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Thorny frog and dementor wasp among new species discovered in Mekong 27/5/2015
A “dementor” wasp named after the Harry Potter creatures, a stick insect more than half a meter long, and a color-changing thorny frog are among new species discovered in South East Asia’s Greater Mekong region.
 
The discoveries also include a bent-toed gecko which is the 10,000th reptile to be recorded on Earth, a feathered coral whose nearest relatives are found in Africa and four moths named after Thai princesses.
 
A total of 139 new species were identified in the region in 2014, including a new mammal - a long-toothed pipistrelle bat - as well as 90 plants, 23 reptiles, 16 amphibians and nine fish found by scientists.
 
It brings the total number of species found in the Greater Mekong, which covers Cambodia, Laos, Burma, Thailand and Vietnam, between 1997 and 2014 to 2,216 or an average of three new plants or creatures a week.
 
But many of the newly-discovered species are already at risk from threats such as destruction of their habitat, poaching or the illegal wildlife trade, a Magical Mekong report by wildlife charity WWF warned.
 
The Ampulex dementor wasp from Thailand, which was named by popular vote after the soul-sucking creatures in the Harry Potter books, paralyses its prey with venom before eating them alive.
 
A stick insect measuring 54cm (21 inches), making it - for now - the world’s second largest insect, was found in Vietnam, while a stealthy wolf snake with a “flying bat” pattern on its skin which helps it blend into trees and mosses was discovered in Cambodia.
 
The gecko which became the 10,000th reptile known to science when it was discovered a few hundred meters from a cornfield carved into the forest, was one of 16 bent toed gecko species found in the Greater Mekong in 2014 alone.
 
And the thorny frog found in Vietnam breeds in pools of water in plants and changes color from pink and yellow at night to a dull brown during the day.
 
Experts warned of the threats facing many of the newly discovered species.
 
A newly-discovered crocodile newt in Burma is threatened by a construction project and demand from the international pet trade, while two new orchid species were also found being traded in Bangkok, Thailand.
 
The long-toothed pipistrelle bat, which has long fangs, faces the loss of its habitat in Laos to dam construction and quarrying.
 
 
PHOTO: Gracixalus lumarius frog, one of many new species identified in the Greater Mekong which covers Cambodia, Laos, Burma, Thailand and Vietnam.
CREDIT: WWF.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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