the data collected from this specimen "will
significantly augment our understanding of how these rodents evolved, what makes
them tick, and how we can keep them around," said William Stanley, collections
manager of mammals at the Field Museum. "Also, finding this animal again gives
us hope for the conservation of one of the most diverse and threatened mammal
faunas of the world."
The research team thinks that this species probably
lives only high in the big canopy trees in mature mossy forests at high
elevations.
(Agencies)