JAKARTA: A team of
scientists exploring an isolated jungle in one of Indonesia's most remote provinces said
they discovered dozens of new species of frogs, butterflies and plants - as well as large mammals hunted to near extinction elsewhere.
The team also found wildlife that were remarkably unafraid of humans during their rapid assessment survey of the Foja Mountains, which has more than two million acres of old growth tropical forest, Bruce Beehler, a co-leader of the monthlong trip, said in announcing the discoveries on Tuesday.
Two Long-Beaked Echidnas, a primitive egg-laying mammal, simply allowed
scientists to pick them up and bring them back to their camp to be studied, he said.
Their findings, however, will have to be published and then reviewed by peers before being officially classified as new species, a process that could take six months to several years.
The December 2005
expedition to the eastern province of Papua was organised by the US-based environmental organisation Conservation International and the Indonesian Institute of Sciences.
There was not a single trail, no sign of civilisation, no sign of even local communities ever having been there, said Beehler, adding that two headmen from the Kwerba and Papasena tribes, the customary landowners of the Foja Mountains, accompanied the expedition