Rhinogradentia

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A mock taxidermy of a certain snouter can be seen at the Musée zoologique de la ville de Strasbourg.

The Rhinogradentia (also called Rhinogrades, snouters, or Nasobames) are a fictitious mammal order documented by the equally fictitious German naturalist Harald Stümpke. The order's most remarkable characteristic was the nasorium, an organ derived from the ancestral species' nose, which had variously evolved to fulfil every conceivable function.[1][2]

Both the animals and the scientist were ostensibly creations of Gerolf Steiner, a zoology professor at the University of Karlsruhe, who drew his inspiration from a poem by Christian Morgenstern.[3] A mock taxidermy of a certain snouter can be seen at the Musée zoologique de la ville de Strasbourg.

[edit] Description

According to the book, the order's remarkable variety was the natural outcome of evolution acting over millions of years in the remote Hi-yi-yi islands in the Pacific Ocean. All the 14 families and 189 known Snouter species descended from a small shrew-like animal, which gradually evolved and diversified to fill most of the ecological niches in the archipelago — from tiny worm-like beings to large herbivores and predators.[2]

Many Rhinogrades used their nose for locomotion, for example the shrew-like Hopsorrhinus aureus, whose nasorium was used for jumping, and Otopteryx, which flew backwards by flapping its ears and used its nose as a rudder. Other species included the fierce Tyrannonasus imperator and the shaggy Mammontops.

[edit] Discovery

According to Stümpke's account, the snouters were discovered on the main island of Hiddudify[4] in 1941 by the Swedish explorer Einar Pettersson-Skämtkvist when he landed on the island trying to escape spies in WW2. Unfortunately, as a consequence of atomic bomb testing, the islands suddenly sank into the ocean in the late 1950s. Thus perished all traces of the snouters, their unique ecosystem, and all the world's specialists on that intriguing subject — who happened to be holding their congress there at the time.

Although the first widely available report on these creatures was Stümpke's book (1957), an early reference to them is found in Christian Morgenstern's poem Das Nasobem ("The Nasobame", 1905).[3]. The Great Morgenstern's Nasobame (Nasobema lyricum), a dog-size animal that walked on four snouts, was named in the poet's honor.

[edit] Genera

Stümpke describes the following genera of Rhinogrades:

  Archirrhinos   Rhinolimacius   Emunctator   Dulcicauda  
  Columnifax Rhinotaenia Rhinosiphonia Rhinostentor
  Rhinotalpa Enterorrhinus Holorrhinus Remanonasus
  Phyllohoppla Hopsorrhinus Mercatorrhinus   Otopteryx
  Orchidiopsis Liliopsis Nasobema Stella
  Tyrannonasus Eledonopsis Hexanthus Cephalanthus
  Mammontops Phinochilopus Larvanasus Rhizoidonasus
  Nudirhinus

I.M. Kashkina (2004) and her colleague V.V. Bukashkina (2004) describe two additional marine genera: Dendronasus and an as yet unnamed parasitic taxon.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Harald Stümpke [=Gerolf Steiner] (1981), Bau und Leben der Rhinogradentia. With preface and illustrations by Gerolf Steiner. Gustav-Fischer-Verlag, Stuttgart,. ISBN 3-437-30083-0.
  2. ^ a b Harald Stümpke [=Gerolf Steiner] (1967), The Snouters: Form and Life of the Rhinogrades. Translated by Leigh Chadwick. The University of Chicago Press.
  3. ^ a b Christian Morgenstern (1905): Galgenlieder.
  4. ^ From Bavarian dialect Hei der Deifi!, "what the Devil!"

[edit] Further reading

[edit] Real books

[edit] Real articles

[edit] Fictitious books and articles

  • E. Petterson-Skämtkvist (1946): Aventyrer pa Haiaiai-öerna. Nyströms Förlag och Bokhandel, Lilleby.
  • J. Bromeante De Burlas Y Tonterias (1948): "A systematica dos Rhinogradentes". Bull. Darwin Inst. Hi. volume 2, page 45.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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