• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Cave-Dwelling “Baby Dragons” Found Sneaking To The Surface, Surprising Scientists

March 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Subterranean salamanders, once thought to dwell exclusively in their underwater caverns, spend a surprising amount of time aboveground, new research has revealed. The blind beasties, called olms, have been spotted venturing out of their underground caves in northern Italy and scoping things out at the surface.

The olm (Proteus anguinus) are bizarre creatures, once thought to be baby dragons. After millions of years spent (largely) in darkness, it is effectively blind, has a ghostly pale complexion, a sharp sense of smell and hearing, and navigates using electric fields. But despite these cave-dwelling specializations, known as troglomorphisms, it seems olms are not strictly bound to life below the ground.

Advertisement

“To date, very limited observations of olms outside caves are available,” the researchers write in their paper. And those that have been spotted elsewhere are considered to have been flukes.

However, in 2020, the team stumbled across one swimming in an aboveground spring, much to their surprise. Investigating further, they realized this was not such a rare occurrence as first suspected.

“Unexpectedly, olms were repeatedly detected even during the daytime, when conditions of surface habitats (light, visual predator occurrence) are assumed to be particularly unsuitable for cave specialists,” they write.

Olms were observed in 15 springs in northeastern Italy, and in one instance, a larva was found – an “exceptional finding” the team say. “To our knowledge, it represents the smallest individual ever found in the field and the only larva found outside caves.” As it was discovered during a period when no flooding could explain its presence there, this could suggest that olms can breed in aboveground springs, although this is expected to be a rarity (if the case at all).

Advertisement

Even if they aren’t breeding at the surface, the researchers suspect the species may be feeding there. They handled 12 olms, five of which regurgitated recently eaten earthworms. None of the worms belonged to species living in underground environments such as caves, so the olms must have gorged themselves on earthworms found during an excursion to the surface.

Despite the huge amount of energy required for an olm to zip between cave and spring, they don’t seem to be faring too badly, study author Dr Raoul Manenti told The New York Times. While they tend to be on the skinny side at the best of times, some of the olms found at the surface were “downright plump”.

These strange salamanders really are full of surprises.

The study is published in the journal Ecology.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Iceland’s Crowberry Capital launches $90M Seed and Early-stage fund aimed at Nordics
  2. European stocks slide as Evergrande concerns resurface
  3. Fortescue buys 60% stake in Dutch-based renewable energy firm
  4. Scientists Once Scanned The Brains Of 3 Suspected Zombies In Haiti

Source Link: Cave-Dwelling “Baby Dragons” Found Sneaking To The Surface, Surprising Scientists

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • “We Were Genuinely Astonished”: Moss Spores Survive 9 Months In Space Before Successfully Reproducing Back On Earth
  • The US’s Surprisingly Recent Plan To Nuke The Moon In Search Of “Negative Mass”
  • 14,400-Year-Old Paw Prints Are World’s Oldest Evidence Of Humans Living Alongside Domesticated Dogs
  • The Tribe That Has Lived Deep Within The Grand Canyon For Over 1,000 Years
  • Finger Monkeys: The Smallest Monkeys In The World Are Tiny, Chatty, And Adorable
  • Atmospheric River Brings North America’s Driest Place 25 Percent Of Its Yearly Rainfall In A Single Day
  • These Extinct Ice Age Giant Ground Sloths Were Fans Of “Cannonball Fruit”, Something We Still Eat Today
  • Last Year’s Global Aurora-Sparking “Superstorm” Squashed Earth’s Plasmasphere To A Fifth Its Usual Size
  • Theia – The Giant Impactor That Formed The Moon – Assembled Closer To The Sun Than Earth Is Now
  • Testosterone And Body Odor May Quietly Influence How People Perceive The Social Status Of Men
  • There Have Been At Least 50 Incidents Of Spiders Capturing And Eating Bats (That We Know Of)
  • A “Very Old, Undisturbed Structure” May Have Been Discovered Beyond The Orbit Of Neptune, 43 AU From The Sun
  • NASA Finally Reveals Comet 3I/ATLAS Images From 8 Missions, Including First From Another Planet’s Surface
  • 360 Million Years Ago, Cleveland Was Home To A Giant Predatory Fish Unlike Anything Alive Today
  • Under RFK Jr, CDC Turns Against Scientific Consensus On Autism And Vaccines, Incorrectly Claiming Lack Of Evidence
  • Megalodon VS T. Rex: Who Had The Biggest Teeth?
  • The 100 Riskiest Decisions You’ll Likely Ever Make
  • Funky-Nosed “Pinocchio” Chameleons Get A Boost As They Turn Out To Be Multiple Species
  • The Leech Craze: The Medical Fad That Nearly Eradicated A Species
  • Unusual Rock Found By NASA’s Perseverance Rover Likely “Formed Elsewhere In The Solar System”
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version