From an article at Discovery News: “A bustling airport would hardly seem the place to find a new species of reclusive animal, but a team of California biologists recently found a shy new species of legless lizard living at the end of a runway at Los Angeles International Airport. What’s more, the same team discovered three additional new species of these distinctive, snake-like lizards that are also living in some inhospitable-sounding places for wildlife: at a vacant lot in downtown Bakersfield, among oil derricks in the lower San Joaquin Valley and on the margins of the Mojave desert.” Here’s some more information in the form of a press release from Cal State Fullerton, home to James Parham, one of the discoverers…. From an article at Discovery News: “A bustling airport would hardly seem the place to find a new species of reclusive animal, but a team of California biologists recently found a shy new species of legless lizard living at the end of a runway at Los Angeles International Airport. What’s more, the same team discovered three additional new species of these distinctive, snake-like lizards that are also living in some inhospitable-sounding places for wildlife: at a vacant lot in downtown Bakersfield, among oil derricks in the lower San Joaquin Valley and on the margins of the Mojave desert.” Here’s some more information in the form of a press release from Cal State Fullerton, home to James Parham, one of the discoverers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.






Read more http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/SFqg2edLgSE/story01.htm