Mark Gurney
Looking like a "cross between a house cat and a teddy bear" the newly discovered olinguito is more closely related to the raccoon.
Smithsonian researchers announced the discovery of the new mammal today, August 15, and it was published the journal ZooKeys. It's the first carnivorous mammal discovered in either North or South America in the last 35 years.
Discovering a new carnivorous mammal is extremely rare, but surprisingly there are still
"The discovery of the olinguito shows us that the world is not yet completely explored, its most basic secrets not yet revealed," Kristof Helgen, curator of mammals at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, said in a press release. "If new carnivores can still be found, what other surprises await us? So many of the world's species are not yet known to
It was discovered in the cloud forests of Ecuador, weighs about two pounds, mostly eats fruit (but sometimes meat), and rarely leaves the trees.
"I honestly think that this could be the last time in history that we will turn up this kind of situation-both a new carnivore, and one that's widespread enough to have multiple kinds," Helgen said.
Indeed this isn't the first time someone has been known to see the onlinguito. In fact, one may have lived in several American zoos in the 1960s in an olingo display, confusing the zookeepers by refusing to mate with its cohabitants, wrote Joseph Stromberg in Smithsonian Managzine.
Here are some more adorable images of our new addition:
Mark Gurney
Mark Gurney
I. Poglayen-Neuwall