Mark Gurney
The top 10 list, compiled this year by the SUNY College of Environmental
The list should not be viewed as a ranking (there are no "losers" or "runners-up"), but instead to draw attention to the "biodiversity crisis by working to complete an inventory of earth's plants, animals and microbes," Quentin Wheeler, president of ESF, said in a statement."
Scientists estimate that there are 10 million species that still haven't been identified, five times the number that have already been named.
The following gallery includes photos of the top 10 new species and a few others suggested by Wheeler that didn't make the cut.