GBR Press: Close encounters with Japan's 'living fossil'

RobM

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Hey all,

News article on the BBC News website, regarding Andrias japonicus and chytrid. Contains two videos, one getting close and describing a specimen another showing two adults fighting, which really shows how fast this species can move when it wants too!

BBC News - Close encounters with Japan's 'living fossil'
 
Re: Andrias japonicus and chytrid

Very interesting!
I just wish he wouldn't poke him like that...can't be nice.
The BBC had a program about Japanese animals some time ago, this is a part of it:
YouTube - The Sausage & the Salamander - Secret Japan - BBC Earth
The best thing was when they said that the salamander's head smells like rhubarb :talker:
 
Re: Andrias japonicus and chytrid

I was just about to post this article!
 
BBC News (London, UK) 05 February 2010 Close encounters with Japan's 'living fossil' (Richard Black)

(Article has two videos and photographs)

It soon becomes clear that the giant salamander has hit Claude Gascon's enthusiasm button smack on the nose.
"This is a dinosaur, this is amazing," he enthuses.
"We're talking about salamanders that usually fit in the palm of your hand. This one will chop your hand off."
As a leader of Conservation International's (CI) scientific programmes, and co-chair of the Amphibian Specialist Group with the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Dr Gascon has seen a fair few frogs and salamanders in his life; but little, he says, to compare with this.


Fortunately for all of our digits, this particular giant salamander is in no position to chop off anything, trapped in a tank in the visitors' centre in Maniwa City, about 800km west of Tokyo.
But impressive it certainly is: about 1.7m (5ft 6in) long, covered in a leathery skin that speaks of many decades passed, with a massive gnarled head covered in tubercles whose presumed sensitivity to motion probably helped it catch fish by the thousand over its lifetime.
If local legend is to be believed, though, this specimen is a mere tadpole compared with the biggest ever seen around Maniwa.
A 17th Century tale, related to us by cultural heritage officer Takashi Sakata, tells of a salamander (or hanzaki, in local parlance) 10m long that marauded its way across the countryside chomping cows and horses in its tracks.


Continued (with video and photographs): BBC News - Close encounters with Japan's 'living fossil'
 
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