Silent Spring for the giant earwig?
Fabian Haas
haas.smns at NATURKUNDEMUSEUM-BW.DE
Thu Feb 2 09:19:08 CST 2006
Well Ken, strictly speaking we cannot write off that species, though it
wasnt found with two extra expeditions, you are right. There is still
the possibility that they looked at the wrong place at the wrong time,
and after all it is an earwig and not too many people are interested in
them. So in contrast to birds and butterflies the search and recording
frequencies are quite low in any case. That is probably one reason why
there are only these two collecting events in 1789 and 1960's.
Though this time the earwig is a real big one and attracts considerable
'extra' attention because of this.
Hans Hendericks told me that the late Dr. Leleup said it is there but at
some rather special place. Unfortunately Dr. Leleup seemingly did not
record & publish this.
Anybody going to St. Helena, shortly?
Best
Fabian Haas
Ken Kinman schrieb:
> I think it is still premature to write off the giant earwig as extinct. My understanding is that none were collected between its discovery in 1798 and the specimens found in the 1960's. In spite of its size, maybe this species is just particularly elusive for some reason. Although expeditions (such as those in 1988 and 2003) failed to find it, who knows if this species may still be hanging in there (like the ivory-billed woodpecker). In any case, maybe it will help save some of the other 200 endemic invertebrate species on the island by delaying, modifying, or even preventing plans on constructing a controversial airport. If tourists are too lazy to go there by boat, maybe they should just go elsewhere (where the wildlife has already been exterminated anyway).
> -----Ken Kinman
>
>
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Dr. Fabian Haas, FRES
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