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European blood-sucker falls victim to global warming Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.com August 26, 2007
Land leeches, generally confined to habitats with heavy rainfall in tropical Asia, Australia and Madagascar, are aggressive parasites that commonly feed on the blood of warm-blooded animals, especially mammals. While land leeches are usually found in warm, humid regions, they are also known to occur in temperate climates. The European land leech (Xerobdella lecomtei) is one such species. Discovered in 1868 in the forests of Austria, Xerobdella lecomtei is believed to be one of the rarest animals on Earth, with only scattered individuals collected over the past 140 years. In an effort to learn more about the elusive species, a team of German and Austrian researchers set out to find individuals living in their natural habitat: birch forests around Graz (Austria). Led by Dr. Ulrich Kutschera, a biology professor at the University of Kassel in Germany, the scientists managed to find only a single specimen in expeditions between 2001 and 2005. Observing the individual -- dubbed the "lonesome George of the annelids" -- over a four-year period, the researchers learned more the ecology and evolutionary history of this species, which has become "largely extinct over the past four decades."
"The increase in air temperature led to a sharp decline in the moisture content of the soil of the birch forests where the land leeches live, notably in the hot summer of 2003," write the authors. "Reisinger [the discoverer of the leech] reported that in the laboratory, the optimal temperature for the cultivation and maintenance of Xerobdella populations is around 12°C and that at 25°C these cold-adapted worms rapidly die... Based on our climate data and field observations, we suggest that recent human-induced warming may have led over past decades to the almost complete extinction of a local population of this rare animal species." While the researchers allow that populations could still exist in cooler forests, they warn that the decline of the European land leech shows that "human-induced warming without apparent habitat destruction may lead to subtle changes in biodiversity, notably the decline and extinction of populations that consist of cold-adapted species."
Similar findings were reported earlier this month in the journal Biology letters. Justin Gerlach, an Oxford University biologist with the Nature Protection Trust of Seychelles, found that recent decreases in rainfall likely caused the extinction of the Aldabra banded snail, a rare and beautiful snail, since 1997. These results, from three very different ecosystems, suggest the outlook is not good for Earth's most sensitive species. Many scientists believe that the quiet exit of these species is a harbinger of more serious changes to come. CITATION: U. Kutschera & I. Pfeiffer & E. Ebermann (2007). The European land leech: biology and DNA-based taxonomy of a rare species that is threatened by climate warming. Naturwissenschaften DOI 10.1007/s00114-007-0278-3 Comments? News options News index | RSS | Add to MyYahoo! Advertisements: Organic Apparel from Patagonia | Insect-repelling clothing |
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