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  • The Search for Olinguito: Discovering a New Species by Sandra Markle
  • Elizabeth Bush
Markle, Sandra The Search for Olinguito: Discovering a New Species. Millbrook, 2017 40p illus. with photographs
Library ed. ISBN 978-1-5124-1015-0 $30.65         R Gr. 3-5

At the opening of the twenty-first century, scientists were uncertain whether olingos, racoon-like forest dwellers, comprised one or more than one species. As researcher Kristofer Helgen investigated this issue, he stumbled upon pelts and skulls stored in various natural history museums that pointed to a related but separate problem: perhaps some of the remains labeled as olingos were actually another mammal entirely. Markle focuses on the decade where Helgen began studying the animals in museum storage, determined that a related animal he would call an olinguito existed as recently as the 1970s; he then hypothesized that they actually might still exist. He put together a team that sighted the animals in an Ecuadorian cloud forest and, after further research and documentation, had his work published and claimed naming rights to Bassaricyon neblina. Helgen's identification of a topic for study and the years-long trajectory of his research are laid out in economical, orderly chapters, supplemented with large photos and and maps that are nicely adapted to science-classroom use. Young patrons who regularly stalk the 599s in search of kissin' cute animals will also gravitate to the wide-eyed, silky-furred olinguito, who has all this time been contentedly squeaking on his nocturnal swings through the trees, just out of sight of nosy scientists. Source notes, glossary, a kid-appropriate reading list, and an index are included.

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