Houston Chronicle

Scientists discover new, frightenin­g-looking creature.

- By Roger Simmons

ORLANDO, Fla. — It’s as long as a snake, is spotted like a leopard, has two small arms with gills sticking out of its body and it lives in the swamps of Florida’s Panhandle. What is it?

It’s a new creature that was discovered by scientists, who announced their findings last week. They say it’s a type of legless salamander called a siren — and this new species is being officially called Siren reticulata, or the reticulate­d siren. Others have referred to it as a leopard eel, even though it’s not really an eel.

Scientists say the reticulate­d siren is among the largest species discovered in the United States in the last century.

“In this study we use morphologi­cal and genetic evidence to describe a previously unrecogniz­ed species from southern Alabama and the Florida panhandle,” the scientists wrote in their paper, published in the journal Plos.

“We name this species the Reticulate­d Siren, Siren reticulata. Future studies will enable more precise phylogenet­ic informatio­n about S. reticulata and will almost surely reveal additional undescribe­d species within the family.”

NationalGe­ographic.com, which interviewe­d one of the authors of the scientific paper, said stories about this strange swamp creature have been passed around the Florida and Alabama area for years.

“What immediatel­y jumps out about the reticulate­d siren that makes it so different from currently recognized species is its dark and reticulate­d (or net-like) pattern,” Steen told National Geographic. “It also seems as though they have a disproport­ionally smaller head, as compared to other sirens.”

Despite efforts to find more specimens, the scientists reported, their efforts proved futile for five years. “However, on 8 June 2014, three more specimens were collected in a freshwater marsh adjacent to Lake Jackson in Walton County, Florida.”

The reticulate­d siren was so hard to find because it spends its entire life below the surface of the water, the scientists said.

“S. reticulata has an elongate, eel-like body shape, two forelimbs, no eyelids, a lateral line, enlarged external gill fimbriae associated with gill slits, and a horny beak in place of the premaxilla­ry teeth typical of other salamander­s,” the scientists said in their descriptio­n of the creature.

The reticulate­d siren has only been confirmed in three locations so far — Eglin AFB in Florida’s Okaloosa County, Lake Jackson and in the Fish River near Baldwin County, Ala.

 ?? Journals.Plos.org ?? The reticulate­d siren spends its entire life underwater.
Journals.Plos.org The reticulate­d siren spends its entire life underwater.

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