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Japanese Discover Possible
New Whale Species

11-19-3

(AFP) -- Japanese researchers said they have uncovered a previously unidentified species of whale, a discovery that is extraordinarily rare on a planet where more and more large mammal species are at risk of extinction.
 
The 12-meter- (40-foot-) long creature joins the elite club of baleen whales, or Mysticeti in Latin. These are whales that use fringed plates, or baleen, to trap small particles of food, as opposed to toothed whales.
 
The newcomer has been dubbed Balaenoptera omurai in honor of Hideo Omura, one of the top names in Japanese whale research in the 1960s and 70s.
 
Reporting in the British science weekly Nature, a team lead by Shiro Wada of the National Research Institute of Fisheries Science in Yokohama said the story behind the exciting find dates back more than two decades.
 
In the late 1970s, Japanese research vessels operating in southern latitudes on the border between the Pacific and Indian oceans caught eight specimens of a baleen whale, which experts found impossible to identify.
 
Then, in 1998, a similar kind of whale washed up dead on Tsunoshima, a Japanese island on the Sea of Japan.
 
The advent of biotechnology gave Wada's team the chance to do a DNA identity check against known whale species and make a close comparison of its skeleton and other body parts.
 
Their conclusion was that B. omurai is a unique species. Not only is its molecular identity unique, its cranial structure is distinct from other whales, and it has a notably smaller number of baleen plates.
 
The DNA work has thrown up another discovery ó that two outwardly similar baleens, the Bryde's whale and the Eden's whale, are in genetic terms so different that they deserve to be considered different species.
 
If this suggestion were accepted internationally, that would boost the number of known living baleen species, also called rorquals, from six to eight.
 
The other five are the blue whale - the world's largest mammal - the humpback whale, the fin whale, the sei whale and the minke whale.
 
Further details about B. omurai - its habitat, eating habits, reproductive cycle and so on - remain largely unknown, although Wada believes that more specimens will come to light when museums start to look more closely at their collections.
 
The find reflects how little of the world's flora and fauna has been documented, even as the number of species that are extinct or heading that way, especially mammals, rises each year.
 
According to U.S. scientist Peter Raven, director of the Missouri Botanical Garden, only 1.5 million of the estimated 10 million species alive today have been recognized and named scientifically. The biggest knowledge gaps are in microscopic species, especially fungi.
 

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