‘Death Ball’ Sponge, Tiny Opossum Among 2025’s Spectacular New Species

‘Death Ball’ Sponge, Tiny Opossum Among 2025’s Spectacular New Species

The spider with extra-long genitalia (with good reason); A carnivorous caterpillar that eats the body parts of its prey; And a small, mountain-dwelling opossum is one of the spectacular new species described by science in 2025.

A new recent study With approximately 16,000 new species reported to be “discovered” each year, the rate is accelerating – 15 percent of all known species have recently been described in the last 20 years.

“Our good news is that this rate of discovery of new species far exceeds the rate of species extinction, which we calculated to be about 10 per year,” said University of Arizona ecology professor John Wiens, who co-authored the study. in a news release,

Many are not really new discoveries. In many cases, they were known or photographed locally, or were collected for museums many years earlier. They had never been identified and described by science until now.

But scientists say this official documentation step is important. “If we don’t know a species exists, we can’t protect it from extinction,” Wiens said.

This is a great way for us to learn about some interesting and unique creatures that we have never seen or heard of before. Here’s a closer look at some of them.

well endowed tarantula

Four new species of tarantula discovered in the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. What is special about them? Well, their males have the longest genitalia of all known tarantulas.

The largest species, namely satyrex feroxThe foot span is 14 centimeters (about the width of a slice of bread). But if you haven’t been impressed yet, males have genitalia called palps that are up to five centimeters long; This is almost as long as their longest legs.

big black tarantula
Satyrex ferox is the largest of four new tarantula species found in the Arabian Peninsula and the Horn of Africa. (Bobby Bok)

Alireza Zamani, a researcher at the University of Turku who led the study describing the new tarantula, suggests that the long palps “may allow the male to maintain a safe distance during mating to help him avoid being attacked and eaten by a highly aggressive female.”

The caterpillar is wearing a scary outfit

Two caterpillars covered with insect body parts
Two bone-gathering caterpillars have decorated their cases with insect body parts. (UH Manoa)

Most caterpillars are herbivorous, but this year scientists in Hawaii found one that lives in spider webs, eats prey trapped in the web, and then weaves their body parts into a coat or covering around its body (which then becomes its cocoon).

Unique “bone collector” caterpillar, which transforms into a moth with feathery wings, was described in science In April. It has only been found in a small patch of 15 square kilometers of forest in the Wai’ane mountain range on O’ahu, suggesting it is endangered.

listen Researchers talk about caterpillars on CBC’s Quirks and Quarks:

quirks and quarks7:50‘Bone collector’ caterpillar covers itself with body parts

Carnivorous ‘death-ball’ sponge

A creature that looks like a bunch of pink balls on sticks
The ROV Subastian found a carnivorous ‘death-ball’ sponge at an altitude of 3601 m at the Trench North dive site, east of Montague Island. (Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census/Schmidt Ocean Institute © 2025)

The deep ocean is a part of the planet that has been little explored by humans, and each expedition there uncovers many new and surprising species. In October, the Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census 30 new species announced Discovered in the Southern Ocean near Antarctica.

They include the “death-ball” sponge, which does not filter feed like most sponges, but instead has shells covered with small hooks to trap prey. New sea star species and an armoured, iridescent scale worm are also on the list.

pearly worm with many legs and hair at the ends
An iridescent scale worm was found at 2859 m at the South Trench dive site northwest of Zavodovsky Island in the Southern Ocean by the ROV Subastian. (Jialing Cai/The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census/Schmidt Ocean Institute © 2025)

Eggy Sea Slug

The shallow waters also yielded some beautiful and unique new species, including a sea slug that looks like it’s covered in fried eggs, named Phyllidia ovata. This wart is one of two beautiful new species of sea slugs that hunt sponges and steal their toxins for self-defense.

Their bright colors warn potential predators that they are poisonous. The new species was photographed 23 years ago by divers in North Sulawesi, Indonesia, but only described by science This past July.

A black slug with a white border and what looks like a fried egg on its back
Phyllidia ovata is one of two wart slug species discovered in Sulawesi, Indonesia. (Heike Wegele)

New Canadian Crayfish

The aquatic creature was one of the new species discovered in Canada this year. okanagan crayfish Found in BC’s Okanagan Lake. It was previously mistaken for the common, similar-looking signal crayfish. The distinguishing feature of the new species is that it lacks the distinctive white markings found on the claws of signal crayfish.

Unfortunately, the new species is considered endangered, and scientists are especially concerned because Okanagan Lake is heavily used by humans.

dark red crayfish on a rock
The Okanagan crayfish is a new species found in BC’s Okanagan Lake. (Eric Larson/University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)

New bats discovered by Canadians

Canadian researchers were also involved in the discovery of six small new species of tube-nosed bats in the Philippines.

Judith Eggar and Burton Lim of the Royal Ontario Museum Co-authored a study describing the species Just before Halloween. Each bat, weighing only four to 14 grams, was collected during expeditions by researchers in the Philippines and the Field Museum of Chicago over the past 30 years.

close up of bat face
Murina alvarezii is one of five new tube-nosed bat species described by a team of researchers, including two species at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto. (J. Sedlock)

Crocodile Hunter Snake, Pinocchio Lizard

long nosed chameleon
Calumma pinocchio is a new chameleon from Madagascar. The male has a long appendage on his snout. (Frank Glau/SNSB)

Every year some new species are named after real or fictional famous characters. There are two reptiles with famous names this year Long-nosed Pinocchio chameleon of Madagascar and a New wolf snake from Great Nicobar Island, Indiahas been named Lycodon erwini After the late Steve Irwin’s star crocodile hunter TV series.

shiny black snake
Lycodon irwini is named after the late Steve Irwin, star of The Crocodile Hunter TV series. (Girish Chaure)

small mouse opossum

Here’s one of the less scary animals on this year’s list: a small, spectacled marsupial found in the Peruvian Andes in 2018. small mouse opossum Marmosa Chachapoya It is rat-sized (about 10 cm tall, with a 15 cm tail) and lives at much higher altitudes than other rats. It was described in June in the journal American Museum Newbie,

small mouse opossum on a log
Marmosa chachapoya is a small opossum found in the Andes mountains of Peru. (Pedro Peloso)

toads without tadpoles

We don’t have any amphibians on our list yet, so let’s add a few before we go.

Three unusual species discovered this year include toads that live in trees away from water in Tanzania’s Eastern Arc Mountains. This makes the tadpole stage of their life cycle a challenge – so they abandon it and give birth to live toadlets.

“Survivalism is exceptionally rare among frogs and toads, with less than one percent of frog species practicing it, making these new species exceptionally interesting,” H. Christoph Liedtke saidA researcher at the Spanish National Research Council, who co-authored Description of the new species in November.

Brown and white marbled toad on a leaf from the front
It is one of the new tree toad species found in Tanzania, Nectophrynoides luhomeroensis. (John Lyrkurwa)

The new species was identified through physical and genetic analysis of museum specimens that were originally thought to be the same species. Two of the new species are already believed to be critically endangered.

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