Image copyright Nicole Dutra Image caption The Araguaia river dolphin is the first new species described since 1918

Scientists in Brazil have discovered the first new river dolphin species since the end of World War One.

Named after the Araguaia river where it was found, the species is only the fifth known of its kind in the world.

Writing in the journal Plos One, the researchers say it separated from other South American river species more than two million years ago.

There are believed to be about 1,000 of the creatures living in the Araguaia river basin.

River dolphins are among the world's rarest creatures.

According to the IUCN, there are only four known species, and three of them are on the Red List, meaning they are critically endangered.

It is an area where people see them all the time, they are a large mammal, the thing is nobody really looked Dr Tomas Hrbek, Federal University of Amazonas

These dolphins are only distantly related to their seafaring cousins, tending to have long beaks which let them hunt for fish in the mud at the bottom of rivers.

Big brains

One of the best known species, the Yangtze river dolphin or baiji is believed to have gone extinct in about 2006.

South America though is home to the Amazon river dolphin, also known as the pink dolphin or boto, said to be the most intelligent of all the river species.

The new discovery is said to be related to the Amazonian, although scientists believe the species separated more than two million years ago.

"It is very similar to the other ones," said lead author Dr Tomas Hrbek, from the Federal University of Amazonas.

"It was something that was very unexpected, it is an area where people see them all the time, they are a large mammal, the thing is nobody really looked. It is very exciting."

The scientists say there are some differences in the number of teeth and they suspect the Araguaia river species is smaller, but most of the clues to their separate nature were found in their genes.

By analysing DNA samples from dozens of dolphins in both rivers, the team concluded the Araguaia river creature was indeed a new species.

They acknowledge though that some experts may question whether or not the discovery is in fact, wholly distinct.

Image copyright Nicole Dutra Image caption The new dolphins are very similar to the Amazon river species though the scientists believe they separated two million years ago

"In science you can never be sure about anything," said Dr Hrbek.

"We looked at the mitochondrial DNA which is essentially looking at the lineages, and there is no sharing of lineages.

"The groups that we see, the haplotypes, are much more closely related to each other than they are to groups elsewhere. For this to happen, the groups must have been isolated from each other for a long time.

"The divergence we observed is larger than the divergences observed between other dolphin species," he said.

The researchers propose that the new species be called the Araguaian Boto, or Boto-do-Araguaia.

They estimate that there are about 1,000 of these creatures living in the river that flows northward for more than 2,600km to join the Amazon.

The researchers are concerned about the future for the new dolphin, saying that it appears to have very low levels of genetic diversity.

They are also worried because of human development.

"Since the 1960s the Araguaia river basin has been experiencing significant anthropogenic pressure via agricultural and ranching activities, and the construction of hydroelectric dams," the authors write in their study.

"The dolphins are at the top of the line, they eat a lot of fish," said Dr Hrbek.

"They rob fishing nets so the fishermen tend to not like them, people shoot them."

They believe that as a result of the threats that it faces, the new species should be categorised as Vulnerable on the Red List.

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