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Tag: Tanzania

  • Altezza Travel Wins Two Nominations at 2024 World Travel Awards

    Altezza Travel Wins Two Nominations at 2024 World Travel Awards

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    Press Release


    Oct 22, 2024

    Altezza Travel has been named Tanzania’s Leading Tour Operator and Tanzania’s Leading Destination Management Company at the 2024 World Travel Awards. Since 1993, the awards have highlighted excellence across the global travel industry, recognizing top companies, destinations, and organizations.

    Mt. Kilimanjaro, a key destination for Altezza Travel, was also named “Africa’s Leading Tourism Attraction,” reaffirming the mountain’s appeal as one of Africa’s most sought-after travel destinations.

    Although it was their first nomination, Altezza Travel outperformed several previous winners to claim the title.

    While the organizers do not disclose the voting criteria, Altezza likely won for the following reasons:

    • Kilimanjaro Leadership: Altezza Travel is the largest and fastest-growing operator of Kilimanjaro treks. In 2024 alone, they guided over 5,000 people to the summit of Kilimanjaro, more than any other operator, accounting for 15% of all successful climbs. The company experiences an annual growth rate of 20%, with thousands of positive reviews on platforms like TripAdvisor and Trustpilot, which likely played a key role in influencing the judges’ decision.
    • Outstanding Safety and Expertise: Travelers choose Altezza for its top-tier safety protocols, expert consultants, and high comfort standards on Kilimanjaro. Paying the highest wages in the region, Altezza attracts the best talent. The company has invested heavily in custom-designed tents and extensive guide training. In 2023, Altezza Travel’s expertise earned them an invitation to Nepal, where their guides became the first Tanzanian guides to participate in a high-profile international expedition.
    • Commitment to Social Responsibility: Altezza Travel’s proactive social responsibility: the company has several ongoing projects with the Kilimanjaro National Park Authority. After the devastating fires in 2020 and 2022, which Altezza helped to extinguish, they provided fire-fighting equipment to the park and took part in a large-scale reforestation effort. Additionally, Altezza invests in numerous conservation initiatives and actively supports local communities.

    As of October 2024, Altezza Travel remains the leading operator for Kilimanjaro treks and wildlife safaris, setting the benchmark for excellence in Tanzania’s tourism industry.

    For more information about Altezza Travel, visit https://altezzatravel.com/.

    Source: Altezza Travel

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  • ‘Alien-faced’ creature — with ‘about 200 legs’ — discovered as new species in Tanzania

    ‘Alien-faced’ creature — with ‘about 200 legs’ — discovered as new species in Tanzania

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    Scientists found an “alien-faced” animal on a mountain in Tanzania and discovered a new species, a study said. Photo shows a representative mountain.

    Scientists found an “alien-faced” animal on a mountain in Tanzania and discovered a new species, a study said. Photo shows a representative mountain.

    Photo from samson tarimo via Unsplash

    On a mountain in Tanzania, an “alien-faced” creature walked along on its countless legs. Suddenly, the ground underneath the animal seemed to give out, and it fell into a trap.

    Scientists picked up their catch — and discovered a new species.

    Researchers ventured into the mountains of the eastern African country as part of the Forest Restoration and Climate Experiment, according to a study published Jan. 22 in the European Journal of Taxonomy. The project evaluates the health of a forest through the study of captured insects and millipedes.

    While surveying the Udzungwa Mountains, researchers checked their pitfall traps and found dozens of millipedes that didn’t match any known records, the study said.

    They took a closer look at the animals and realized they’d discovered a new species: Udzungwastreptus marianae, or Marian’s millipede.

    Marian’s millipedes can have up to 44 body segments and reach about 1.7 inches in length, researchers said. They have “small” eyes and “short” antennae on their heads.

    A photo shows the yellow-bodied Marian’s millipede curled in a spiral.

    A Udzungwastreptus marianae, or Marian’s millipede, curled into a spiral.
    A Udzungwastreptus marianae, or Marian’s millipede, curled into a spiral. Photo from S.G. Selvantharan via Enghoff, Ngute, Kwezaura, Laizzer, Lyatuu, Mhagawale, Mnendendo and Marshall (2024)

    Study co-author Andrew Marshall described the new species as “alien-faced” with “about 200 legs,” according to a Feb. 1 news release from the University of the Sunshine Coast in Australia.

    A close-up photo shows the head of a Marian’s millipede. Overall, it looks a bit like a helmet with a wrinkled texture.

    The head of a Udzungwastreptus marianae, or Marian’s millipede, as seen under a microscope.
    The head of a Udzungwastreptus marianae, or Marian’s millipede, as seen under a microscope. Photo from Enghoff, Ngute, Kwezaura, Laizzer, Lyatuu, Mhagawale, Mnendendo and Marshall (2024)

    Researchers said they named the new species after María Ángeles (Marian) Ramos, a “Spanish zoologist, close project partner and friend of (lead co-author Henrick Enghoff) through decades” who died in 2023.

    Marian’s millipedes were found in the forest soil in three areas of the Udzungwa Mountains, the study said. These mountains are about 180 miles southwest of Tanzania’s largest city of Dar es Salaam.

    Tanzania is along the eastern coast of Africa. It borders eight countries including: Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia.

    The new species was identified by its legs, body segments, genitalia and other subtle physical features, the study said. Researchers classified it as a new genus, Udzungwastreptus, named after the mountain area where it was discovered.

    The research team included Henrik Enghoff, Alain Ngute, Revocatus Kwezaura, Richard Laizzer, Herman Lyatuu, Waziri Mhagawale, Hamidu Mnendendo and Andrew Marshall.

    The team also discovered four more new species of millipede.

    Aspen Pflughoeft covers real-time news for McClatchy. She is a graduate of Minerva University where she studied communications, history, and international politics. Previously, she reported for Deseret News.

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  • Five new alien-faced species of millipede revealed in “remarkable” find

    Five new alien-faced species of millipede revealed in “remarkable” find

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    Five new spooky-looking species of millipede have been discovered, one of which belongs to a totally unknown group of critters.

    The new species, which resemble something out of a sci-fi movie, were found in the forest litter of Tanzania’s remote Udzungwa Mountains, according to a new paper in the European Journal of Taxonomy.

    “We record millipedes of all sizes during our fieldwork to measure forest recovery because they are great indicators of forest health, but we didn’t realize the significance of these species until the myriapodologists had assessed our specimens,” Andy Marshall, a professor of tropical forest conservation at the University of the Sunshine Coast, and discoverer of the new species, said in a statement.

    “It’s remarkable that so many of these new species did not appear in earlier collecting of millipedes from the same area, but we were still hoping for something new.”

    The heads of two of the new millipede species, Lophostreptus magombera and Udzungwastreptus marianae. These new species, alongside three others, were discovered in a forest in Tanzania.

    Credit: European Journal of Taxonomy 2024. DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2024.918.2405

    Millipedes are actually not insects, but something called diplopods, and are defined by their elongated bodies and plentiful legs. Despite the name millipede translating roughly to “thousand feet,” no species was known to have over 1,000 legs until 2020, when a species named Eumillipes persephone was found to have up to 1,300 legs.

    There are around 12,000 species of millipede worldwide, but the true total may be much higher. Some estimates predict that there may be 15,000 species in total, but others think that there may be as many as 80,000.

    Most millipedes are fairly small, but the largest species of millipede, found in Africa, can grow as large as 13.8 inches long. These new species were much smaller than this, at only around an inch long, and had 200 or so legs each.

    The five new species were named Lophostreptus magombera; Attemsostreptus cataractae; Attemsostreptus leptoptilos; Attemsostreptus julostriatus and Udzungwastreptus marianae, the latter of which was part of a whole new genus: Udzungwastreptus.

    This discovery was made during an expedition meant to examine how forests in the area were being affected by logging and other disturbances, and how woody vines may be taking over the region, driven by warmer temperatures.

    “The millipedes will help us to determine two very different theories on the role of vines on forest recovery—whether the vines are like bandages protecting a wound or ‘parasitoids’ choking the forest,” Marshall said.

    millipedes
    Box of sample millipedes collected by UniSC FoRCE project researchers in Tanzania. Some of these species have never before been seen.

    A.R. Marshall

    The new millipede specimens have been taken to Denmark’s Natural History Museum at the University of Copenhagen. This is not the first time that Marshall has discovered a new species, having already been responsible for uncovering a new species of chameleon, and a new species of tree.

    These discoveries, including the millipedes, are hoped to highlight the sheer amount of undiscovered diversity lurking in forests around the world.

    He said unearthing the new genus and species of millipedes highlighted the huge amount of discovery remaining in tropical forests.

    Do you have a tip on a science story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have a question about millipedes? Let us know via science@newsweek.com.