Two chubby marsupial species that would literally die for sex (albeit 14-hour sessions) have been discovered Down Under, researchers now report.
The new species are types of antechinus, a bristly haired, mouselike marsupial that eats meaty meals such as spiders and insects. Every year, antechinus males fight each other tooth and claw so they can have sex with as many females as possible before dying.
After sex is complete, with some sprees lasting as long as 14 hours, stress hormones in males skyrocket, causing their immune systems to collapse, “and they all drop dead before the females give birth to a single baby,” lead study author Andrew Baker, a mammalogist at the Queensland University of Technology’s Science and Engineering department, said in a statement.
Until now, 10 species of this sex-crazed marsupial were known to science, with the first discovered in 1803. In the past three years, however, scientists have identified five new antechinus species, revealing the genus has more diversity than previously thought. Like the known antechinus species, the two most recently discovered species also spend two to three weeks a year in a testosterone-fueled mating marathon, the researchers said.
Scientists found one of the new species, the Tasman Peninsula dusky antechinus (Antechinus vandycki), in the remote areas of southeastern Tasmania. Researchers already knew about the other brown, furry marsupial, but didn’t realize it was its own species until now. Now named the mainland dusky antechinus (Antechinus swainsonii mimetes), the newbie lives in parts of New South Wales and Victoria in Australia.
However, A. vandycki faces challenges beyond surviving a mating frenzy: Loggers are tearing apart the animal’s habitat and may push the species into a threatened status, the researchers said. Moreover, three of the relatively new antechinus species, including A. vandycki,are also threatened by climate change; feral pests, such as cats and non-native foxes; and habitat loss, the researchers said.
“We discovered the Tasman Peninsula dusky antechinus not far from the old European settlement town of Port Arthur in Tasmania,” Baker said in the statement. “Most of its limited habitat falls within state forest, which is being logged.
“This species now apparently only lives in tiny, fragmented stands of intact forest that are under threat,” Baker added. “It’s a shame that mere moments after discovery, these little Tasmanian marsupials are threatened with extinction at human hands.”
In fact, Baker has already tried to place two of the other antechinus species he discovered — the black-tailed and silver-headed antechinus — on the state’s threatened species list.
“Both these species are found on remote mountaintops in southeast Queensland,” Baker said. “These species have already retreated to their misty mountain summits. In the face of ongoing climate warming, they have nowhere left to run.”
Read more at Discovery News
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