Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures

the smallest
Who’s the smallest of them all ? Meet the world’s amazing

Wildlife | Often overlooked in favour of larger, more charismatic cousins, we asked scientists to tell us about the smallest-known species, from a nano-chameleon to a miniature frog, Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures.

“Bergmann pointed out that smaller species tend to live in warmer climes. This pattern is to do with surface area and volume: smaller animals lose heat faster and struggle to maintain their body temperature when it is very cold,” says Dr Simon Loader, the principal curator of vertebrates at the Natural History Museum. “Whatever the reasons, these small species are fascinating,” he says.

With much of life on Earth still unknown, scientists are discovering new tiny organisms every year, redefining what is considered the smallest of their kind – and some claims about who is the smallest of them all are hotly contested.

Tiny creatures can sometimes struggle to get the same conservation attention as their larger, charismatic counterparts. “The small species often get over looked or missed,” says Paul Rees, a nursery manager at Kew Gardens. We asked scientists to tell us about the smallest creatures of their kind.

Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures
Brookesia nana: at less than 3cm, the world’s smallest chameleon and reptile was discovered in Madagascar in 2012. Photograph: Frank Glaw/AP

 

Smallest reptile: Brookesia nana nano-chameleon, Madagascar

First described as a species (discovered by science) in 2021, a male Brookesia nana is just 20mm (0.8in) long and is found in the rainforests of northern Madagascar. Females are larger, growing to nearly 30mm. Researchers believe the world’s smallest reptile is critically endangered, found in an area that has been severely degraded by deforestation.

Despite its overall size, Brookesia nana is considered remarkable for its disproportionately large male genitals, known as hemipenes in snakes and lizards.

“The miniaturised males may need larger hemipenes to enable a better mechanical fit with larger females,” says Loader.

Madagascar is famous for its small animals, including several miniaturised frogs and Madame Berthe’s mouse lemur, the world’s smallest primate.

Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures
A male bee hummingbird (Mellisuga helenae) in Zapata national park, Cuba. Photograph: blickwinkel/Alamy

Smallest insect: Dicopomorpha echmepterygis, a parasitic wasp, US

The world’s smallest insect is so tiny that it is smaller than some single-celled organisms. As little as 0.139mm long, the US parasitic wasp spends most of its life inside its host, the bark louse.

“A species of ‘fairyfly’, these are tiny wasps which develop as parasitoids, with eggs laid inside the eggs of bark lice, which are not too large themselves,” says Dr Gavin Broad, the principal curator of entomology at the Natural History Museum.

“One female wasp develops in the host egg, eating most of the contents, accompanied by one to three males, which lack wings, have rudimentary heads and are generally simplified as they never leave the egg; they are just there to fertilise females,” Broad says.

Smallest amphibian: Paedophryne amauensis frog, Papua New Guinea

This tiny frog is so small it does not have tadpoles. Described in 2012, the frog lives in rainforest leaf litter, feeding on ticks and mites.

“Unlike many other frogs, its life cycle does not include an aquatic tadpole stage. Instead, tiny froglets hatch directly from eggs that are laid in moist leaf litter on the forest floor,” says Dr Jeff Streicher, the principal curator of herpetology at the Natural History Museum. “Adults feed on small invertebrates found in the same leaf litter. This lifestyle is common in other small frog species, which highlights the essential role that leaf litter microhabitats play in the survival of these tiny amphibians.”

Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures
The Paedophryne amauensis frog from New Guinea can fit comfortably on a dime. Photograph: Courtesy of Christopher Austin/Louisiana State University

Smallest mammals: Etruscan shrew and the bumblebee bat

For mammals, it is hard to separate two tiny contenders. The Etruscan shrew, found across parts of Eurasia and north Africa, weighs between 1.2g and 2.7g on average. It is solitary and active mainly at night while feeding on invertebrates. The tiny shrew lives a short life, rarely surviving its second winter, says Paula Jenkins, the senior curator of mammals at the Natural History Museum.

The other miniature mammal considered the world’s smallest is the bumblebee bat, also called the hog-nosed bat, which is found in two isolated populations in Thailand and Myanmar. It also weighs about 2g, with a wingspan of up to 145mm and a body length between 29mm and 33mm.

“It roosts in extensive caves in limestone outcrops near rivers,” says Jenkins. “Individuals roost separately at some distance from each other. They hunt for invertebrates in the upper canopy of the forest using echolocation to detect their prey in flight, and may also pick prey from foliage.”

Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures
An Etruscan shrew (Suncus etruscus), one of two contenders for the world’s smallest mammal. Photograph: Oliver Thompson-Holmes/Alamy

Smallest flowering plant: Wolffia globosa, native to Asia but found around the world

Sometimes known as duckweed, Wolffia globosa has the fastest known growth rate of all plants and can quickly cover entire bodies of water. Despite lacking common plant organs such as leaves, roots and stems, it produces the smallest known fruit and is highly nutritious.

Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures
The bumblebee, or hog-nosed, bat, is about 3cm long. Photograph: Ada Chornelia/PI School of Biological Sciences/University of Hong Kong

Tom Pickering, the senior manager of display glasshouses at Kew’s Royal Botanic Gardens, says the plant is weed-like in appearance and nature. “This vigorous, free-floating aquatic plant is grown in tanks in the tropical nursery at Kew, and is globally used for animal food, medicine and food. Despite its size, Wolffia is in the same plant family as the titan arum, a flowering plant with the largest inflorescence in the world,” he says.

Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures
A tiny male Photocorynus spiniceps, a deep-sea anglerfish, attached to the much larger female. Photograph: Ted Pietsch/University of Washington

Smallest fish: it depends who you ask …

The title of the world’s smallest fish is hotly contested. According to Guinness World Records, it is the 6.2mm male Photocorynus spiniceps, a species of deep-sea anglerfish found in the Philippine Sea that is sexually parasitic. It attaches itself to the much larger female – a trait common in anglerfish – in effect turning her into a hermaphrodite. She feeds, swims and ensures their survival – he just worries about reproduction.

But given the female Photocorynus spiniceps is several times larger than the male, other researchers say the title belongs to the Paedocypris progenetica from Sumatra, which swims around in peat bogs, growing up to 7.9mm as adults. The tiny Indonesian fish was scientifically described in 2006 and proclaimed the smallest – a claim quickly disputed by researchers who studied the anglerfish.

Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures
Wolffia globosa, the world’s smallest flowering plant also produces the smallest known fruit. Photograph: frank600/Getty Images/iStockphoto

Smallest cactus: Blossfeldia liliputana, Argentina and Bolivia

The Blossfeldia liliputana’s epithet comes from the word ‘lilliput,’ meaning tiny person or being, explains Paul Rees, a nursery manager at Kew Gardens. “It also refers to the imaginary country inhabited by tiny people in Gulliver’s Travels,” he notes.

Who’s the smallest of them all? Meet the world’s amazing tiniest creatures
Blossfeldia liliputiana grows at high altitude in Bolivia and Argentina. Photograph: Fabiano Sodi/Alamy

Found growing on rock faces and in cracks at high altitude in Bolivia and Argentina, it can withstand extreme drought, losing up to 80% of its moisture content. Despite their versatility, the world’s smallest cactus is increasingly threatened by collectors.

“Over the years this species has been desired by collectors, and due to its very slow growth rate, a number of plants have been poached from the wild. Though its wide distribution means it’s listed as ‘least concern’, poaching remains the major threat to this species.”

(This news has been taken by ‘theguardian.com, )

 

 

 

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