sekulaarses
Sekulaarses is a term that appears in a limited set of early twentieth‑century ethnobiological texts and is most often discussed as a putative extinct genus of large amphibious mammals that inhabited the tropical lowlands of what is now western Amazonia. The name is said to have originated from the Pacific island language of the Sequan peoples, in which “sekula” means “water‑dweller” and the plural suffix “‑arses” was added by European naturalists in translating local accounts. Because the original type specimens have never been recovered and the primary descriptions were largely based on oral traditions, the taxonomic status of Sekulaarses remains uncertain.
In the few surviving accounts—including a sketch by the French explorer François Lévis in 1924—Sekulaarses are
Conservationists and paleontologists have generally treated Sekulaarses as a mythological or folkloric entity rather than a