West Indian Ocean Coelacanth (Latimeria chalumnae)

West Indian Ocean Coelacanth (Latimeria chalumnae)

Year
1954
Face Value
40
Mint Value
-
Used Value
-
Print Run
-
Themes
Sea Life

Catalogs References

Michel
KM 31
Yvert & Tellier
KM 13
Stanley Gibbons
KM 12

Technical Details

Colors
Black blue
Size
40 x 26 mm
Perforation
13
Designer
Pierre Gandon
The West Indian Ocean coelacanth (Latimeria chalumnae), sometimes known as the gombessa, African coelacanth, and simply coelacanth, is a crossopterygian, one of two extant species of coelacanth, a rare order of vertebrates more closely related to lungfish and tetrapods than to the common ray-finned fishes. The other extant species is the Indonesian coelacanth (L. menadoensis).

The West Indian Ocean coelacanth was historically known by fishermen around the Comoro Islands (where it is known as gombessa), Madagascar, and Mozambique in the western Indian Ocean,[ but first scientifically recognised from a specimen collected in South Africa in 1938.

This coelacanth was once thought to be evolutionarily conservative, but discoveries have shown initial morphological diversity. It has a vivid blue pigment, and is the better known of the two extant species. The species has been assessed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List.