I lived in Taiwan for a year after I graduated college and I found their jungles to be difficult to navigate because of the mountainous terrain. It doesn't surprise me that they have been hiding out successfully for >10 years!
Beware! You entered the "cutesy animals, let's save the planet, everyone's cool man" territory with nuance, humour and wider perspective. People don't forgive that easily.
If you want to be fun at parties, you can also try this: "What do you mean, 'YOLO, do what your heart tells you, no matter what they say'? Does that also apply to rapists and murderers?"
I'll make an exception for infectious diseases... certainly getting rid of smallpox was, and eventually getting rid of HIV will be, a cause for celebration.
Definitely. And in in the last two weeks, the worlds largest bee that was thought to be extinct was found again in Indonesia. Particularly good news given the global decline of many bee species. [1]
And a type of tortoise thought to be extinct was seen for the first time in 106 years. [2]
Totally! The clouded leopard is one of my favorite big cats. That's two great pieces of "species persists" news in a week! A few days ago, it was the giant bee:
> The tortoise is said to be in good health, but underweight. It is believed that she is about 100 years old.
I suppose it's easier to have relict populations survive without inbreeding issues when they've got century-plus lifespans. I'm glad they've relocated the tortoise to a breeding center - hopefully we'll be able to preserve them!
Wunderbar! That makes my day, thanks for sharing. Every time I think of tortoises, the book "Classic Shell Scripting" with its African tent tortoise cover springs to mind.
They are going to do a scientific study to try and confirm their return from extinction. The last such study lasted thirteen years and yielded zero sightings.
This is great news. The fact that it's been about thirty years since the last official sighting (according to Wikipedia), suggests that there is still a breeding population and not just one or two geriatric survivors.
Now one can only hope that the local population won't think of them as a valuable trophy prize or maybe of medicinal value, to be shot on sight.
Forest Galante travels the world and searches for animals that people think are extinct, but not in the cryptozoology sense. He was recently on the jre podcast, its a great listen. He Also hosts the show Extinct Or Alive on Animal Planet. The 7th episode was about this exact animal.
I always have one question about such discoveries. Is it that the some mating pairs of the species somehow escaped being seen and were thought to be extinct or is it some magic of nature that the species got reborn somehow!! May be there is an XKCD line about this already :)
> the Alangyi Village set up a team of rangers to patrol traditional areas.
> confirmed that rangers from the village had spotted the Formosan clouded leopard in person, but he was not at the liberty of disclosing the exact time and location of the sightings.
> Alangyi Village elders also asked the Forestry Bureau to stop logging and other disruptive activities.
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[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 37.3 ms ] threadI lived in Taiwan for a year after I graduated college and I found their jungles to be difficult to navigate because of the mountainous terrain. It doesn't surprise me that they have been hiding out successfully for >10 years!
What a beautiful animal with cool patterns.
If you want to be fun at parties, you can also try this: "What do you mean, 'YOLO, do what your heart tells you, no matter what they say'? Does that also apply to rapists and murderers?"
And a type of tortoise thought to be extinct was seen for the first time in 106 years. [2]
1.https://www.upi.com/Science_News/2019/02/21/Worlds-biggest-b...
2. https://abcnews.go.com/US/video/tortoise-thought-extinct-dis...
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-47311186
https://mashable.com/article/fernandina-giant-tortoise-galap...
> The tortoise is said to be in good health, but underweight. It is believed that she is about 100 years old.
I suppose it's easier to have relict populations survive without inbreeding issues when they've got century-plus lifespans. I'm glad they've relocated the tortoise to a breeding center - hopefully we'll be able to preserve them!
Now one can only hope that the local population won't think of them as a valuable trophy prize or maybe of medicinal value, to be shot on sight.
jre: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OT0ZIq-yWEM
https://www.animalplanet.com/tv-shows/extinct-or-alive/
Hide-and-seek is easy if there's only a couple of animals and an entire ecosystem to hide in.
> confirmed that rangers from the village had spotted the Formosan clouded leopard in person, but he was not at the liberty of disclosing the exact time and location of the sightings.
> Alangyi Village elders also asked the Forestry Bureau to stop logging and other disruptive activities.
This was managed extremely well by the village.
For sure, this time protocol was followed as should be expected.
Unfortunately, most likely the ”eyewitnesses” are mistaken, as in nearly all cases like these.