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Wednesday, November 19, 2008 | Science : Evolution and Biology | print version Print | Comments |

Document Scientists discover long-lost Furby-look-alike

by CNN

Reposted from:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/science/11/19/elusive.primate/index.html

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Pygmy tarsiers thought to be extinct for more than eight decades
- Scientists working in Lore Lindu National Park caught and released three
- Primate resembles Furby toy that was popular in 1990s
- Scientist says villages near park threaten pygmy tarsiers' existence

tarsier(CNN) -- Scientists have found a wide-eyed primate -- a clawed fur ball that fits snugly in one hand -- in the first live sighting in more than 80 years of a creature that some thought was extinct.

Over a two-month period, scientists working in Lore Lindu National Park on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi caught and released three pygmy tarsiers. They bear a striking resemblance to the Furby, an electronic toy that spoke its own fantasy language and dominated children's wish lists in the late 1990s.

They caught two males and one female, said Sharon Gursky-Doyen, a Texas A&M University anthropology professor who led the expedition. The group spotted a fourth -- high in the tree canopy -- but were unable to catch it.

The species had not been observed alive in more than eight decades, since they were collected for a museum in 1921. Many scientists had believed them to be extinct until eight years ago, when two scientists trapping rats in Sulawesi accidentally trapped and killed one.

"I needed to go myself ... to confirm in my own mind," whether they were there, Gursky-Doyen told CNN on Wednesday, after recently returning from Indonesia.

And, on the second night of trapping in August on moss-covered, chilly Mt. Rore Katimbo, her group caught the first small nocturnal creature in a mist net.

"It was truly amazing," she said. "My whole body was shaking ... I couldn't conceive that we had actually caught one."

The second trapping didn't come until three weeks later, but that first sighting "kept us going," Gursky-Doyen said, amid the cold, drenched conditions.

The pygmy tarsier, or Tarsius pumilus, weighs about 50 grams (1.7 ounces), and has dense fur, large, protruding eyes. In addition to seeming as a living, breathing version of the Furby, it also appears as though it ought to have had appeared in the 1984 movie "Gremlins."

Unlike other primates, the pygmy tarsier -- endemic to a specific area of Indonesia -- has claws instead of nails on its fingers. It is half as big as the Philippines tarsier, which has similar features.

For their part, the pygmy tarsiers may have been more frightened than elated at being discovered.

"I was bit once, but I take responsibility for that," Gursky-Doyen said, explaining that the animal nipped her as she was trying to attach a radio collar -- to track its movement -- to its neck. The task isn't an easy one, she said, because the animal can swivel its head around 180 degrees.

Despite another person helping to hold the animal still, he turned and bit her, she said. They have "pointy, triangular teeth," she said. It was "very painful."

But for the most part, they appeared very "passive," she said. Other tarsier species give alarm calls, but these didn't, at least nothing that a human could hear, she said.

Gursky-Doyen said she would like her graduate student, Nanda Grow, also on the expedition, to return to the field site for her dissertation, to learn more about the number of animals and how altitude and other variables affect them.

"I do believe that the density of these animals is very low," she said, noting that many villages are located within Lore Lindu National Park. "That threatens them," she said.

Comments 1 - 21 of 21 |

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1. Comment #287065 by kkelly on November 19, 2008 at 5:55 pm

AWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW

Other Comments by kkelly

2. Comment #287068 by splink on November 19, 2008 at 5:59 pm

yeah it pretty much looks nothing like a furby or a Mogwai. This is a pretty good model of how not to write the news. Two lines about how much they resemble something which they do not and a single line about their threatened environment.

Other Comments by splink

3. Comment #287072 by Sciros on November 19, 2008 at 6:04 pm

 avatarIt's CNN. It's written for the average person. The average person is just short of retarded. They will be like "wow a furby."

Looks ok. Of the prosimians I like ruffed lemurs and ringtail lemurs the most, though.

Other Comments by Sciros

4. Comment #287080 by j.mills on November 19, 2008 at 6:11 pm

 avatarUnfortunately there's little prospect of emptying a few villages to save a handful of small cute tarsiers. The practical way to go is to ensure the villagers have an economic stake in preserving the environment, with minimum disturbance. It's good that it's already a National Park but there are no easy solutions to these tensions. ("Furby tourism" doesn't sound like a promising approach either!)

Other Comments by j.mills

5. Comment #287105 by SpEcImEn128 on November 19, 2008 at 6:39 pm

 avatarMaybe they could catch them and stuff them with hay to sell them as souvenirs to the tourists. That would be good for the native's economy, it seems they make good money with gorilla heads in congo.

Other Comments by SpEcImEn128

6. Comment #287213 by ChicagoMolly on November 19, 2008 at 8:59 pm

SpEcImEn128--

Or we could eat 'em. See this article from The Reader http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/wholehog/ about some Illinois farmers who are trying to bring the mulefoot pig back from the edge of extinction by framing the beasts as a yuppie gourmet treat. This will start a demand for mulefoot roast, bacon, sausage, etc., and thus incenting farmers to breed them commercially, thus using The Miracle Of The Marketplace to accomplish what would never happen if you tried to preserve the last 200 mulefoot pigs on a swine reservation.

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7. Comment #287272 by mordacious1 on November 19, 2008 at 10:59 pm

 avatarGood thing Sarah Palin doesn't read.

Other Comments by mordacious1

8. Comment #287291 by jeroen on November 20, 2008 at 1:03 am

I saw tarsiers in the Philippines in the national park reserve - fantastic animals, though sadly not very well-equipped to escape from cats and humans.
Tourism does help in this case - visits help fund the research centre and they were expanding the scientific reserve area.

Other Comments by jeroen

9. Comment #287302 by friendlypig on November 20, 2008 at 1:29 am

 avatarTarsiers figured large in the first 'Evolve' programme that looked at the evolution of the eye.

Amazingly enough, their eyes are larger than their skulls, so they rest on the eye sockets, which appears to be little more than an indentation. The eyes are held in place by ligaments so strong that they are unable to swivel them; they have to turn their heads instead.

Other Comments by friendlypig

10. Comment #287306 by GandalfGrey on November 20, 2008 at 1:36 am

 avatarIt sort of looks like a Gremlin (the cute kind).
Anyone tried feeding it after midnight?

Other Comments by GandalfGrey

11. Comment #287316 by PJG on November 20, 2008 at 1:58 am

 avatarI want one.


JOKE!!!!

Other Comments by PJG

12. Comment #287374 by Vanpastel on November 20, 2008 at 3:54 am

 avatarFrom cute overload:
Pygmy Tarsier.
Let's break it down:

Top 3 Pros
Suction-cup hands
Miniscule earses
Overall pocket-pet size

Top 3 Cons
We're talking some seriously bulbous eye action
alien-esque eye-to-schnozzle ratio
Appears to be nocturnal which means he could bite your nose clean off after dark

http://www.cuteoverload.com/

Other Comments by Vanpastel

13. Comment #287410 by mitch_486 on November 20, 2008 at 6:30 am

 avatarSplink,

Because the media has made a comparison of this tarsier to a "furby", mainstream society can actually make a connection with it. This can only lead to compassion and hopefully even environmental awareness.
I wish sharks had a cute look-a-like toy, although, sadly, that is not the case.


edit: just think about the connection a person who owned a furby in the late 90's would have with this animal.

Other Comments by mitch_486

14. Comment #287420 by bungoton on November 20, 2008 at 6:55 am

I saw Tarsiers on Bohol Island in the Philippines. They are so small its hard to believe there is a pygmy variety. The Philippine variety is about the size of a fist and the babies about as big as a thumb. Amazingly long fingers (thus the name Tarsier) let them hang onto branches.
I have some pics of them here:

http://members.shaw.ca/road.wearier/html/bohol.htm

Other Comments by bungoton

15. Comment #287525 by ly_raya on November 20, 2008 at 9:59 am

 avatarhow and where can i get one?

and do they multiply if wet.

Other Comments by ly_raya

16. Comment #287612 by aquilacane on November 20, 2008 at 11:50 am

 avatarWould it not suck if there were only four in existence?

Other Comments by aquilacane

17. Comment #287656 by justdust on November 20, 2008 at 1:12 pm

 avatar
The average person is just short of retarded.


Tee-shirt caption alert.

Other Comments by justdust

18. Comment #287791 by polestar on November 20, 2008 at 4:31 pm

 avatarComment #287213 by ChicagoMolly "...farmers who are trying to bring the mulefoot pig back from the edge of extinction by framing the beasts as a yuppie gourmet treat...to accomplish what would never happen if you tried to preserve the last 200 mulefoot pigs on a swine reservation."

I understand that this is what saved the American Bison, now far from extinction. Still not sure about Furby-burgers though...

Other Comments by polestar

19. Comment #287801 by ty90 on November 20, 2008 at 4:50 pm

Make them an icon of the cute side of nature, a symbol for all children to love.
Make stuffed animal versions...perfect for the christmass stocking !

they say things like " Don't eat me" and " I dare you to pet me at night"

Other Comments by ty90

20. Comment #287867 by Sittingduck on November 20, 2008 at 7:42 pm

 avatar

Other Comments by Sittingduck

21. Comment #287897 by russkid on November 20, 2008 at 11:06 pm

How long before I can find one at a pet store ?

Other Comments by russkid
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