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[Herpetology • 2020] Oreolalax longmenmontis • A New Species of the Toothed Toad Oreolalax (Anura, Megophryidae) from Sichuan Province, China

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Oreolalax longmenmontis
Hou, Shi, Hu, Deng, Jiang, Xie & Wang, 2020

Longmen Mountains Toothed Toad  ||  DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.929.49748 

Abstract
The toad genus Oreolalax is widely distributed in southwest China and northern Vietnam. A new species of the genus is described from Sichuan Province, China. Phylogenetic analyses based on the mitochondrial 12S rRNA and 16S rRNA gene sequences supported the new species as an independent clade clustered into the clade also containing O. nanjiangensis and O. chuanbeiensis. The new species can be distinguished from its congeners by a combination of the following characters: body size moderate (SVL 51.2–64.2 mm in males); head broad; tympanum hidden; interorbital region with dark triangular pattern; belly with marbling; male lacking spines on lip margin; spiny patches on chest small with thick sparse spines in male; nuptial spines thick and sparse; tibio-tarsal articulation reaching beyond nostril when leg stretched forward; toe webbing at base.

Keywords: Molecular phylogenetic analyses, morphology, southwest China, taxonomy

Figure 3. Photos of the holotype CIB20180522001 of Oreolalax longmenmontis sp. nov. in life
 A dorsal view B ventral view C lateral view D view of chest E view of oral cavity E dorsal view of fingers G view of femoris posterior H ventral view of foot I ventral view of hand. Key: 1 indicates tympanum hidden; 2 denotes a pair of spinal patches with large and sparse spines on chest; 3 denotes nuptial spines on the dorsal surface of fingers I and II; 4 denotes two small posterior femoral glands.

Figure 5. Colour variations in Oreolalax longmenmontis sp. nov. A, B dorsal and ventral view of the paratype CIB20180527002
C, D dorsal and ventral view of the paratype CIB20180526001.

Oreolalax longmenmontis sp. nov.

Diagnosis: 
Oreolalax longmenmontis sp. nov. is assigned to the genus Oreolalax by its molecular phylogenetic position and the following morphological characters: the maxillary teeth prominent; back rough scattered with large warts, covered with oval black spots; pupil vertical; tongue oval, notched posteriorly; femoral glands prominent; pectoral and axillary gland present in males in breeding season; inner two fingers with black nuptial spines in males in breeding season.

Oreolalax longmenmontis could be distinguished from its congeners by a combination of the following characters: body size moderate (SVL 51.2–64.2 mm in males); head broad; tympanum hidden; interorbital region with dark triangular pattern; belly with marbling; male lacking spines on lip margin; spiny patches on chest small with thick and sparse spines in male; nuptial spines thick and sparse; tibio-tarsal articulation reaching beyond nostril when leg stretched forward; toe webbing at base.


Figure 7. Habitats of Oreolalax longmenmontis sp. nov. in the type locality, Sichuan White River National Nature Reserve in Pengzhou City, Sichuan Province, China
A landscape of montane forests B a montane stream with a small pond occupied by toad (insert: the holotype CIB20180522001 in life).

Distribution and ecology: Oreolalax longmenmontis sp. nov., is currently known only from the type locality, the White River National Nature Reserve, Pengzhou City, Sichuan Prov., China at elevations of 1300–1450 m. The new species inhabits subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forests and is frequently found near the ponds in the montane streams (Fig. 7). The breeding season is currently uncertain. Three sympatric amphibian species, i.e., Amolops chunganensis (Pope, 1929), Odorrana margaratae (Liu, 1950), and Quasipaa boulengeri (Günther, 1889), were found in the same habitat.

Etymology: The specific epithet longmenmontis refer to the type locality of the species, the central part of the Longmen Mountains, Pengzhou City of Sichuan Prov., China. 
We propose the common name “Longmen Mountains Toothed Toad” (English) and “long men shan chi chan” (Chinese).


Yinmeng Hou, Shengchao Shi, Daming Hu, Yue Deng, Jianping Jiang, Feng Xie and Bin Wang. 2020. A New Species of the Toothed Toad Oreolalax (Anura, Megophryidae) from Sichuan Province, China. ZooKeys. 929: 93-115. DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.929.49748



[Herpetology • 2020] Amolops tuanjieensis • A New Species of the Genus Amolops (Anura: Ranidae) from Yunnan, China

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Amolops tuanjieensis Gan, Yu & Wu, 2020

Tuanjie Cascade Frog | 团结湍蛙 || 

 A new species of the genus AmolopsAmolops tuanjieensis sp. nov., is described from Yunnan, China. The new species can be distinguished by the following characters: dorsolateral folds present; dorsal and ventral surfaces smooth; top of head and dorsum brown-red with irregular gray and dark spots; flank green; side of head black, from tip of snout, diffusing posteriorly to axilla, continuing as black streak below edge of dorsolateral fold; SVL 39.5–40.4 mm in males, 56.8–60.7 mm in females; tympanum distinct; supratympanic fold indistinct; vomerine teeth in two oblique rows between choanae, closer to each other than choanae; vocal sacs present; nuptial pads present; outer metatarsal tubercle absent, supernumerary tubercles absent; all fingertips expanded into discs; limbs dorsally brown with dark brown bars and irregular dark brown blotches.

 Collection site of Amolops tuanjieensis sp. nov. from Yunnan, China (A) and
Bayesian phylogram of Amolops species inferred from a combination of 16S rRNA, CO1, and ND2 (B).
Numbers above branches are Bayesian posterior probabilities (only values above 50% are shown).





Dorsal (C) and ventral (D) views of holotype of Amolops tuanjieensis sp. nov. (GXNU YU110005) in preservative. Ventral view of hand (E) and foot (F) of holotype in preservative. 



Dorsal (G) and lateral (H) views of paratype of Amolops tuanjieensis (GXNU YU110034) in life and
dorsal (I) and ventral (J) views of paratype (GXNU YU110034) in preservative.

Amolops tuanjieensis sp. nov.

Diagnosis:Amolops tuanjieensis sp. nov. differs from other members in the genus Amolops by the following characters: (1) SVL 39.5–40.4 mm in males and 56.8–60.7 mm in females; (2) dorsolateral folds present; (3) side of head dark with light-colored upper lip stripe extending to axilla; (4) skin on dorsal and ventral surfaces smooth; (5) tympanum distinct, less than half of eye diameter; (6) supratympanic fold indistinct; (7) vomerine teeth in two oblique rows between choanae, closer to each other than to choanae; (8) top of head and dorsum brown-red with irregular black and gray spots; (9) loreal regions dark black; (10) lateral green; (11) pineal body present; (12) nuptial pad velvety; (13) two external subgular vocal sacs in males; (14) all fingertips expanded; (15) two palmar tubercles present; (16) inner metatarsal tubercle oval, outer metatarsal tubercle absent; (17) supernumerary tubercles absent.


Etymology: The specific epithet is named for the type locality, Tuanjie Township, Gengma Dai and Wa Autonomous County, Yunnan Province, China.
We suggest the English common name as “Tuanjie Cascade Frog” 
and the Chinese common name as “团结湍蛙”.

Distribution and ecology: The new species is known only from the type locality (Supplementary Figure S1). The holotype and paratypes were found on leaves and small branches, less than 1 m above the ground along a stream. No tadpoles or vocal recordings were collected for the new species.

Comments: 
In China, species of Amolops have been assigned to different species groups based on morphological characters (Fei et al., 2009). However, consistent with Lyu et al. (2019a), our phylogenetic analysis revealed that the division of some species groups needs further investigation. Firstly, A. chayuensis, which was placed in the A. monticola group by Sun et al. (2013) based on the presence of dorsolateral folds, did not group together with the clade consisting of the new species and other members of the same group, indicating that the A. monticola group is not monophyletic and that assignment of species groups based on dorsolateral folds only is problematic. Comprehensive morphological and molecular comparisons using A. monticola data are necessary to clarify the division of the A. monticola group.

In addition to the problems at the species group level in Amolops, species diversity within this genus also needs further investigation. Amolops marmoratus, which has been confused with A. afghanus and A. indoburmanensis (Dever et al., 2012; Lyu et al., 2019a), is mainly distributed in southern Tibet, as well as Myanmar, Bangladesh, Nepal, and eastern Himalaya in India (Frost, 2019), with distribution in Thailand according to Chan-ard (2003). This species is certainly known from Myanmar, but the statuses of other populations remain problematic (Frost, 2019). In this study, we found that the genetic distance between A. marmoratus from Thailand and A. marmoratus from Myanmar reached 4.48% for the 16S sequences, indicating that A. marmoratus from Thailand possibly represents a cryptic species.


Yu-Lu Gan, Guo-Hua Yu and Zheng-Jun Wu. 2020. A New Species of the Genus Amolops (Anura: Ranidae) from Yunnan, China. Zoological Research. 41(2); 188-193. DOI: 10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2020.018

[Herpetology • 2020] Sinomicrurus peinani • A New Species of the Genus Sinomicrurus (Serpentes: Elapidae) from China and Vietnam

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Sinomicrurus peinani
Liu, Yan, Hou, Wang, Nguyen, Murphy, Che & Guo, 2020

 Guangxi Coral Snake | 广西华珊瑚蛇 || 

A new species of Sinomicrurus Slowinski, Boundy, and Lawson, 2001 is described herein based on a series of specimens. The new species,Sinomicrurus peinani sp. nov., occurs in southern China and northern Vietnam. Sinomicrurus peinani sp. nov. is distinguished from its congeners by the following combination of characters: (1) 30–35 black cross-bands on body and tail; (2) 13 dorsal scale rows throughout, all smooth; (3) white belly with black cross-bands or irregular spots; (4) broad white transverse bar on top of head with inverted V-shaped anterior margin, white bar wider than anterior black bar; and (5) frontal V-like, 1.3 times as long as wide. In addition, new occurrences of S. houi in Guangxi, China, and Vietnam are discussed.

Sinomicrurus peinani sp. nov.:
General view of holotype (YBU 16086) in life and habitat of new species.

Sinomicrurus peinani sp. nov.: Dorsal and ventral views of holotype (YBU 16086) in preservative. 

Sinomicrurus peinani sp. nov.

Diagnosis: All examined specimens possessed a small to medium-sized body, varying from 368 mm to 620 mm, as well as: (1) 30–35 black cross-bands on body and tail; (2) 13 dorsal scale rows throughout, all smooth; (3) white belly with black speckles or bands; (4) broad white transverse bar on top of head with inverted V-shaped anterior margin, white bar wider than anterior black bar; and (5) frontal V-like, 1.3 times as long as wide.

Sinomicrurus peinani sp. nov.D: Dorsal, ventral, and lateral views of head of holotype (YBU 16086) in preservative.
E: Dorsal, ventral, and lateral views of head and ventral view of belly of Sinomicrurus macclellandi (YBU 14127) from Sichuan Province, China.

Bayesian 50% majority-rule consensus tree inferred from COI. Posterior probabilities and bootstrap support values for clades are shown adjacent to nodes to which they refer. 

Ecological notes: The specimens were found in meadowland in bamboo forest (Figure 1A). An individual of Achalinus sp. was found in the stomach of Sinomicrurus peinani sp. nov. No data on diet or reproduction are available.

Etymology: The species is named after Professor Pei-Nan Yu, a distinguished doctor in China, in recognition of his great contribution to the treatment of snakebite. 
We suggest the following common names for this species: “广西华珊瑚蛇” (Chinese) and Guangxi Coral Snake (English).

Distribution: This species is currently known from China (Cangwu, Guangxi) and Vietnam (Cao Bằng and Vinh Phuc). The speciemens from Vietnam were unavailable for examination, but molecular phylogeney indicated that they should be conspecific with those from Cangwu, Guangxi, China (Supplementary Appendix S3).


Qin Liu, Jiao-Wen Yan, Shao-Bing Hou, Ping Wang, Sang Ngoc Nguyen, Robert W. Murphy, Jing Che and Peng Guo. 2020. A New Species of the Genus Sinomicrurus (Serpentes: Elapidae) from China and Vietnam. Zoological Research. 41(2); 194-198. DOI: 10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2020.023


[Herpetology • 2020] How Little is Known about “the Little Brown Frogs”: Description of Three New Species of the Genus Leptobrachella (Anura: Megophryidae) from Yunnan Province, China

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Leptobrachella niveimontis Chen, Poyarkov, Yuan & Che
Mt. Daxue Leaf Litter Toad | 雪山掌突蟾    

in Chen, Xu, Poyarkov, Wang, ... et Che, 2020. 

Abstract
Asian leaf-litter toads of the genus Leptobrachella represent a great anuran diversification in Asia. Previous studies have suggested that the diversity of this genus is still underestimated. During herpetological surveys from 2013 to 2018, a series of Leptobrachella specimens were collected from the international border areas in the southern and western parts of Yunnan Province, China. Subsequent analyses based on morphological and molecular data revealed three distinct and previously unknown lineages, which we formally describe as three new species herein. Among them, we describe a new species that occurs at the highest known elevation for Leptobrachella in China. Four species of Leptobrachella, including two new species, are found in the same reserve. Furthermore, our results suggest that the population from Longchuan County, Yunnan, may represent an additional new species of Leptobrachella, although we tentatively assigned it to Leptobrachella cf. yingjiangensis due to the small sample size examined. Lastly, we provide the first description of females of L. yingjiangensis. Our results further highlight that both micro-endemism and sympatric distributions of species are common patterns in Leptobrachella, that contribute to taxonomic and conservation challenges in these frogs. We provide an identification key for Leptobrachella known to occur in Yunnan. Given the lack of knowledge on species diversity of Leptobrachella along international border areas, we recommend that future studies include trans-boundary collaborative surveys.
Keywords: Biodiversity hotspot, Conservation, Cryptic diversity, Micro-endemism, National border,  Speciation, Taxonomy

Figure  1.  Sampling localities of Leptobrachella used in this study
A: Jinzhuzhai Village, Yingjiang, Yunnan, China; B: Gongdong, Longchuan, Yunnan, China; C: Daxueshan Nature Reserve, Lincang, Yunnan, China; D: Daweishan, Pingbian, Yunnan, China; E: Xiaoqiaogou Nature Reserve, Wenshan, Yunnan, China.


Figure  2.  Bayesian phylogram of Leptobrachella inferred from 16S mtDNA gene fragments
“*” denotes high support by Bayesian posterior probabilities (BPP>0.95) and bootstrap support values (BS>70%); “-” represents low support values. Scale bar represents 0.1 nucleotide substitutions per site. Outgroup taxa not shown. Photos showing species of Leptobrachella newly collected from Yunnan. Numbers in brackets after species names correspond to Samples IDs in Supplementary Table S1.

Figure  3.  Holotype of Leptobrachella niveimontis sp. nov. (KIZ028277) in life
A: Dorsolateral view; B: Ventral view; C: Left hand in dorsal view; D: Left foot in dorsal view; E: Lateral view; F: Cloacal area view.

Figure  5.  Paratypes of Leptobrachella niveimontis sp. nov. in life
A: KIZ015734; B: KIZ015743.

     

Leptobrachella niveimontis sp. nov. Chen, Poyarkov, Yuan & Che

Diagnosis: Leptobrachella niveimontis sp. nov. can be distinguished from its congeners by the following combination of morphological characters: (1) body size small (SVL 22.5–23.6 mm in four adult males, 28.5–28.7 mm in two females); (2) tympanum distinct, upper half black; (3) skin on dorsum scattered with fine reddish tubercles; (4) ventral sides marbled with distinct irregular black speckling on bluish-white background; (5) black blotches distinct, scattered on dorsum and flanks; (6) ventrolateral glands distinct, forming continuous white line; (7) finger webbing and fringes absent; (8) toe webbing rudimentary, toe lateral fringes narrow; (9) longitudinal ridges distinct under toes; (10) supratympanic ridges distinct, with reddish-brown pigmentation; (11) numerous rounded whitish speckles present on cloacal region; (12) pectoral gland white, larger than femoral gland; (13) iris distinctly bicolored, typically bright orange red in upper half, fading to silver white in lower half.


Etymology: The specific epithet “niveimontis” is a toponymic adjective derived from the Latin words “niveus” for “snowy”, and “montanus” meaning “related to mountains”, given in reference to the type locality of the new species, Mt. Daxue (literally “Great Snowy Mountain”) of Yunnan Province, China, and also in reference to the ecology of the new species, inhabiting high elevations in low temperature climate zones. 
For the common name, we recommend “Mt. Daxue Leaf Litter Toad” (English) and “Xue Shan Zhang Tu Chan” (雪山掌突蟾) (Chinese).

Figure  6.  Breeding habitat of Leptobrachella niveimontis sp. nov. near Wumulong Ganhe Protection Station, Daxueshan Nature Reserve, Yunnan Province, China.

Distribution and habits: Leptobrachella niveimontis sp. nov. is presently known only from its type locality, near Wumulong Ganhe Protection Station of Daxueshan Nature Reserve in Yongde County, Lincang, Yunnan Province, China. The new species was found along small creeks or rocky streams in well-preserved montane evergreen broadleaf forest at elevations between 2 569 m and 2 601 m a.s.l. (Figure 6). Leptobrachella niveimontis sp. nov. is the fifth known species of the genus inhabiting elevations above 2 000 m, and to the best of our knowledge it also occurs at the highest elevation as compared to other Chinese species of Leptobrachella. During our field surveys, calling males were recorded mostly inside the rocky crevices, and some were found hiding under leaf litter. Ubiquitous orthopteran-like calls could be heard along the stream from April to May, and very few calls were detected during July. The gravid female collected in April carried pure white eggs.

      


Figure  7.  Holotype of Leptobrachella flaviglandulosa sp. nov. (KIZ032626) in life
A: Dorsolateral view; B: Ventral view; C: Dorsal view; D: Lateral view; E: Hand in ventral view; F: Foot in ventral view; G: Iris coloration; H: Dorsal view of thighs; L: Posteroventral view of thigh.

Leptobrachella flaviglandulosa sp. nov. Chen, Wang & Che

Diagnosis: Leptobrachella flaviglandulosa sp. nov. can be distinguished from its congeners by the following combination of morphological characters: (1) body size small (SVL 22.99–26.97 mm in 13 adult males, 29.30 mm in single adult female); (2) tympanum distinct, partially covered by black marking; (3) black supratympanic line present; (4) skin on dorsum shagreened with fine yellowish-brown tubercles; (5) venter whitish with small black speckling on throat, chest and belly margins; (6) supra-axillary gland, femoral, pectoral and ventrolateral glands yellowish; (7) ventrolateral glands forming a discontinuous line; (8) finger webbing and fringes absent; (9) toe webbing poorly developed and lateral fringes narrow; (10) longitudinal ridges distinct under toes and interrupted at the articulations; (11) distinct black blotches scattered on dorsum and flanks; (12) “\ /”-shaped yellow markings on dorsum in scapular region; (13) pectoral glands larger than femoral glands; (14) iris distinctly bicolored, typically golden-orange in upper half, fading to whitish grey in lower half.


Etymology: The species epithet, “flaviglandulosa”, is a Latin adjective in feminine gender, derived from Latin “flavus” for “yellow color” and “glandula” for “gland”, in reference to characteristic life coloration of femoral, pectoral and ventrolateral glands in the new species.
 For the common name, we recommend “Yellow-gland Leaf Litter Toad” (English) and “Huang Xian Zhang Tu Chan” (黄腺掌突蟾) (Chinese).

Figure  9.  Breeding habitat and general aspect in field of Leptobrachella spp. in Xiaoqiaogou Nature Reserve
A1: Breeding stream in Fadou Station, which harbors three co-occurring species: Leptobrachella bourreti, L. flaviglandulosa sp. nov., and L. nyx. A2: Stream in Nanchang Station, which harbors two co-occurring sympatric species: Leptobrachella flaviglandulosa sp. nov. and L. nyx. A3: Stream in Xiaoqiaogou Station, which harbors two sympatric species: L. bourreti and Leptobrachella feii sp. nov.
B1: Leptobrachella bourreti in the field. B2: Leptobrachella flaviglandulosa sp. nov. in the field. B3: Leptobrachella feii sp. nov in the field.

Distribution and habits:Leptobrachella flaviglandulosa sp. nov. is currently known only from Xiaoqiaogou Nature Reserve, Xichou County, Wenshan City, Yunnan Province, China. The species was found in the environs of the Fadou, Shangchang and Nanchang stations of the nature reserve. The new species was recorded along small seeps or clear-water rocky mountain streams in well-preserved montane evergreen broadleaf forest at elevations between 1000 and 1400 m a.s.l. (Figure 9). The new species was recorded in sympatry with L. bourreti and L. nyx. During our field surveys, calling males were found mostly while sitting on vegetation, and some were calling from rocky crevices. An insect-like calls could be heard along the stream from March to June; gravid female was collected in March bearing pure-white eggs.


Figure  10.  Holotype of Leptobrachella feii sp. nov. (KIZ032625) in life
A: Dorsolateral view; B: Ventral view; C: Dorsal view; D: Lateral view; E: Hand in ventral view; F: Foot in ventral view; G: Iris coloration; H: Dorsal view of thighs; L: Posteroventral view of thigh.

Leptobrachella feii sp. nov. Chen, Yuan & Che

Diagnosis: Leptobrachella feii sp. nov. can be distinguished from its congeners by a combination of the following morphological characters: (1) body size small (SVL 21.51–22.75 mm in 5 adult males, 25.67 mm in a single adult female); (2) tympanum distinct, partially covered by black marking; (3) distinct black supratympanic line; (4) skin on dorsum shagreened with small tubercles and unequal dermal ridges; (5) distinct black blotches scattered on the creamy white chest and belly; (6) small black spots densely covering the throat; (7) ventrolateral glands present, forming a distinct continuous white line; (8) finger webbing and fringing absent; (9) toe webbing rudimentary with narrow lateral fringes; (10) longitudinal ridges under toes distinct and uninterrupted at the articulations; (11) small white pectoral glands; (12) black patches scattered on lateral sides of the body; (13) relatively long head (HDL/SVL=0.38–0.43 in males); and (14) iris distinctly bicolored, typically golden orange in upper half, fading to silver white in lower half.

Etymology: The specific epithet “feii” is a patronymic noun in the genitive singular; derived from the name of Prof. Liang Fei of the Chengdu Institute of Biology, CAS, China, in recognition of his long-term and significant contribution to the advancement of amphibian research in China, particularly his research on the family Megophryidae. 
For the common name, we recommend “Fei's Leaf Litter Toad” (English) and “Fei Shi Zhang Tu Chan” (费氏掌突蟾) (Chinese).

Distribution and habits:Leptobrachella feii sp. nov. is currently known to occur at two disjunct localities: Xiaoqiaogou Nature Reserve, Xichou County, Wenshan City, Yunnan Province, China, and Daweishan Nature Reserve, Pingbian County, Yunnan Province, China (Figure 1); these two sites are separated by a flying distance about 150 km. The new species was found along small seeps in well-preserved montane evergreen broadleaf forest at elevations between 1 577 m and 1 850 m a.s.l. (Figure 9). The new species is sympatric with L. bourreti. During our field surveys, males were usually recorded while calling sitting on vegetation (usually on the members of the family Acanthaceae species; see Figure 9). Advertisement calls of the new species, resembling calling of orthopterans, could be heard along the streams from March to June; gravid female collected in April was swollen with pure white eggs.


Jin-Min Chen, Kai Xu, Nikolay A. Poyarkov, Kai Wang, Zhi-Yong Yuan, Mian Hou, Chatmongkon Suwannapoom, Jian Wang and Jing Che. 2020. How Little is Known about “the Little Brown Frogs”: Description of Three New Species of the Genus Leptobrachella (Anura: Megophryidae) from Yunnan Province, China. Zoological Research. DOI: 10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2020.036

[Mammalogy • 2020] Neusticomys peruviensis musseri • A Revision of Neusticomys peruviensis (Rodentia: Cricetidae) with the Description of A New Subspecies

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Neusticomys peruviensis musseri Pacheco & Sánchez-Vendizú

in Pacheco, Sánchez-Vendizú, Salazar, et al., 2020. 

Abstract
Neusticomys peruviensis is a poorly known sigmodontine rodent of the tribe Ichthyomyini, represented in collections by only five specimens collected in five localities from lowland forests of central and southern Peru. Recent expeditions in Llanchama, in northern Peru, north of the Río Amazonas, and near Allpahuayo Mishana Natural Reserve (Loreto, Peru), were successful in obtaining three specimens of Neusticomys. Based on morphological and meristic data, we found the population at Llanchama is distinct from the allopatric populations of N. peruviensis, and other species of Neusticomys. A species distribution model also shows the population at Llanchama is not highly predicted by the set of variables of the known localities of N. peruviensis. However, sequence data from the mitochondrial cytochrome-b gene indicate that genetic distinctiveness is low. Because intraspecific variability is important to understand evolutionary and biogeographic processes, and in concordance with the polytypic species concept, we interpret the population at Llanchama to represent a new subspecies of N. peruviensis that we describe in this paper.

Key words: biodiversity, Ichthyomyini, Loreto, Neotropics, Peru, Río Amazonas, Rodentia


Sigmodontinae Wagner, 1843
Tribe Ichthyomini Vorontsov, 1959
Genus Neusticomys Anthony, 1921

Neusticomys peruviensis musseri, new subspecies Pacheco and Sánchez-Vendizú
G. G. Musser’s Neusticomys

Etymology.— The subspecific epithet honors Dr. Guy G. Musser, a remarkable and fine mammalogist, for whom we have a deep admiration. He is author of numerous and key contributions to South American mammalogy and other regions of the world. It is also a pleasure to read his elegant, precise, and encyclopedic contributions, among them the description (with A. L. Gardner) of N. peruviensis.


Víctor Pacheco, Pamela Sánchez-Vendizú, Christian R Loaiza Salazar, Kateryn Pino, César Medina and Dan Vivas-Ruiz. 2020. A Revision of Neusticomys peruviensis (Rodentia: Cricetidae) with the Description of A New Subspecies. Journal of Mammalogy. gyaa011. DOI:  10.1093/jmammal/gyaa011  

     

Neusticomys peruviensis es un roedor sigmodontino poco conocido de la tribu Ichthyomyini, representado en colecciones por solo cinco especímenes colectados en cinco localidades de bosques de tierras bajas del centro y sur del Perú. En recientes expediciones a Llanchama, en el norte de Perú, al norte del río Amazonas y cerca de la Reserva Natural Allpahuayo Mishana (Loreto, Perú), se lograron obtener tres especímenes de Neusticomys. Basados en datos morfológicos y merísticos, encontramos que la población de Llanchama es distinta de las poblaciones alopátricas de N. peruviensis y otras especies de Neusticomys. Un modelo de distribución de especies también muestra que la población de Llanchama no está altamente predicha por el conjunto de variables de las localidades conocidas de N. peruviensis. Sin embargo, las secuencias del gen mitocondrial citocromo-b indican que la diferenciación genética es baja. Debido a que la variabilidad intraespecífica es importante para comprender los procesos evolutivos y biogeográficos y en concordancia con el concepto de la especie politípica, interpretamos que la población de Llanchama representa una nueva subespecie de N. peruviensis, que describimos en este artículo.

[Ichthyology • 2020] Gymnothorax elaineheemstrae • A Taxonomic Revision of Gymnothorax undulatus (Anguilliformes: Muraenidae) in the Western Indian Ocean, with Description of A New Species

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 Gymnothorax elaineheemstrae 
Sithole, Smith, Mwale & Gouws, 2020


Abstract
The taxonomic status of the widely distributed Indo-Pacific undulated moray eel, Gymnothorax undulatus, is revised using morphological and genetics features. Ninety-seven specimens previously identified as G. undulatus were examined and their mitochondrial COI and 16S rRNA genes were analysed. The multivariate analysis of eight morphometric characters resulted in separation with little to no overlap among some geographic regions. These groupings explained more than 90% of the total variation, with 86.6% overall classification. Two color morphs were identified, and the South African population was described as new species, Gymnothorax elaineheemstrae n. sp., distinct from G. undulatus in having mottled and faintly reticulated color pattern, 134–136 total vertebrae and further confirmed by the genetic analysis of COI and 16S rRNA with > 0.1 genetic distance. The morphological and genetics results indicate that G. undulatus, previously treated as a single species, consists of more than one species.

Keywords: Pisces, Taxonomy, morphometric, paraphyletic, genetic distance, Gymnothorax elaineheemstrae n. sp.


Yonela Sithole, David G. Smith, Monica Mwale and Gavin Gouws. 2020. A Taxonomic Revision of Gymnothorax undulatus (Anguilliformes: Muraenidae) in the Western Indian Ocean, with Description of A New Species. Zootaxa. 4767(1); 161–181. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4767.1.7

[Botany • 2020] Begonia caramoanensis (sect. Baryandra, Begoniaceae) • A New Species from Camarines Sur, Philippines

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Begonia caramoanensis 

in Rubite, Irabagon, ... et Bustamante, 2020. 

Abstract
Begonia caramoanensis from Caramoan, Camarines Sur, Luzon Island is described as a new species endemic to the Philippines. This is the latest addition to the species rich Begonia section Baryandra. It resembles Begonia madulidii but is distinguished by the dark green almost orbicular leaves; extensive inflorescence branching five times; and the glandular hairs of the bracts, peduncle, pedicels and ovary. More than 500 individuals, were observed in each of the four barangays of Caramoan, thus according to to the IUCN red list categories and criteria, B. caramoanensis is hereby proposed to be placed under Least Concern (LC) category.

Keywords: Begoniaceae, Begonia section Baryandra, Caramoan, endemic, taxonomy, Eudicots


      

Illustration of Begonia caramoanensis.
by Y.P. Ang 


     


Rosario R. Rubite, Madeleine L. Irabagon,  Diane Joy E. Palacio, Yu Pin Ang, Rene Alfred and Anton Bustamante. 2020. Begonia caramoanensis (sect. Baryandra, Begoniaceae) A New Species from Camarines Sur, Philippines. Phytotaxa. 439(3); 287–294. DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.439.3.10 

     

[Herpetology • 2020] Cnemaspis tubaensis • A New Species of Cnemaspis Strauch 1887 (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from the Langkawi Archipelago, Kedah, Peninsular Malaysia

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 Cnemaspis tubaensis
Quah, Wood, Anuar & Muin, 2020


Abstract
A new, diminutive species of Rock Gecko Cnemaspis tubaensis sp. nov. of the C. kumpoli group, is described from Tuba Island, Langkawi Archipelago, Kedah, Peninsular Malaysia and is differentiated from all other species in the kumpoli group by having a unique combination of morphological and color pattern characteristics, including a maximum SVL of 37.0 mm; 10 or 11 supralabials; eight or nine infralabials; 15–18 semi-linearly arranged paravertebral tubercles; lateral caudal furrow present; lateral caudal tubercles on the anterior portion of the tail; caudal tubercles not encircling tail; five or six precloacal pores; 28 or 29 subdigital lamellae on the fourth toe; smooth ventrals; smooth subcaudals with an enlarged median row of scales; subcaudal region light-grey and speckled with yellow; absence of light-colored ocelli on the shoulder; no yellow postscapular band; dorsum light-brown with sage-green blotches and black spots; flanks with scattered yellow spots; absence of black gular markings in both sexes; and 13.0–22.0% uncorrected pairwise sequence divergences in the NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 gene (ND2). Cnemaspis tubaensis sp. nov. is the fourth species of Cnemaspis to be described from the Langkawi Archipelago and underscores the underestimated biodiversity of the islands which is in need of more thorough herpetological inventories.

Keywords: Reptilia, Integrative taxonomy, phylogeny, molecular systematics, karst, island, conservation, herpetology, reptile, amphibian, discovery 




Evan S.H. Quah, Perry L. Jr. Wood, M.S. Shahrul Anuar and Mohd Abdul Muin. 2020. A New Species of Cnemaspis Strauch 1887 (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from the Langkawi Archipelago, Kedah, Peninsular Malaysia with An Updated Checklist of the Herpetofauna of Tuba Island. Zootaxa. 4767(1); 138–160. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4767.1.6 


[Mollusca • 2020] Alvania pizzinii • Revision of the Recent Alvania scabra (Philippi, 1844) Complex (Gastropoda, Rissoidae) from the Mediterranean Sea with the Description of A New Species

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 Alvania pizzinii  Amati, Smriglio & Oliverio

in Amati, Appolloni, ... et Oliverio, 2020. 

Abstract
Herein we revise several Recent Mediterranean species of the rissoid genus Alvania Risso, 1826: Alvania scabra (Philippi, 1844), Alvania sculptilis (Monterosato, 1877), Alvania sororcula Granata-Grillo, 1877, Alvania lucinae Oberling, 1970, Alvania josefoi Oliver & Templado, 2009 and Alvania scuderii Villari, 2017. They represent a rather homogeneous group of morphologically similar species, referred to as the Alvania scabra complex, which includes also some other species from the northeastern Atlantic. We designate a neotype for Rissoa scabra Philippi, 1844 and a lectotype for Rissoa oranica Pallary, 1900 to stabilize the use of the names. Alvania oranica (Pallary, 1900) is confirmed as a synonym of Alvania scabra (Philippi, 1844), and Alvania asperella (Granata-Grillo, 1877) is proposed as a synonym of Alvania sororcula (Granata-Grillo, 1877) [new synonymy]. Finally, we describe one new Mediterranean species: Alvania pizzinii Amati, Smriglio & Oliverio n. sp. from Levanzo Is., Sicily.

Keywords: Mollusca, Gastropoda; Rissoidae; Mediterranean Sea; Alvania; new species; taxonomy



Bruno Amati, Massimo Appolloni, Andrea Di Giulio, Danilo Scuderi, Carlo Smriglio and Marco Oliverio. 2020. Revision of the Recent Alvania scabra (Philippi, 1844) Complex (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Rissoidae) from the Mediterranean Sea with the Description of A New Species. Zootaxa. 4767(3); 415–458. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4767.3.3

[Herpetology • 2020] Eryx sistanensis • A New Species of Eryx (Serpentes: Erycidae) from Iran

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Eryx sistanensis 
Eskandarzadeh, Rastegar-Pouyani, Rastegar-Pouyani, Zargan, Hajinourmohamadi, Nazarov, Sami, Rajabizadeh, Nabizadeh & Navaian, 2020


Abstract
We describe a new species of the genus Eryx Daudin, 1803 from southern Iran that is morphologically closely related to the Indian sand boa, E. johnii. The new species, Eryx sistanensis sp. nov. has a distribution range from Zabol in the Sistan Region to the southern parts of Sistan & Baluchistan, as well as Hormozgan Province of Iran. Morphologically, E. sistanensis sp. nov. differs from E. johnii by having fewer dorsal scale rows at midbody and the tail tip is not as blunt as E. johnii. The genetic distance (p-distance) between the new species and the Indian sand boa is considerable (9.1% for cytb and 11.8% for COI).

Keywords: Serpentes, Eryx sistanensis sp. nov., molecular phylogeny, morphology, taxonomy


FIGURE 5. Eryx sistanensis sp. nov. specimen from Gurband Village, Minab County in Hormozgan Province.

FIGURE 6. Eryx sistanensis sp. nov. specimens in (A) Rikukash with damaged tail, and (B) Shamil.

Eryx sistanensis sp. nov. 

Etymology: Eryx sistanensis sp. nov. is named after the Sistan Region in Sistan & Baluchistan Province, where the holotype was collected.

FIGURE 2. Photos of the juvenile specimens of (A) Eryx johnii (Photo by Raju Vyas), and (B) Eryx sistanensis sp. nov.

Distribution: Eryx sistanensis sp. nov. is currently known from Zabol in Sistan Region to the southern parts of Sistan & Baluchistan and Hormozgan Provinces (Fig. 7). 

Habitat: The specimens were observed in agricultural fields with soft substrates (Fig. 8). The farms were surrounded by natural vegetation such as Tamarix, Zygophyllum, Acacia and Chenopodiaceae shrubs. 


 Naeimeh Eskandarzadeh, Nasrullah Rastegar-Pouyani, Eskandar Rastegar-Pouyani, Jamil Zargan, Ashkan Hajinourmohamadi, Roman A. Nazarov, Soheil Sami, Mahdi Rajabizadeh, Hossein Nabizadeh and Majid Navaian. 2020. A New Species of Eryx (Serpentes: Erycidae) from Iran. Zootaxa. 4767(1); 182–192.  DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4767.1.8

[Invertebrate • 2020] Euchonoides moeone • An Abundant New Genus and Species of Fan Worms (Polychaeta: Sabellidae) from Hawaii

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Euchonoides moeone
Magalhães, Bailey-Brock & Tovar-Hernández, 2020


Abstract
A new genus and species of Hawaiian sabellid polychaete, Euchonoides moeone n. gen. et n. sp. is described. This new species has consistently been one of the most abundant polychaetes collected in Mamala Bay, Hawaii, reaching densities of 141,046 ind. m-2 and representing up to 30.6% of all polychaetes collected in that region. The species has a small body (~2 mm length) with a reduced number of abdominal chaetigers (8–10), and is distinguished by the presence of the following features: 1) three pairs of radioles; 2) radiolar skeleton with two longitudinal rows of cells from radiole base to third proximal pair of pinnules, remainder of each radiole skeleton with single rows of cells; 3) pinnules unpaired, alternating (snowflake arrangement); 4) thoracic uncini acicular with a large tooth above the main fang followed by a series of small ones; 5) thoracic chaetiger 3 enlarged; 6) a wide belt on third abdominal chaetiger; and 7) a pre-pygidial depression composed of three chaetigers, with lateral wings, among a combination of several others features. Histological sections have shown that the abdominal belt seems to be a clitellum-like structure where oogenesis takes place. The new genus is compared with other plesiomorphic genera sharing similar morphological features. Patterns of abundance of the new species are presented for the past 27 years in Mamala Bay.

Keywords: Polychaeta, Euchonoides, Euchone, clitellum-like segment, histology, sewage outfall, abundance

Figure 1. Euchonoides moeone n. sp. 
A, complete paratype, lateral view; B, complete paratype, ventral view; C, detail of patch of cilia (pc) on posterior peristomial ring collar and glandular ridge (gr) on chaetiger 2; D, dissected radiolar crown with arrows showing elongate dorsal lips and ventral radiolar appendages; E, inferior, thoracic, short, broadly hooded chaetae; F, inferior, thoracic bayonet chaeta; G, thoracic acicular uncini; H, anterior abdominal uncinus; I, posterior abdominal uncini, frontal and lateral view, respectively; J, posterior end showing pre-pygidial segments and pygidium, ventral view; K, posterior end, dorsal view.
Abbreviations: ar, abdominal ridge; ch, chaetiger; es, eyespots; fg, faecal groove; gr, glandular ridge; pc, patch of cilia; pyg, pygidium; pre-pyg, pre-pygidial chaetigers. 
Pinnules in A–B may be confused with radioles, there are only three pairs or radioles.

Figure 2. Euchonoides moeone n. sp.
 A, anterior end, ventral view, stained with methyl green; B, posterior end, dorso-lateral view, stained with Methyl Green; C, peristomium in ventral view showing brownish eyespots; D, dissected radiolar crown stained with Shirlastain A. 
Abbreviations: ar, abdominal ridge; ch, chaetiger; dl, dorsal lip; pyg, pygidium; R, radiole; vra, ventral radiolar appendage

Family Sabellidae Latreille, 1825

Euchonoides n. gen. 

Diagnosis. Body short with a reduced number of abdominal chaetigers (8–10). Three pairs of radioles. Radiolar skeleton present in branchial lobes, radioles and pinnules. Each radiolar skeleton with two longitudinal rows of cells from radiole base to third proximal pair of pinnules, remainder of each radiole and all pinnular skeletons with single rows of cells. Pinnules unpaired, alternating (snowflake arrangement). Basal membrane absent; radiolar flanges absent; radiolar eyes absent. Dorsal lips without radiolar appendage. Ventral lips absent. Dorsal pinnular appendages absent. Ventral pinnular appendages present. Parallel lamellae absent. Ventral sacs absent. Radiolar lobes fused along dorsal midline; without dorsal or ventral basal flanges. Anterior peristomial ring distinctive, but no visible annulation between anterior and posterior peristomial ring. Peristomial eyes present. Peristomial vascular loops absent. Posterior peristomial ring collar incised ventrally; separated dorsally by distinct gap. Collar chaetae fascicles protruding from a short lobe, narrowly hooded chaetae. Glandular ridge on thoracic chaetiger 2 present. Superior thoracic notochaetae elongate, narrowly hooded. Inferior thoracic notochaetae includes bayonet and broadly hooded chaetae. Thoracic neuropodial uncini acicular, handles long, hoods absent, a large tooth above the main fang followed by a series of small ones. Companion chaetae absent. Thoracic chaetiger 3 always enlarged (2–3 times longer than wide). Ventral thoracic shields not differentiated. Neuropodial abdominal fascicles with elongate, narrowly hooded chaetae. Anterior abdominal uncini with square breasts, handle absent, and rasp-shaped dentition. Belt (clitellum-like) on third abdominal chaetiger present. Pre-pygidial depression composed by three chaetigers, with lateral wings. Uncini from pre-pygidial depression similar to those from anterior abdomen. Pygidium without anal cirrus. Pygidial eyes absent. 

Etymology. The genus name is a free combination of Euchone and the Latin sufix -oides, in relation to the similarities between the new genus with the genus Euchone.


Euchonoides moeone n. sp. 

Etymology. The new species epithet derives from the Hawaiian language and the implied meaning of moeonein Hawaiian is ‘small worm that hides in the sand’. 

Distribution. The type locality is Mamala Bay, Oahu, Hawaii at the vicinity of Barbers Point sewage outfall at 70 m. This species has also been collected at Ala Wai Canal, Kailua Bay, and Waianae on Oahu from shallow subtidal to up to 100 m in fine and medium sand.

Figure 3. SEM of Euchonoides moeone n. sp. A, complete specimen in lateral view, inset showing glandular belt on third abdominal chaetiger; B, radiolar crown; C, anterior peristomial ring and posterior peristomial ring collar in dorsal view; D, posterior peristomial ring collar in ventro-lateral view; E, posterior end with pygidium, ventro-lateral view.

Figure 5. Longitudinal, histological sections of  Euchonoides moeone n. sp. 
A, body, regenerating thorax; B, base of radiolar crown and collar, lateral view; C, same, frontal view; D, pre-pygidial depression and pygidium; E–F, belt on third abdominal chaetiger, G, sexual abdominal segments; H, J, details of glandular epithelium of belt of third abdominal chaetiger; I, detail of a mature oocyte and follicle cells. In A–B, D and I, the section plane is shown, where A refers to the anterior region, P to the posterior region, d dorsal zone and v ventral zone. Black arrows in A, E–G, I–J points to glandular belt on third abdominal chaetiger.
Abbreviations: A1: abdominal chaetiger 1, A2: abdominal chaetiger 2, A3: abdominal chaetiger 3.


 Wagner F. Magalhães, Julie H. Bailey-Brock and María Ana Tovar-Hernández. 2020. An Abundant New Genus and Species of Fan Worms (Polychaeta: Sabellidae) from Hawaii. Zootaxa. 4763(1); 85–98. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4763.1.7


[Diplopoda • 2020] The Millipedes Collected by the Museum "La Specola" on Madagascar 1989/1991, with the Description of Three New Species of Giant Pill-millipedes (Diplopoda, Sphaerotheriida, Arthrosphaeridae)

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Distribution map of the three new Zoosphaerium species and the morphologically related species.
Photograph shows the holotype of Zoosphaerium mangabe Wesener sp. nov., male.

in Wesener & Anilkumar, 2020. 

Abstract
A large collection of millipedes (Diplopoda) from Madagascar, belonging to the Museum “La Specola” in Florence, Italy were investigated. The collection includes three new species of the giant pill-millipede genus Zoosphaerium Pocock, 1895 which are described here as Zoosphaerium mangabe Wesener, sp. nov., Z. bartolozzii Anilkumar & Wesener, sp. nov., and Z. taitii Anilkumar & Wesener, sp. nov., all belonging to the Z. coquerelianum species group. The latter two are currently only known from a single site. Other specimens belonging to eight orders (Polyxenida, Sphaerotheriida, Polyzoniida, Siphonophorida, Chordeumatida, Polydesmida, Spirobolida, and Spirostreptida) are listed. Three tropical tramp species, Pseudospirobolellus avernus (Butler, 1876), Glyphiulus granulatus Gervais, 1847, and Chondromorpha xanthotricha (Attems, 1898) are recorded for the first time from Madagascar. New locality data is provided for Zoosphaerium neptunus (Butler, 1872), Z. villosum Wesener & Sierwald, 2005, Z. blandum (de Saussure & Zehntner, 1897), Sphaeromimus musicus (de Saussure & Zehntner, 1897), Rhinotus purpureus (Pocock, 1894), Hylekobolus andasibensis Wesener, 2009, Aphistogoniulus infernalis Wesener, 2009, Ostinobolus rufus Wesener, 2009, Ostinobolus subterraneus Wesener, 2009, Dactylobolus bivirgatus (Karsch, 1881), and Eumekius antimena (de Saussure & Zehntner, 1901).

Keywords: Biodiversity, COI, introduced species, Madagascar, museum collection

Figure 1. Maximum likelihood tree inferred from the COI dataset with 1000 bootstrap pseudoreplicates implementing the GTR+I+G model. Colors used to separate species. The circle indicates weakly supported sister-group relationships.

Figure 2. Distribution map of the three new Zoosphaerium species and the morphologically related species. Photograph shows the holotype of Zoosphaerium mangabe sp. nov., male.

Taxonomy
Genus Zoosphaerium Pocock, 1895

Zoosphaerium mangabe Wesener, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Zoosphaerium mangabe sp. nov. shares the large body size, surface structure (like the peel of an orange), presence of only one stridulation rib on the male harp, and > 10 apical cones on the antenna only with Z. coquerelianum (de Saussure & Zehntner, 1897) and Z. tainkintana Wesener, 2009. Zoosphaerium mangabe sp. nov. differs from Z.coquerelianum in the long second locking carina on the anal shield (> times longer than the first), the hairy anal shield, and the presence of sclerotized teeth on the anterior telopods. The former differs from Z. tainkintana in the much shorter marginal bristles of the endotergum (reaching only 1/3 of the distance towards margin), the female operculum (two widely separated tips vs. fused tips), and in structures of the anterior telopod (e.g., three or four large teeth in Z. mangabe sp. nov. but seven in Z. tainkintana).

Etymology: The word mangabe is a noun in apposition, after the type locality of the species, the island of Nosy Mangabe at the NE coast of Madagascar.


Zoosphaerium bartolozzii Anilkumar & Wesener, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Zoosphaerium bartolozzii sp. nov. is most similar to Z. tigrioculatum due to the presence of three sclerotized crenulated teeth on the podomere three of the anterior telopod, and also in the visibility of the process of the 2nd podomere in anterior view (Figs 6D, 7G). Zoosphaerium bartolozzii sp. nov. differs from Z. tigrioculatum in the presence of a single row cuticular impression on the endotergum (two rows in the latter), the absence of sensilla basiconica on antennomeres one and two, and the presence of a well-rounded anal shield which is slightly bell-shaped in Z. tigrioculatum.

Etymology: Adjective, the species is named after the Italian beetle expert Dr. Luca Bartolozzi who collected this species. 


Zoosphaerium taitii Anilkumar & Wesener, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Zoosphaerium taitii sp. nov. is mostly similar to Z. isalo, both differing from all other species in the anterior telopod where sclerotized teeth are absent on the third podomere. Zoosphaerium taitii sp. nov. differs from Z. isalo in the shorter marginal bristles of the endotergum (protruding above the tergite margin in Z. isalo), the higher number of ventral spines on leg 2 (four or five versus six or seven) and the slightly differently shaped anal shield (tapering in Z. isalo, well-rounded in Z. taitii sp. nov.).

Etymology: Adjective, the species is named after the land isopod expert Dr. Stefano Taiti who collected this species.


 Thomas Wesener and Pooja Avinipully Anilkumar. 2020. The Millipedes Collected by the Museum "La Specola" on Madagascar 1989/1991, with the Description of Three New Species of Giant Pill-millipedes (Diplopoda, Sphaerotheriida, Arthrosphaeridae).  In: Korsós Z, Dányi L (Eds) Proceedings of the 18th International Congress of Myriapodology, Budapest, Hungary. ZooKeys. 930: 3-35. DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.930.47620

Spinosaurus

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Two Spinosaurus hunt Onchopristis, a prehistoric sawfish, in the waters of the Kem Kem river system in what is now Morocco. 

Reconstructed sequential cross-sections through the tail show proximal-to-distal changes in the arrangement of major muscles and skeletal reconstruction.
in Ibrahim, Maganuco, Dal Sasso, Fabbri, Auditore, et al., 2020.
Art: Davide Bonadonna 

Abstract
In recent decades, intensive research on non-avian dinosaurs has strongly suggested that these animals were restricted to terrestrial environments. Historical proposals that some groups, such as sauropods and hadrosaurs, lived in aquatic environments were abandoned decades ago. It has recently been argued that at least some of the spinosaurids—an unusual group of large-bodied theropods of the Cretaceous era—were semi-aquatic, but this idea has been challenged on anatomical, biomechanical and taphonomic grounds, and remains controversial. Here we present unambiguous evidence for an aquatic propulsive structure in a dinosaur, the giant theropod Spinosaurus aegyptiacus. This dinosaur has a tail with an unexpected and unique shape that consists of extremely tall neural spines and elongate chevrons, which forms a large, flexible fin-like organ capable of extensive lateral excursion. Using a robotic flapping apparatus to measure undulatory forces in physical models of different tail shapes, we show that the tail shape of Spinosaurus produces greater thrust and efficiency in water than the tail shapes of terrestrial dinosaurs and that these measures of performance are more comparable to those of extant aquatic vertebrates that use vertically expanded tails to generate forward propulsion while swimming. These results are consistent with the suite of adaptations for an aquatic lifestyle and piscivorous diet that have previously been documented for Spinosaurus. Although developed to a lesser degree, aquatic adaptations are also found in other members of the spinosaurid clade, which had a near-global distribution and a stratigraphic range of more than 50 million years14, pointing to a substantial invasion of aquatic environments by dinosaurs.



Fig. 1: Reconstructed skeleton and caudal series of FSAC-KK 11888.


    

Two Spinosaurus hunt Onchopristis, a prehistoric sawfish, in the waters of the Kem Kem river system in what is now Morocco.
Art: Davide Bonadonna 
Source: Dr. Nizar Ibrahim, University of Detroit Mercy
 © Jason Treat, NG Staff, and Mesa Schumacher 

     




Nizar Ibrahim, Simone Maganuco, Cristiano Dal Sasso, Matteo Fabbri, Marco Auditore, Gabriele Bindellini, David M. Martill, Samir Zouhri, Diego A. Mattarelli, David M. Unwin, Jasmina Wiemann, Davide Bonadonna, Ayoub Amane, Juliana Jakubczak, Ulrich Joger, George V. Lauder and Stephanie E. Pierce. 2020.  Tail-propelled Aquatic Locomotion in A Theropod Dinosaur. Nature.  DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2190-3

Bizarre Spinosaurus makes history as first known swimming dinosaur

     

    

          

[Fungi • 2020] Tylopilus hayatae • A New Endemic Bolete Species (Basidiomycota: Agaricomycetes) in Relict Mexican Beech Forest

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Tylopilus hayatae  Rodríguez-Ramírez & Luna-Vega

in Rodríguez-Ramírez, Martínez-González, González-Ávila & Luna-Vega, 2020.

Abstract
Tylopilus hayatae Rodríguez-Ramírez & Luna-Vega, sp. nov., is an ectomycorrhizal fungus found in relict Mexican beech forest (Fagus grandifolia subsp. mexicana) in the mountains of Hidalgo State, Sierra Madre Oriental, in eastern Mexico. We propose this new species based on morphological and molecular data evidence. Macro- and microscopic descriptions including illustrations, photographs and scanning electron micrographs of the basidiospores are presented.

Keywords: ectomycorrhizal fungi, molecular phylogeny, tropical montane cloud forest, Fungi




Ernesto Chanes Rodríguez-Ramírez, César Ramiro Martínez-González, Patricia Astrid González-Ávila and Isolda Luna-Vega. 2020. Tylopilus hayatae, A New Endemic Bolete Species in Relict Mexican Beech Forest. Phytotaxa. 441(1); 35–46. DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.441.1.3

[Arachnida • 2020] Desis jiaxiangi • First Report of the Spider Genus Desis (Araneae, Desidae) from China, with Description of A New Species

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Desis jiaxiangi Lin, Li & Chen, 2020

 DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4755.3.11
Photograph by Zixuan Lin. 

The spider genus Desis Walckenaer, 1837 is the type genus of the spider family Desidae Pocock, 1895. Desis spiders hide in silk sacs between rocks or shells during high tide and forage during low tide (Baehr et al. 2017). Four Desis species have been recorded from Asia: Desis gardineri Pocock, 1904 (India), Desis inermis Gravely, 1927 (India), Desis japonica Yaginuma, 1956 (Japan) and Desis martensi L. Koch, 1872 (Malaysia) (World Spider Catalog 2020). Until now, only one species of the family Desidae, Badumna tangae Zhu, Zhang & Yang, 2006, has been reported from China (Zhu et al. 2006). Here, we describe a new species of Desis and report the genus from China for the first time.

Figure 4. Desis jiaxiangi, live holotype male.
Photograph by Zixuan Lin.

Desis jiaxiangi sp. nov. 

Etymology. The species is named after Mr Jiaxiang Wu, the collector of the holotype; noun (name) in genitive case.


Yejie Lin, Shuqiang Li and Haifeng Chen. 2020. First Report of the Spider Genus Desis (Araneae, Desidae) from China, with Description of A New Species. Zootaxa. 4755(3); 593–597. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4755.3.11


[Botany • 2020] Kaempferia albiflora (Zingiberaceae) เปราะแมงมุม • A New Species from Northern Thailand

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Kaempferia albiflora Jenjitt. & Ruchis.

in Jenjittikul & Ruchisansakun, 2020. 
เปราะแมงมุม ||  DOI: 10.1007/s12225-020-9868-4 

Summary
Kaempferia albiflora Jenjitt. & Ruchis., a new species from Northern Thailand, is described. It is similar to K. grandifolia Saensouk & Jenjitt. but differs in having erect, lanceolate to elliptic leaves, lobes of the labellum with a rounded apex, and a trilobed anther crest, whereas K. grandifolia has broadly ovate leaves appressed to the ground, lobes of the labellum with an acuminate apex, and a trilobed anther crest.

Key Words: Endangered species, Northern Thailand, precocious flowering, Protanthium, Tak Province



Kaempferia albiflora Jenjitt. & Ruchis. sp. nov.

 

RECOGNITION. This species is most similar to Kaempferia grandifolia Saensouk & Jenjitt. in its inflorescence appearing before the vegetative parts and its white flower with a yellowish patch at the base, but differs in having erect, lanceolate to elliptic leaves, lobes of the labellum with a rounded apex, and a trilobed anther crest, whereas K. grandifolia has broadly ovate leaves appressed to the ground, lobes of the labellum with an acuminate apex, and a bilobed anther crest (Table 1).


Thaya Jenjittikul and Saroj Ruchisansakun. 2020. Kaempferia albiflora (Zingiberaceae), A New Species from Thailand. Kew Bulletin. 75; 13. DOI: 10.1007/s12225-020-9868-4



Nattapon Nopporncharoenkul, Woranuch Laongsri and Thaya Jenjittikul. 2020. Two New Species of Kaempferia subgenus Protanthium (Zingiberaceae) from northern Thailand. Nordic Journal of Botany. 38(2): e02633. DOI: 10.1111/njb.02633 

[Botany • 2020] Agave muxii & Yucca pinicola • Two New Species of Asparagaceae (Agavoideae) from Guanajuato and Querétaro States, Mexico

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 Agave muxii Zamudio & G. Aguilar-Gutiérrez

in Zamudio & Aguilar-Gutiérrez, 2020.

Abstract
Two new species of Asparagaceae from the southern portion of the Sierra Madre Oriental, in Guanajuato and Querétaro states, Mexico, are described and illustrated. Agave muxii from Querétaro is included in Agave, subgenus Littaea, section Choritepalae. It is ditinguished from the other species of the group by its robust inflorescence, which is densely covered from base to apex by purple bracts, and by its purple flowers, stamens and anthers. Agave muxii represents a noteworthy discovery for the Mexican flora, not only for its beauty, but also for its restricted distribution and rarity. Yucca pinicola is known from Guanajuato and Querétaro states, where it grows in the pinyon forest. It is included in Yucca section Sarcocarpa and is related to Y. filifera, Y. schidigera, Y. schottii and Y. treculeana.




Agave muxii Zamudio & G. Aguilar-Gutiérrez, sp. nov

Etymology. — The specific epithet refers to Muxi, god of rain in the Teenek culture or Huasteca, a character who helps maintain the wildlife balance and which according to the cultural tradition of this town played a role important in the origin of corn.

Yucca pinicola Zamudio, sp. nov.


Resumen: Se describen e ilustran dos especies nuevas de Asparagaceae, procedentes de la porción sur de la Sierra Madre Oriental en los estados de Guanajuato y Querétaro, México.Agave muxii proveniente del estado de Querétaro se incluye en Agave, subgénero Littaea, sección Choritepalae, ésta se distingue de las otras especies del grupo por su inflorescencia robusta, cubierta densamente por brácteas de color púrpura desde la base hasta el ápice, y por sus flores, estambres y anteras teñidos de púrpura. Agave muxii representa un notable hallazgo para la flora mexicana, no sólo por su extraordinaria belleza, sino también por su rareza y distribución restringida. Por su parte, Yucca pinicolase conoce de los estados de Guanajuato y Querétaro, en donde crece dentro del bosque de pinos piñoneros. Ésta se ubica en Yucca sección Sarcocarpa, y está relacionada con Yucca filifera, Y. schidigera, Y. schottii, y Y. treculeana.

Palabras clave: Agave muxii, endemismos, flora del Bajío, Sierra Madre Oriental, Yucca pinicola


Sergio Zamudio and Gabriela Aguilar-Gutiérrez. 2020. Dos especies nuevas de Asparagaceae (Agavoideae) de los estados de Guanajuato y Querétaro, México [Two New Species of Asparagaceae (Agavoideae) from Guanajuato and Querétaro States, Mexico]. Brittonia. DOI: 10.1007/s12228-020-09613-0
NEW AGAVE IDENTIFIED IN MEXICO

       

[Entomology • 2020] Haplaxius dougwalshi • A New Species of Planthopper in the Genus Haplaxius (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Cixiidae) on Palms in Costa Rica

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Haplaxius dougwalshi
Bahder, Barrantes, Echavarria, Mou, Helmick & Bartlett, 2020


Abstract
The genus Haplaxius is a large taxon of cixiid planthoppers that is of economic importance due to the ability of Haplaxius crudus to transmit lethal yellowing in coconut palms. Haplaxius dougwalshi sp. n. is established as a new taxon of Cixiidae in the tribe Oecleini collected from native palms in lowland tropical rainforest in Costa Rica. Placement in the genus Haplaxius is supported both by molecular evidence based on the COI and 18S genes as well as by morphological characters. This novel taxon was discovered during survey work in Costa Rica to look for phytoplasmas and document planthopper diversity on palms. Furthermore, Haplaxius skarphion was also collected from coconut palms during survey work and is reported for the first time in Costa Rica.

Keywords: Hemiptera, Cixiidae, taxonomy, DNA barcoding, planthopper, palm, Costa Rica


Figure 1. Haplaxius dougwalshi sp. n. habitat/host (A–B) and in vivo (C–D).

Systematics
Family Cixiidae Spinola 1839
Subfamily Cixiinae Spinola 1839

Tribe Oecleini Muir 1922
Type genus:Oecleus Stål 1862

Genus Haplaxius Fowler 1904

Type species: Haplaxius laevis Fowler 1904

Figure 2. Adult habitus  Haplaxius dougwalshi sp. n.; (A) body dorsal view male (B) body lateral male, scale = 1 mm.
Figure 3. Adult  Haplaxius dougwalshi sp. n.; (A) male head frontal view, (B) male head, pronotum, and mesonotum dorsal view (C) male head, pronotum, and mesonotum lateral view, scale = 1 mm.

 Haplaxius dougwalshi sp. n. 

Diagnosis. This species is distinguished by a combination of bright orange coloration, facial color pattern of an orange frons with white arch traversing width of frons resulting in a trapezoidal shape dorsad of frontoclypeal suture, large, incurved processes on lateral margins of the pygofer and aedeagus with curved spine near midlength of shaft.

Plant associations. Pata de gallo palm (Asterogyne martiana), Arecaceae. 

Distribution. Costa Rica (Heredia, Puerto Viejo de Sarapiqui) 

Etymology. The specific name given is an honorarium in reference to the lead authors professor and chair during graduate school (Ph.D.), Dr. Doug Walsh at Washington State University, who’s signature mustache resembles the color pattern observed on the frons of the novel taxon.


 Brian W. Bahder, Edwin A. Barrantes, Marco A. Z. Echavarria, De-fen Mou, Ericka E. Helmick & Charles R. Bartlett. 2020. A New Species of Planthopper in the Genus Haplaxius (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Fulgoroidea: Cixiidae) on Palms in Costa Rica and A New Country Record for Haplaxius skarphion. Zootaxa. 4767(4); 543–552. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4767.4.4

Resumen: Haplaxius dougwalshi sp. n. fue recolectada en palmeras nativas en el bosque lluvioso tropical en las tierras bajas de Costa Rica y se establece como un nuevo taxón de la familia Cixiidae de la tribu Oecleini. La clasificación de esta especie dentro del género Haplaxius se basa tanto en la evidencia molecular aportada por los genes COI y 18S; así como en los caracteres morfológicos de la misma. Este nuevo taxón fue descubierto durante un trabajo de investigación que se está llevando a cabo en Costa Rica, el cual tiene como objetivo principal la evaluación de la ocurrencia de fitoplasmas y la documentación de la diversidad de chicharritas en las palmeras. 
Palabras clave: Cixiidae, taxonomía, código de barras de AND, chicharrita, palmera, Costa Rica

[Herpetology • 2020] Trimeresurus caudornatus • A New Pit Viper of the Genus Trimeresurus (Lacépède, 1804) (Squamata: Viperidae) from Southwest China

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Trimeresurus caudornatus Chen, Ding, Vogel & Shi

in  Chen, Yu, Vogel, ... et Chen, 2020. 

Abstract
The white-lipped tree viper, Trimeresurus albolabris Gray, is one of the most common species of the genus Trimeresurus with a wide distribution from India eastwards to China and southwards to Indonesia. However, this species was previously split into five geographical clades with significant genetic divergence. Recent surveys in Yingjiang County, Yunnan Province, China resulted in the discovery of one cryptic species of the subgenus Trimeresurus. Combining molecular, morphological and ecological data, we describe it as a new species Trimeresurus caudornatus sp. nov. The new species differs from other Trimeresurus species by a combination of the following characteristics: (1) Head and body generally dark green, postocular stripes absent in both genders, upper labials light green; (2) ventrolateral stripe faint green yellow, present on the first row of DSR in both genders; (3) iris golden yellow in both genders; (4) dorsal tail mostly dark red, lateral and ventral green; an orange red stripe along the ventral part of the tail; (5) DSR 21/22 –21–15, VEN 161–163, SC 52–72; (6) first upper labial partially fused to the nasal. The new species was shown to be a strongly supported monophyletic group (BPP 100%) and sister to T. septentrionalis. The uncorrected pairwise distances of mitochondrial gene Cytb between the new species and other species of the subgenus Trimeresurus, ranging from 0.059 (T. septentrionalis) to 0.134 (T. kanburiensis).

Keywords: Reptilia, Trimeresurus caudornatus sp. nov., Viperidae, morphology, molecular phylogenetics






Trimeresurus caudornatus sp. nov. Chen, Ding, Vogel & Shi,  




 Zening Chen, Jianping Yu, Gernot Vogel, Shengchao Shi, Zhaobin Song, Yezhong Tang, Jia Yang, Li Ding and Cangsong Chen. 2020. A New Pit Viper of the Genus Trimeresurus (Lacépède, 1804) (Squamata: Viperidae) from Southwest China. Zootaxa. 4768(1); 112–128. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4768.1.7

我国云南再发现竹叶青属一新种——饰尾竹叶青

    

[Herpetology • 2020] Bolitoglossa copinhorum • Integrative Systematic Revision of Bolitoglossa celaque (Caudata: Plethodontidae), with A New Species from the Lenca Highlands of Honduras

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Bolitoglossa copinhorum
Itgen, Sessions, Wilson & Townsend, 2020


 Abstract
The diversity of the tropical climbing salamander genus Bolitoglossa (Magnadigita) in Honduras has been underestimated historically, with 11 new species having been described in the past quarter-century. Bolitoglossa celaque is known to occur in three disjunct mountain ranges across the Lenca Highlands region of southwestern Honduras, and previous studies have independently demonstrated differences in mitochondrial genealogy and genome size between populations to the east and west of the Mejocote–San Juan Depression. Sampling from all three mountain ranges represented two genetically distinct clades: one associated with the vicinity of the type locality, Montaña de Celaque, and the second consisting of several eastern populations from the departments of Intibucá and La Paz. Distinctiveness of these two clades was further investigated and supported by analyses of morphological variation, geometric morphometrics of foot morphology, and comparative osteology. Based on congruent signals from each line of evidence, we restrict the taxon B. celaque to Montaña de Celaque and describe the eastern populations as a new species of Bolitoglossa.

KEYWORDSBolitoglossa copinhorum sp. nov., Chortís Block, comparative morphology, Geomorphic morphometrics, Integrative taxonomy, montane forests, Nuclear Central America, osteology, phylogenetics

Holotype adult male Bolitoglossa copinhorum (CM 163182) from Refugio de Vida Silvestre Mixcure, Intibuca;
 (A) details of head and anterior portion of body in lateral view; (B) dorsolateral view of entire body; and (C) dorsal and ventral aspects of the preserved holotype specimen.


Variation in Bolitoglossa copinhorum:
(A) an adult male from San Pedro La Loma (CM 170771); (B) an adult male from the Sierra de Opalaca, Intibuca (CM 170752);
(C) an adult female from San Pedro La Loma (CM 170770); (D) a juvenile from the Sierra de Opalaca, Intibuca.





Habitat at other localities where Bolitoglossa copinhorum occurs:
(A) Zacate Blanco, (B) San Pedro la Loma, (C) Agua Negra in the nuclear zone of Opalaca, (D) San Pedro La Loma, (E) Guajiquiro, Departamento de La Paz.

Type locality of Bolitoglossa copinhorum; Refugio de Vida Silvestre Mixcure, 2150 m elevation, Departamento de Intibuca, Honduras;
 (A) Mixcure, west of El Rodeo; (B–C) forest interior at Mixcure, west of El Rodeo.


     



Michael W. Itgen, Stanley K. Sessions, Larry David Wilson and Josiah H. Townsend.  2020. Integrative Systematic Revision of Bolitoglossa celaque (Caudata: Plethodontidae), with A New Species from the Lenca Highlands of Honduras. Herpetological Monographs. 33(1); 48-70. DOI: 10.1655/HERPMONOGRAPHS-D-19-00001.1  

        

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