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Meet macroscelides micus,
or the Etendaka round-eared sengi.
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It's a mouthful.
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(female narrator) Sengis,
or elephant shrews,
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are very unusual mammals
found only in Africa.
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(Jack Dumbacher) The early biologists
who discovered them and described them,
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they tried to lump them in with shrews,
but they were unusual for shrews
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because they had a long proboscis —
their nose was long,
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not quite like an elephant's trunk,
but it can move them around
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and their nostrils are at the end
like an elephant's trunk
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and so they called them elephant shrews.
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It turns out that they're
genetically more closely related
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to elephants and aardvarks and dugongs
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than they are to the other shrews.
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(narrator) This news species
was discovered and described recently
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by Academy scientists
and their colleagues.
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They found the specimen in Namibia,
where other sengis live,
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but with its red hair, it looked
a little different from the rest.
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(Jack) It was unclear
at the time whether that was
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just a red-haired individual
or whether it was
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actually genetically very distinct
from the others.
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So it took quite a bit of work,
looking at the skull,
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looking at the skins,
and then some genetic work
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before we realized that it
actually was very distinct.
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Then once we knew that we had
something new and different
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from all the others,
we actually went back to the field
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so that we could learn
a little bit more about them.
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(narrator) Their fieldwork confirmed it,
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and the team recently
published their results.
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(Jack Dumbacher) It turns out
that it's the smallest
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of all of the elephant shrews,
so it's the smallest member of its order.
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In addition to being smaller,
it has a very large gland
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on the tail, which it
probably uses for scent marking.
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This particular species tends to live
in areas that are very remote
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and extremely dry, so they
probably need a huge home range.
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That's how they might tell
other individuals where they are.
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Even their mate might be hard to find
on such a large home range
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without something like that.
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(narrator) To learn more
about these critters,
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Jack and Glen Rathbun
will return to the field this fall.
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(Jack Dumbacher) We want to go
back to Namibia this fall
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to try and understand its home range,
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whether they're monogamous
like some of the other groups,
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what they feed on, when they're active —
during the night or day —
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probably mostly during the night —
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we're going to be radio-collaring
these teeny, tiny mouse-like critters
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and following them around
in the desert with radios.
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(narrator) But for now,
these new small mammals are making news.
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(Jack Dumbacher) We tend to think
that we know the mammal fauna
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of the world fairly well, and so when you
do discover a new mammal,
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it's a pretty special thing.
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♪ (light music) ♪