New: Hawaiian Fish, Panama Salamanders, and Madagascar Millipedes

Posted by: Loren Coleman on September 12th, 2007

Marine biologist Marc Hughes was recently successful in catching a new species of the genus Grammonus, an unusual six inch long brown fish. Hughes had been searching for these fish since he first encountered one of them in 1998, off Hawaii.

New Kona Fish

The new Hawaiian fish (above) discovered and photographed by Marc Hughes.

The Honolulu Star-Bulletin reporter Rod Thompson writes:

Hughes was studying micro-mollusks that look like sand in the South Kona cave near Kona Paradise subdivision in 1998 when he spotted the unusual fish and took a picture. Another photographer took a picture at about the same time.
The fish had a downturned mouth, and fins along its rear looked similar to an eel. Hugh showed the picture to [John E.] Randall [at the Bishop Museum], who saw it was unusual but could not declare a new species on the basis of a photograph.

Hughes ended his nearly decade-long search for a specimen of the fish in April [2007], catching one and sending it to Oahu via a tropical fish dealer.

The fish arrived dead, and the dealer, seeing no value in a dead fish, threw it away. Hughes returned to the cave and caught another one on July 21 [2007].

Shortly after Hughes found his second specimen, biologist Bronson Nagareda caught another one off Waianae and sent it to Randall.

Randall will be writing the scientific paper to get formal recognition and a new name for this fish.

Thompson also notes:

Randall said other Grammonus fish include a species in the Mediterranean and another with the species name Robustus found from Japan through South Asia to the Gulf of Aden at the Horn of Africa.

Randall determined that the Hawaii fish are different partly by X-raying them and counting their vertebrae, different from other Grammonus species.

Grammonus fish give birth to live babies rather than eggs, unusual for marine fish, Randall said.

In other new species news, German biologists have reportedly identified 43 new species of insects and millipedes on the island of Madagascar.

Highlights included eleven new “giant pill millipedes” – some of them were as large as an orange when rolled up – a world record – and were already on earth during the dinosaur era. Among other species found were stick insects, praying mantises and dragon flies.

giant pill millipede

This huge orange pill millipede is not a new find, but related to the giant pill millipedes recently discovered.

It has been announced that there has been the discovery of two new species of salamanders from the mountainous Costa Rica-Panama border region.

Bolitoglossa gomezi

The paratype species of Bolitoglossa gomezi recently discovered in Panama, as photographed by Dr. Alan Jaslow of Rhodes College.

Thanks for the heads up from Wayne Fenner for the fish news.

Loren Coleman About Loren Coleman
Loren Coleman is one of the world’s leading cryptozoologists, some say “the” leading living cryptozoologist. Certainly, he is acknowledged as the current living American researcher and writer who has most popularized cryptozoology in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Starting his fieldwork and investigations in 1960, after traveling and trekking extensively in pursuit of cryptozoological mysteries, Coleman began writing to share his experiences in 1969. An honorary member of Ivan T. Sanderson’s Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained in the 1970s, Coleman has been bestowed with similar honorary memberships of the North Idaho College Cryptozoology Club in 1983, and in subsequent years, that of the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club, CryptoSafari International, and other international organizations. He was also a Life Member and Benefactor of the International Society of Cryptozoology (now-defunct). Loren Coleman’s daily blog, as a member of the Cryptomundo Team, served as an ongoing avenue of communication for the ever-growing body of cryptozoo news from 2005 through 2013. He returned as an infrequent contributor beginning Halloween week of 2015. Coleman is the founder in 2003, and current director of the International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine.


10 Responses to “New: Hawaiian Fish, Panama Salamanders, and Madagascar Millipedes”

  1. Mnynames responds:

    Is it just me, or does the species Bolitoglossa gomezi look like it’s well on its way to evolving into a Caecilian? Are they of any close relation, or just similar lifestyle?

  2. DWA responds:

    I should add: a new millipede, big as an orange when rolled up. Totally new to science.

    On an island that’s been intensively studied, and cultivated, for a long long time.

    So we’ve discovered everything now, right? 😀

  3. mystery_man responds:

    Back from vacation and on the site and I see this fascinating pic of the new millipede that just drew my eyes to it. Beautiful, but I wouldn’t want to find one of those creeping around my room at night. 🙂

  4. sschaper responds:

    How does that “pill millipede” compare to a triobite?

  5. Loren Coleman responds:

    Actually, convergence evolution (as in why a dolphin and a shark look alike) is fooling you into thinking there’s very direct relationship between trilobites and millipedes.

    They are as close as a cat and a pigeon, separated on the order of Class divisions.

    a cat

    Kingdom:
    Animalia
    Phylum:
    Chordata
    Class:
    Mammalia
    Order:
    Carnivora
    Suborder:
    Feliformia
    Family:
    Felidae

    a pigeon

    Kingdom:
    Animalia
    Phylum:
    Chordata
    Class:
    Aves
    Order:
    Columbiformes
    Family:
    Columbidae

    a trilobite

    Kingdom:
    Animalia
    Phylum:
    Arthropoda
    Class:
    Trilobita

    a millipede

    Kingdom:
    Animalia
    Phylum:
    Arthropoda
    Subphylum:
    Myriapoda
    Class:
    Diplopoda

  6. twas brillig responds:

    WOW! that PILL MILLIPEDE is UNBELIEVABLY STUNNING! Looks like it received an expensive acrylic or laquered paint finish. Exquisite! Right out of science fiction! I was thinking it looked more like a pill bug (potato bug) than a trilobite tho.

    Tragedy does not express adequately the magnitude of the loss of plant and animal species we stand to lose as Madagascar’s remaining forests are decimated.

  7. Loren Coleman responds:

    One person’s “pill millipede” is another person’s “pill bug” or “sow bug” or “woodlouse” or “potato bug.” This is not to be confused with the “potato beetle,” a/k/a the Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata, also known as the Colorado beetle, ten-striped spearman, the ten-lined potato beetle.

  8. mystery_man responds:

    It may be interesting for some to note that the common garden variety “pill bug” or “rolly polly” is actually a terrestrial crustacean. If you consider all arthropods to be “bugs”, then I suppose you could call them that, but then you’d have to call crabs “bugs” too. Wouldn’t be very appetizing on a seafood menu, I’d imagine. It is interesting that Loren brings up convergence evolution, because there are many unrelated creatures that share the appearance and some of the functions of our “pill bug” friends and they haven’t changed much in a very long time. It seems to be a very successful form to take.

  9. sschaper responds:

    Loren,
    I guess it might even get into the splitter/joiner controversy (like the ox report), but do we know that about the trilobite from actual observations of the fossils? We don’t have DNA to comparatively sequence. Sometimes classifications can be awfully subjective. Of course similar forms of dissimilar animals is well-known as you point out.

  10. Mnynames responds:

    Mystery Man,
    I always had great fun relating that fact about Isopods when I was conducting field trips into the salt marshes of Brigantine, NJ. I also learned that almost nobody knows them as Sow Bugs anymore, and very few as Pill Bugs, at least in the areas of New Jersey and Philadelphia. Almost everyone knew them as Roly Poly’s, as I did too, growing up in the Atlantic City area.

    As for convergent evolution, the “Stop, Drop, & Roll” survival strategy of the Pill Bug is quite effective, as any Atomic Energy Commissioner can tell you…LOL. I suspect in the event of a nuclear explosion, however, that it would be a lot more effective for these little guys than it would us…

    Sschaper, if you’re asking for a simple size comparison between the 2, it depends on the Trilobite, as there are hundreds of known species, some small, others quite large.

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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