Prehistoric amphibian ancestor is named for Kermit the Frog

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Prehistoric amphibian ancestor is named for Kermit the Frog
Arjan Mann (right), a Smithsonian postdoctoral paleontologist and former Peter Buck Fellow, and Calvin So (left), a doctoral student at George Washington University, holding the fossil skull of Kermitops in front of the Kermit the Frog puppet display in the “Entertainment Nation” exhibition at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. Photo: James D. Tiller and James Di Loreto, Smithsonian.

by Michael Levenson



WASHINGTON, DC.- One crawled across the rain-drenched ground of what is now Texas more than 270 million years ago, possibly feasting on fast-moving insects. The other endeared himself to millions as the banjo-playing roving newscaster and reluctant beau of Miss Piggy, known as Kermit the Frog.

Now they share a name.

On Thursday, scientists announced that they had named a newly identified ancient ancestor of modern-day amphibians Kermitops gratus in honor of Kermit the Frog.

Although it couldn’t sing “Rainbow Connection” or deliver the news, the salamanderlike species seemed to bear a striking resemblance to the beloved Muppet, said Calvin So, a doctoral student in the department of biological sciences at George Washington University, who helped name it.

The combination of bones in the eye socket gave it a “bug-eyed appearance” like Kermit’s, and its slightly crushed, 3-centimer-long fossilized skull appeared to have “a lopsided smile,” reminiscent of Kermit’s shy grin, So said.

“It really made it look to us that Kermit was smiling at us,” said So, the lead author of a paper describing the new species, which was published Thursday in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. The name combines “Kermit” and the Greek suffix “-ops,” which means face.

The fossilized skull was unearthed near Lake Kemp in Texas in 1984, So said. It was sitting in the collections of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington until 2021, when one of So’s co-authors, Arjan Mann, and a few other paleontologists noticed it and recognized that it might be a new species, So said.

So said the snout was longer than the back of its skull, which was very different from other fossil amphibians of its kind. The shape might have made the species especially adept at catching fast-moving insects for food, So said.

“It increases our knowledge of the diversity of amphibians at the time,” said So, who uses they/them pronouns. And the name, they added, could get people interested in prehistoric creatures other than dinosaurs.

“I did want to garner attention and change the way people relate to science and fossils,” So said. “It would be really great to have a lot more people really joining the investigation into amphibian origins because it’s an area of the tree of life that is not very well studied.”

The species was only the latest scientific discovery to emerge from obscurity bearing a famous name.

Last year, scientists at a German research institute who discovered that certain bacterial compounds kill fungus named them keanumycins, in honor of actor Keanu Reeves in his starring role in the thriller franchise “John Wick.”

Scientists have named insects after Arnold Schwarzenegger and RuPaul, while a species of dinosaur was named Dracorex hogwartsia, or the dragon king of Hogwarts, in honor of the Hogwarts School from the Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling, according to the Natural History Museum in London.

Muppets, too, have served as inspiration. A trilobite was named after the grouchy duo of Statler and Waldorf, and a tube-dwelling spider was named in honor of Gonzo, the museum said.

Despite So’s enthusiasm for the new species, they said they were not always a big fan of the Muppets. “Personally,” So said, “I thought some of the Muppets were a little scary.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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