The
small, insect-eating lizard was first discovered in eastern Montana in
1974, but a recent re-examination showed the fossil had been wrongly
classified as a Leptochamops denticulatus and was in fact a new species,
researchers told Reuters on Tuesday.
Obamadon gracilis was one
of nine newly discovered species reported on Monday in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
In naming the new species,
scientists from Yale and Harvard universities combined the Latin
“Obamadon” for “Obama’s teeth” and “gracilis,” which means slender.
“The
lizard has these very tall, straight teeth and Obama has these tall,
straight incisors and a great smile,” said Nick Longrich, a
paleontologist at the school in New Haven, Connecticut.
It was
believed to have lived during the Cretaceous period, which began 145.5
million years ago. Along with many dinosaurs from that era, the lizard
died out about 65 million years ago when a giant asteroid struck earth,
scientists say.
Longrich said he waited until after the recent U.S. election to name the lizard.
“It
would look like we were kicking him when he’s down if he lost and we
named this extinct lizard after him,” he said in an interview.
“Romneydon”
was never under consideration and “Clintondon” didn’t sound good, said
Longrich, who supported Hillary Clinton’s failed run against Obama in
the 2008 Democratic primary.
Obama is not the first politician
whose name has been used to help classify organisms. Megalonyxx
jeffersonii, an extinct species of plant-eating ground sloth, was named
in honor of President Thomas Jefferson, an amateur paleontologist who
studied the mammal.

Earlier
this year, researchers announced they had named five newly identified
species of freshwater perch after Obama, Bill Clinton, Al Gore, Jimmy
Carter and Theodore Roosevelt.
In 2005, entomologists named three
species of North American slime-mold beetles Agathidium bushi,
Agathidium cheneyi and Agathidium rumsfeldi in honor of George W. Bush,
Dick Cheney, and Donald Rumsfeld – the U.S. president, vice president
and secretary of defense at the time.
Other celebrity names also
have been used to name new species. A small Caribbean crustacean has
been named after reggae icon Bob Marley, an Australian horsefly has been
named in honor of hip-hop star Beyonce, and an endangered species of
marsh rabbit has been named after Playboy magazine founder Hugh Hefner.
[Reuters]
No comments:
Post a Comment