
Also known as Laonastes aenigmamus, Kha-nyou
species of mammal
Laotian Rock Rat
species
老挝岩鼠是一种形态古老的啮齿动物,为岩鼠属下的唯一物种,也是硅藻鼠科(英语:Diatomys)下现存的唯一物种。 老挝岩鼠分布于老挝甘蒙省西北部的热带喀斯特地形区域。
via IUCN
The Laotian rock rat or kha-nyou (Laonastes aenigmamus, Lao: ຂະຍຸ), sometimes called the "rat-squirrel", is a species of rodent found in the Khammouan region of Laos. The species was first described in a 2005 article by Paulina Jenkins and coauthors, who considered the animal to be so distinct from all living rodents, they placed it in a new family, Laonastidae. It is in the monotypic genus Laonastes.
Skull of L. aenigmamus In 2006, the classification of the Laotian rock rat was disputed by Mary Dawson and coauthors. They suggested the rat belongs to the ancient fossil family Diatomyidae, which was thought to have been extinct for 11 million years, since the late Miocene. It would thereby represent a Lazarus species. The animals resemble large, dark rats with hairy, thick tails like those of a squirrel. Their skulls are very distinctive and have features that separate them from all other living mammals.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).