| Dwarf Cloud Rat Rediscovered |
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| Monday, 28 April 2008 06:48 | |||
![]() Example of Cloud Rat (Northern Luzon) The dwarf cloud rat, said to be a long-time mystery for biologists, was captured by a team of Filipino and American scientists who conducted a survey of small mammals in Mt. Pulag. Lawrence Heaney, curator of the mammals at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, and Danilo Balete, research associate of the Philippine National Museum, rediscovered the dwarf cloud rat in a portion of a mossy forest in Mt. Pulag. The scientists called for stricter implementation of conservation laws to protect the several animal and plant species found in Mt. Pulag. "You can't find a place like Mt. Pulag in other parts of the world," Heaney stressed. The team believed the dwarf cloud rat lived up in moss-covered trees, based on its physical characteristics. Heaney said the animal is quiet sensitive to human intrusions, reason why it is only found in a thickly covered forest. The mammal was last seen 112 years ago in Mt. Data. The dwarf cloud rat has soft, reddish-brown fur, a black mask around large dark eyes, small rounded ears, a broad and blunt snout and a long tail covered with dark hair.
Its picture was first published in 1898, two years after it was discovered by British biologist John Whitehead in Mt. Data in Mountain Province.
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 30 April 2008 05:00 |