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Home » Environment

New species named after Hollywood blockbuster

Submitted by on June 19, 2012 – 11:48 am

Forest and Bird

The new species of day-flying moth found during Forest & Bird’s Denniston BioBlitz in March will be named after the world’s most successful movie Avatar, scientist Brian Patrick announced today.

Arctesthes avatar, or more commonly the Avatar moth, is a fast and low-flying striped moth that was discovered by Wildlands entomologist Brian and soon after caught by his son Hamish during the species scavenger hunt on the West Coast’s Denniston Plateau in March.

 

Brian, Hamish and Forest & Bird opened naming rights to the public to raise awareness about the plans to coal mine on the Denniston

Plateau where the new species was found.

 

The father and son duo judged the winner from nearly 100 entries and although tempted by “Denniston survivor” and “Arctesthes bioblitzia”, Brian said the Avatar moth was a clear winner. “It was by far the best one. It’s a novel name and the movie is about a mining company that threatens to devastate a human-like species that’s living in harmony with nature. It’s just a really good analogy.”

 

The movie parallels the real life threat to the environmentally unique plateau as Australian mining company Bathurst Resources plans to open-cast mine on Denniston Plateau. If it goes ahead, it would be the country’s largest open-cast mine on public conservation land. Forest & Bird is appealing the consents and is working to save the plateau and have it made into a reserve.

 

The Avatar moth is just one of the significant finds during the BioBlitz weekend that saw 150 volunteers, including top scientists, scour the plateau in search of unusual plants and animals.

 

Other new species discovered are likely to include another moth, beetle, wingless wasp and three spiders. Forest & Bird Top of the South Field Officer Debs Martin says discovering the new species underscores the ecological importance of the area and the urgent need to protect it from mining.

 

“All the scientists agree that the plateau harbours life, especially little life, that is either not known or is relatively uncommon elsewhere. Denniston Plateau provides a mainland island habitat that we’re only just discovering,” she says.

 

 

For more information, follow the Twitter hashtag #denniston

 

Contacts: Top of the South Field Officer Debs Martin (03) 989 3355, [email protected]
Entomologist Brian Patrick, (03) 332 3868, [email protected]

 

For a hi-res jpeg of the moth, please contact Jolene Williams at [email protected].nz

 

 

Jolene Williams
COMMUNICATIONS OFFICER

Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society of New Zealand Inc.
Level 1 . 90 Ghuznee St . PO Box 631 . Wellington 6140. New Zealand
DD 04 803 1020 . M 027 3255 125 . F 04 385 7373

You can join Forest & Bird at www.forestandbird.org.nz

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