New Species Of River Dolphin Discovered In The Amazon
A team of scientists from the Federal University of Amazonas
in Manaus, Brazil have discovered a new species of freshwater river dolphin in
the Amazon. The small group of dolphins was living in the Araguaian basin,
where they were assumed to be Amazon river dolphins (Inia geoffrensis) that had
broken off from the larger population.
Not so, the scientists reported in the journal Plos One. DNA
tests showed that the population of dolphins were genetically distinct from
their dolphin cousins and that the species likely diverged more than two
million years ago.
River dolphins are extremely rare, and the Araguaian Boto is
the first new species to be discovered since 1918, when scientists found the
Yangtze river dolphin (Lipotes vexillifer) in China.
The Yangtze river dolphin became extinct in 2006, and the
Araguaian Boto population faces its own threats. The scientists who discovered
the new dolphin recommended that the International Union for Conservation of
Nature (IUCN) classify the new species as "vulnerable."
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