Britain's Natural History Museum announces ancient long-extinct amphibians discovered in Brazil
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Britain's Natural History Museum announces ancient long-extinct amphibians discovered in Brazil
Reconstruction of the new species of extinct amphibians, Timonya anneae (left) and Procuhy nazariensis (right), in their ancient lake ecosystem © Andrey Atuchin.



LONDON (AFP).- Scientists have discovered two previously unknown salamander-like creatures that lived 278 million years ago in Brazil that could shed light on how animals respond to climate change, Britain's Natural History Museum said on Thursday.

Fossils of the amphibians were discovered alongside the oldest reptile skeleton ever found in South America by an international team of scientists from the Natural History Museum, Argentina, Germany and other countries.

The discovery was announced in a study in the journal Nature.

"The find fills an important geographic gap in our understanding of the evolution and adaptation of amphibians, a group that is increasingly under threat today from environmental change," the Natural History Museum said in a statement.

The two species were aquatic amphibians, named timonya annae and procuhy nazariensis.

Timonya annae was a fanged creature that reached 40 centimetres in length and looked like a cross between a modern Mexican salamander and an eel, according to the research.

A close relative, procuhy nazariensis would have reached a similar size.

Palaeontologist Martha Richter described the discovery as "remarkable" as most knowledge of four-legged vertebrates from the period is limited to North America and Western Europe, with little known about what animals lived in the southern tropics.

Richter, a co-author of the Nature study and fossil vertebrates collection manager at the Natural History Museum, said the discovery would improve understanding on how animals respond to rapid environmental change, as the fossils pre-date the worst-known mass extinction.

"More than 90 percent of all the species on Earth went extinct at the end of the Permian 253 million years ago, as conditions worldwide became so inhospitable," Richter said.

"Understanding the composition of extinct faunas like this in northeastern Brazil and how they changed through time may help us to better predict how today's lake systems and their complex communities of animals evolve in response to the extensive global environmental changes."

The team also found the oldest reptile bone fossil ever discovered in South America, a fossil similar to a lizard-like creature, captorhinus aguti, found in rocks dating from the same time in North America.



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