After discovery of extinct echidna: these 5 animal species are also (maybe) still alive | Science & Planet

Researchers in Indonesia have captured images of a long-beaked echidna, an animal long thought to be extinct. However special it may be, this echidna is not the first animal to suddenly reappear. We list five other rare species that have long been considered extinct, but (maybe) aren’t.

The long-beaked echidna is known as a shy nocturnal animal that is difficult to find. In June and July this year, a wildlife camera spotted the animal, which is officially the Zaglossus Attenboroughi is called and named after the famous British nature fanatic Sir David Attenborough. Biologist James Kempton discovered the images after a trip in the mountains on the last memory card of more than eighty cameras. “I’m not kidding when I say it was on the very last SD card we looked at, on the very last day of our expedition,” Kempton said.

The long-beaked echidna isn’t the only animal thought to be extinct. Recently it was even a Flemish man who found the spotted wasp bee in Limburg, which everyone thought had been extinct since 1955. Below are five other animals that remained hidden for a long time, but were rediscovered or of which there is a good chance that they are still around somewhere.



The great ivory-billed woodpecker is a bird the size of a crow that requires a territory of at least 16 square meters. The woodpecker lives in North America and was last seen in 1950 on the Gulf Coast in Louisiana. In 2004, an American claimed to have rediscovered the woodpecker in the US state of Arkansas, but this was later questioned by scientists. Possibly that bird could be another common woodpecker.

The great ivory-billed woodpecker lives in forests that are difficult to access, so who knows, the animal may still be fluttering around where no human can reach.

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The ivory-billed woodpecker is a bird the size of a crow. © Getty Images



The chacopekari looks a bit like a boar and was for a long time only known as a fossil. It was therefore thought that the animal had long been extinct. However, in 1971, scientists discovered that groups of chacopekars were hiding in Bolivia, Argentina and Paraguay in the Gran Chaco area. The indigenous peoples who live there appeared to have known about their existence all along.

However, it is not certain that the chacopekari will remain in the wild for much longer. It is legal to hunt the animals and they are said to naturally have many health problems.

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In 1971, scientists discovered that groups of chacopekari were still living in the wild
In 1971, scientists discovered that groups of chacopekari were still living in the wild © ThinkStock



The eyelash gecko gets its name from the small protrusions around its eyes. The eyelash gecko, which originates from New Caledonia (a French archipelago east of Australia), was thought extinct for centuries. Until he was spotted again in 1994. Since their rediscovery, they have become extremely popular as pets among reptile enthusiasts. They do come with a hefty price tag: they cost between $70 and $400.

Fun fact: these animals lick their eyes to keep them wet and they can live up to twenty years.

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The eyelash gecko lick their eyes to keep them wet
The eyelash gecko lick their eyes to keep them wet © Getty Images



The Tasmanian tiger originally lived in Australia and New Guinea. The only reason why these animals are called ‘tigers’ is because of their stripes. They have more similarities with the Tasmanian devil, a type of marsupial.

The Tasmanian tiger is thought to have become extinct in 1936. Officially, one has never been seen again, but since then there have been reports in Australia from people claiming to have seen (traces of) the animal. Until now, no one has managed to take a reliable photo.

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The Tasmanian tiger is thought to have become extinct in 1936.
The Tasmanian tiger is thought to have become extinct in 1936. © HUM Images/Universal Images Grou



These animals are real experts at hide and seek. They live mainly at night in the Indonesian forests and are four centimeters in size.

After 1930, no one spotted him for seventy years until accidentally in 2000 a dwarf tarsier ended up in a rat trap. In 2008, a scientific expedition was set up to look for the animals. Four were then found in the same area.

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The dwarf tarsier is 4 centimeters in size.
The dwarf tarsier is 4 centimeters in size. © Getty Images

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