![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Thursday, March 25, 1999 Published at 01:38 GMT Sci/Tech New 'living fossil' identified ![]() The coelacanth first appeared over 400 million years ago What a beast! This is a new species of coelacanth discovered off the coast of Indonesia. The find has surprised and delighted scientists who had believed such creatures were restricted to a small stretch of water around the Comoros, east of South Africa. Now it would appear there are two distinct communities living 9,000 km apart.
Since the 1930s, fishermen have pulled in about 200 other coelacanths. The catches have been so few and in such a restricted area that scientists assumed they were dealing with a small an isolated population living only in the Mozambique Strait, or even around just one or two of the Comoros islands (Grand Comoros and Anjouan). New thinking But the chance discovery of a fish last year near Menadotua Island in the Celebes archipelago of Indonesia has forced a rethink of the creature's evolutionary history. Detailed analysis of its body features and two stretches of its DNA has now revealed the fish is a new - though closely-related - species of coelacanth (Latimeria menadoensis). The research, published in the Comptes rendus de l'Acad�mie des Sciences, indicate that the two species went their separate ways about 1.5 million years ago.
The Indoensian coelacanth was taken from an area which has seen recent volcanic activity. It is an environment that is similar to the habitat of the Comorean species. It seems these fish like the crevices that form when lava flows into the sea. They are ideal hiding places. Semi-sedentary fish Although studies have shown the coelacanth can move several dozens of kilometres to get from one cave to another, it is a semi-sedentary fish and does not like to go to great depths or into open water.
This is one more reason why the animals must be two distinct species, the scientists conclude. The research on the new fish was conducted by a joint team from the Institut de Recherche pour le D�veloppement (IRD, formerly ORSTOM), LIPI (Division of Zoology Research and Development Centre for Biology, Indonesia) and CRIFI-RIFF (Central Research Institute for Fisheries, Indonesia). | Sci/Tech Contents
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||