
Spotted rabbit, discovered by biologists in Indonesia by chance in 2007, has only been seen twice before, this rare rabbit only exists in the local tropical rainforest, the body surface is unique and rare, with tiger-like stripes.
Leaf-tailed geckos, a new type of gecko discovered by modern biologists, inhabit Melville Point in Australia, the master of disguise in nature, the color of the body surface is almost like a dead leaf, and their body gradually "merges" with the branches in the process of evolution, the head shows a flat triangle, and even the tail is like a real dead leaf.
Hatching brook toads, discovered in 1984 in Queensland, Australia, are outliers among known frogs, and the most special thing is the way in which hatchlings feed their offspring, in which females swallow eggs after ivory fertilization into their stomachs, incubate and feed their cubs in the body until they become frogs. Unfortunately, this peculiar frog became extinct a year after it was discovered, and the cause of the extinction has not yet been identified.
The pygmy seahorse, one of the top ten new species discovered in 2009, is one of the smallest vertebrates known to humans, with a body length of only about 2.5 centimeters. Currently, this seahorse is mainly distributed in the Red Sea and the Coral Sea near Indonesia.
Forked spotted lemur, a new type of mouse lemur found by biologists in the primeval forest of the western island of Madagascar, the fork spotted lemur has slender limbs, a wide palm that is easy to grasp branches, and a long tongue, which is mostly used to absorb nectar. The environment in which these new species depend is currently under threat as a result of the gradual reduction of local primary forests.