The label on a specimen of Afzelius’s crab simply said ‘Sierra Leone’. But it was enough for an expedition to track it down along with another ‘lost’ freshwater crab

Tracking down rare species believed to be extinct is never easy, but when Pierre A Mvogo Ndongo travelled to Sierra Leone in January 2021 to search for “lost” species of land-dwelling crabs, the feeling of looking for a needle in a haystack was particularly powerful due to the size of the “haystack”. For one of the species, Afzelius’s crab (Afrithelphusa afzelii), last seen in 1796, the only clue was the label on a specimen that simply said: “Sierra Leone.”

Mvogo Ndongo’s expedition was primarily looking for the rainbow-coloured, land-dwelling Sierra Leone crab Afrithelphusa leonensis, lost to science for 65 years and thought to be possibly extinct – one of the species on wildlife charity Re:wild’s 25 “most wanted lost species” list. He also hoped – but never expected – to find, Afzelius’s crab (Afrithelphusa afzelii).

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

North Korea fires two ballistic missiles into sea, South Korea military says

Launch comes as Chinese foreign minister is in Seoul to discuss stalled…

Ben Jennings on Boris Johnson at the Met Gala — cartoon

Continue reading…

Two in three state secondary schools in England teach just one foreign language

Survey finds German is most affected by shift towards single-language offer in…

William and Kate: what matters is better future for people of Commonwealth

Royal couple say they are ‘committed to service’, which is not ‘telling…