Extinct Animals Found Alive 2019
The Fernandina Tortoise.
Extinct animals found alive 2019. Dozens of Extinct Creatures Found Alive in Lost City Deep Within Rainforest. Saturday June 29 2019By Stillness in the StormLeave a Comment. And the false tree coral snake which had not been reported.
Scientists also rediscovered three species that were thought to be no longer living in Honduras. The rediscovered reptile is just one of many lost animals to be found in recent years. Mouse deer species not seen for nearly 30 years is found alive in Vietnam.
The pale-faced bat the False Tree Coral Snake and. In 2019 during an expedition to the Galapagos Galante trekked over Fernandina Island and discovered a female Fernandina Island tortoise a species that hadnt been seen for 113 years and also was classified as extinct. The Rio Apaporis caiman a subspecies of the Spectacled caiman are typically found in southern Colombia and resurfaced in 2019 after being lost to the scientific community since 1952 according.
Their primary habitat the Caraiba tree has largely been deforested leaving the macaws vulnerable. Its official rediscovery came in early 2019 after a five-day expedition during which a single female was found in a termite nest where the species typically burrows and nests 8 feet off the ground. Some of the more notable finds included a tiger beetle which had only ever been recorded in Nicaragua and was believed to be extinct.
Many of these are rare and endangered. That snares laid by hunters have pushed the species to. An expedition to the island of Fernandina found the animal alive and well.
Elias Marat Scientists found 198 species of birds 40 of small mammals 56 amphibian and reptile species 30 of large mammals 94 butterfly species and so much more. Overall the team recorded 246 species of butterflies and moths 30 bats 57 amphibians and reptiles alongside many plants fishes mammals and insects. Kids News has covered some of these important finds including the Vietnamese mouse-deer and Wallaces giant bee both found in 2019 and the Wondiwoi tree kangaroo found in 2018.