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[Paleontology • 2020] Revision of Nannopterygius (Ichthyosauria: Ophthalmosauridae): Reappraisal of the ‘Inaccessible’ Holotype resolves A Taxonomic Tangle and reveals An Obscure Ophthalmosaurid Lineage with A Wide Distribution

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Nannopterygius sp.

in Zverkov & Jacobs, 2020. 
Illustration: Andrey Atuchin  twitter.com/AndreyAtuchin

Abstract
The Late Jurassic ichthyosaur Nannopterygius is among the poorest known, with the only skeleton, NHMUK PV 46497, on display in the Natural History Museum, London and, therefore, difficult to access. This holotype specimen is here reassessed. The newly obtained data have enabled the identification of several additional specimens of Nannopterygius in museum collections across the UK. Furthermore, all the material of Russian ichthyosaurs previously referred to genera Paraophthalmosaurus and Yasykovia, and considered as junior synonyms of Ophthalmosaurus in the majority of subsequent works, are also reassessed. Both these genera are synonymized with Nannopterygius with preservation of the two from six originally erected species: Nannopterygius saveljeviensis comb. nov. and Nannopterygius yasykovi comb. nov.Additionally, a new species from the Berriasian of Arctic (Svalbard and Franz Josef Land) is proposed. To resolve the phylogenetic relations within Ophthalmosauria, a revised dataset, including 44 taxa and 134 characters, 20 of which are new, was compiled. The results of a phylogenetic analysis places Nannopterygius spp. as sister to Arthropterygius spp. within Ophthalmosaurinae. Thus, the lineage of Nannopterygius was among several ophthalmosaurine lineages that crossed the Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary and, similarly to Arthropterygius, survived the Jurassic–Cretaceous transition at high latitudes.

Keywords: Boreal Realm, Jurassic/Cretaceous transition, Kimmeridgian, Paraophthalmosaurus, phylogeny, Tithonian, Yasykovia


 



Nikolay G Zverkov and Megan L Jacobs. 2020. Revision of Nannopterygius (Ichthyosauria: Ophthalmosauridae): Reappraisal of the ‘Inaccessible’ Holotype resolves A Taxonomic Tangle and reveals An Obscure Ophthalmosaurid Lineage with A Wide Distribution. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. zlaa028. DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa028


[Herpetology • 2020] Acanthosaura aurantiacrista กิ้งก่าเขาหนามสีส้ม • A New Long Horn Lizard (Squamata: Agamidae) from northern Thailand

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Acanthosaura aurantiacrista 
Trivalairat, Kunya, Chanhome, Sumontha, Vasaruchapong, Chomngam & Chiangkul, 2020

“กิ้งก่าเขาหนามสีส้ม” | Orange Crested Horned Lizard || DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.8.e48587 

Abstract
Background
In Thailand, five species of Acanthosaura have been recorded so far, including Acanthosaura armata from the southern region, A. cardamomensis from the eastern region, A. crucigera from the western region, A. lepidogaster from the northern region and A. phuketensis from the Phuket Island and south-western region. However, comprehensive studies of diversity patterns and distribution of Acanthosaura are still lacking in some areas and need further information for designating areas of special conservation importance and nature protection planning in Thailand.

New information
Acanthosaura aurantiacrista is a new species of long-horned lizard of the genus Acanthosaura from northern Thailand. It is distinguished from all other species of Acanthosaura by a dagger-like nuchal spine with yellowish-orange colouration in females, bright yellow colouration in males and a combination of other morphological characters: a greater tail length to snout-vent length ratio; a larger postorbital spine, nuchal spine, dorsal spine and occipital spine compared to its head length; a smaller diastema to snout-vent length ratio; a greater number of subdigital lamellae on the fourth finger and fourth toe; and a larger gular pouch than other Acanthosaura species. Analysis of mitochondrial ND2 gene sequences revealed a sister clade between the A. aurantiacrista lineage and the A. crucigera lineage with a 100% probability of divergence, according to Bayesian analysis and strong support value for Maximum Likelihood analysis. The pairwise distance ranged from 13.8-15.0% between A. aurantiacrista and A. cardamomensis, 10.9-14.5% between A. aurantiacrista and A. crucigera and 0-1.2% amongst A. aurantiacrista populations. The discovery of this lizard increases the known endemic herpetological diversity and underscores the importance of conservation in the mountain rainforest region of northern Thailand.

Keywords: rainforest, Thanon Thong Chai Mountain Range, northern region, ND2

      

Figure 2. Holotype THNHM28064 of Acanthosaura aurantiacrista sp. n., adult female from Mae Sariang District, Mae Hong Son Province, Thailand.
A. Dorsal and B. Ventral views of the body; C. Lateral and D. Dorsal view of the head; E. In life.

Acanthosaura aurantiacrista, sp. n.

Diagnosis: Acanthosaura aurantiacrista sp. n. is differentiated from all other congeners by this combination of characters: A large size (maximum SVL 130.1 mm for males and 119.3 mm for females) and a single long conical spine above the posterior margin of the eye; a large spine on the occiput between the tympanum and nuchal crest; tympanum naked, large, roundish; large developed gular pouch; scales on flanks randomly intermixed with small keeled and small tubercle scales; large nuchal crest with 8 large dagger-like and pointed spines; narrow diastema with 8-9 scales between the nuchal and vertebral crests; vertebral crest composed of large dagger-like, pointed spines beginning at the shoulder region and decreasing in size until the base of the tail; nuchal and dorsal crests are orange in females and yellow in males; tail 1.40-1.70 times the SVL; and black collar and black eye patch present, extending posteriorly until reaching the nuchal crest.


Figure 4. Morphology of Acanthosaura aurantiacrista sp. n. from Sop Khong Subdistrict, Omkoi District, Chiang Mai Province, Thailand.
A. Adult male paratype QSMI1448; B. Adult female paratype THNHM28522; C. Subadult male paratype THNHM28523.

         

Etymology: The specific epithet aurantiacrista came from a combination of the Latin words aurantiaco (orange) and crista (crest). The name refers to a distinctive characteristic of the first discovered female specimen, which exhibited nuchal and dorsal crests with an orange colour. 
We suggest the following common names: “กิ้งก่าเขาหนามสีส้ม” kingkakhaownaam seesom (Thai), Orange Crested Horned Lizard (English), orange-verzierter gehörnter Nackenstachler (German) and Acanthosaurus à crête orange (French).

Figure 5. Distribution of Acanthosaura species in Thailand.  

Figure 6. Ecological area of  Acanthosaura aurantiacrista sp. n. from Sop Khong Subdistrict, Omkoi District, Chiang Mai Province, Thailand.

Distribution: Acanthosaura aurantiacrista sp. n. occurs in the Thanon Thong Chai Mountain Range in northern Thailand: Mae Sariang District, Mae Hong Son Province at 728 m a.s.l.; Sop Khong Subdistrict, Omkoi District, Chiang Mai Province at 935 m a.s.l.; and Nang Lae Subdistrict, Mueang District, Chiang Rai Province at 636 m a.s.l. This species usually lives in rainforests on mountains at elevations over 600 m a.s.l. (Fig. 5).

Ecology: Acanthosaura aurantiacrista sp. n. has been found in evergreen forests on hills up to at least 600 m elevation (Fig. 6). It is active during the day on the ground, logs or rocks or 1-2 m above the ground on trees. During night, it is inactive and sleeps on twigs or trees 1-2 m above the ground. This species displays a defence mechanism against approach or provocation consisting of falling to the ground and running away to find refuge under rocks, log hollows or shrubs.

Poramad Trivalairat, Kirati Kunya, Lawan Chanhome, Montri Sumontha, Taksa Vasaruchapong, Nirut Chomngam and Krittiya Chiangkul. 2020. Acanthosaura aurantiacrista (Squamata: Agamidae), A New Long Horn Lizard from northern Thailand. Biodiversity Data Journal. 8: e48587. DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.8.e48587


กิ้งก่าเขาหนามสีส้ม ชนิดนี้ มีการเเพร่กระจายอยู่ในเขตภาคตะวันตกเฉียงเหนือเเละภาคเหนือของประเทศไทย ซึ่งชื่อของมันถูกตั้งมาจากหนามสีส้มบนหลังของตัวเมียตัวเเรกที่พบ (Holotype) เพื่อเป็นสัญลักษณ์ที่สื่อถึง "ไฟป่า"ในภาคเหนือ ที่มักจะเกิดจากการเผาป่าเพื่อการเกษตร การนำไม้ไปแปรรูป และอื่นๆ จนทำให้เกิดไฟไหม้ลุกลามไปในหลายพื้นที่ และยังเป็นต้นเหตุของปัญหาฝุ่น PM2.5 
ดังนั้นคณะผู้วิจัยจึงอยากให้กิ้งก่าเขาหนามชนิดนี้ เป็นตัวแทนของเหล่าสัตว์ป่าทั้งหลาย ที่ต้องเผชิญผลกระทบจาก “ไฟป่า” เพื่อให้ทุก ๆ คน โดยเฉพาะภาครัฐ ตระหนักถึงปัญหาไฟป่าที่เกิดขึ้นจากฝีมือของมนุษย์อย่างจริงจัง เพื่อที่สัตว์ป่า ทรัพยากรธรรมชาติ และอากาศบริสุทธิ์ จะได้อยู่คู่กับเมืองไทยตลอดไป 
#กิ้งก่าเขาหนามสีส้ม #ไฟป่า #อมก๋อย #ประเทศไทย #Acanthosaura #aurantiacrista 


[PaleoIchthyology • 2020] Rumporostralis gen. nov. • A New Genus of Sinogaleaspids (Galeaspida, stem-Gnathostomata) from the Silurian Period in Jiangxi, China

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Rumporostralis xikengensis (Pan & Wang, 1980)

in Shan, Zhu, Zhao, et al., 2020
Artwork: Xiaocong Guo.

Abstract
Galeaspids are an endemic clade of jawless stem-gnathostomes known as ostracoderms. Their existence illuminates how specific characteristics developed in jawed vertebrates. Sinogaleaspids are of particular interest among the galeaspids but their monophyly is controversial because little is known about Sinogaleaspis xikengensis. Newly discovered sinogaleaspids from the Lower Silurian of Jiangxi, China provide a wealth of data and diagnostic features used to establish the new genus, Rumporostralis gen. nov., for Sinogaleaspis xikengensis. A morphological study showed that the sensory canal system of sinogaleaspids had mosaic features similar to those of three known galeaspids. There are 3–8 pairs of transverse canals in the Sinogaleaspidae, which suggests that the sensory canal system of galeaspid probably had a grid distribution with transverse canals arranged throughout the cephalic division. Phylogenetic analysis of Galeaspida supports the monophyly of the Sinogaleaspidae, consisting of Sinogaleaspis, Rumporostralis, and Anjiaspis. However, Shuyu and Meishanaspis form another monophyletic group, Shuyuidae fam. nov., which is outside all other eugaleaspidiforms. We propose a cladistically-based classification of Galeaspida based on our analysis.


Systematic paleontology
Subclass Galeaspida Tarlo, 1967
Order Eugaleaspiformes (Liu, 1965) Liu, 1980

Family Shuyuidae fam. nov.

Differential diagnosis. Shuyuidae differs from other families of Eugaleaspiformes in the splayed posterior supraorbital canals and absence of U-shaped median dorsal canals.

Type genus. Shuyu Gai et al., 2011
Referred genera. Meishanaspis

Remarks. Newly discovered sinogaleaspid material provides a wealth of data and reliable diagnostic features to erect the new genus Rumporostralis gen. nov. for ‘Sinogaleaspis’ xikengensis. Our phylogenetic analysis of Galeaspida shows that Shuyu and Meishanaspis are not included in Sinogaleaspidae and form another monophyletic group. A new family, Shuyuidae fam. nov., was created for Shuyu and Meishanaspis. Shuyuidae is positioned in the new cladogram as the sister to all other Eugaleaspididiformes with synapomorphies including a subtriangular head-shield and longitudinal oval or wedge-shaped median dorsal opening.


Family Sinogaleaspidae Pan & Wang, 1980

Differential diagnosis. Sinogaleaspidae differs from other families of Eugaleaspiformes in the V-shaped posterior supraorbital canals and more than 2 pairs of median transverse canals (autapomorphy).

Type genus. Sinogaleaspis. Pan & Wang, 1980
Referred genera.Rumporostralis gen. nov., Anjiaspis

Remarks. The amended Sinogaleaspidae, including Sinogaleaspis shankouensis, Rumporostralis xikengensis, (Figs. 3, 4) R. shipanensis (Fig. 5), and Anjiaspis reticularis is monophyletic with synapomorphy (U-shaped median dorsal canals) and autapomorphy (more than 2 pairs of median transverse canals).


Genus Rumporostralisgen. nov.

Etymology. Rumpo latin, state of being dehiscent or split; rostralis, Latin, snout, in referring to the rostral margin of the head-shield split by the anterior end of median dorsal opening.

Type species.Rumporostralis xikengensis (Pan & Wang, 1980)
Referred species. Rumporostralis shipanensis gen. et sp. nov.

Differential diagnosis. Rumporostralis differs from other Eugaleaspiformes by an unclosed rostral margin of the head-shield, indicating autapomorphy.

Remarks. The genus including R. xikengensis and R. shipanensis is uniquely characterized by the unclosed rostral margin.

Holotype. A nearly complete head-shield GMC V1753A, B

Referred specimens. A nearly complete head-shield IVPP V25136.1, three incomplete head-shields IVPP V25136.2–4.

Type locality and horizon. Xikeng village and Shipan reservoir, Taiyangsheng Town, Xiushui County, Jiangxi Province, China; Xikeng formation, Telychian, Llandovery, Silurian.

Differential diagnosis.R. xikengensis differs from the other species R. shipanensis in the small size of the head-shield.

Rumporostralis shipanensis gen. et sp. nov.

Holotype. An incomplete head-shield IVPP V26114.1a, b

Type locality and horizon. Shipan reservoir, Taiyangsheng Town, Xiushui County, Jiangxi Province, China; Xikeng formation, Telychian, Llandovery, Silurian.

Differential diagnosis.R. shipanensis differs from the type species R. xikengensis by the large size of the head-shield.


Figure 7: Life restoration of Sinogaleaspis shankouensis (left) and Rumporostralis xikengensis (right) in a fresh river.
Artwork: Xiaocong Guo.

Conclusion: 
The newly discovered sinogaleaspids from the Lower Silurian in Jiangxi, China provides a wealth of new data and reliable diagnostic features to assign the new genus, Rumporostralis gen. nov., to ‘Sinogaleaspisxikengensis. This in-depth morphological study determined that the sensory canal system of sinogaleaspids exhibits the mosaic features of three known galeaspid patterns. The presence of 3-8 pairs of transverse canals in Sinogaleaspidae suggests that the sensory canal system of galeaspids probably displayed a grid distribution with transverse canals arranged throughout the cephalic division. An extended phylogenetic analysis of Galeaspida corroborates the monophyly of Sinogaleaspidae, which consists of Sinogaleaspis, Rumporostralis, and Anjiaspis. Shuyu and Meishanaspis were excluded from Sinogaleaspidae to form the monophyletic group Shuyuidae fam. nov., which is the sister of all other Eugaleaspididiformes. We propose a cladistically-based classification of the Galeaspida.


Xianren Shan, Min Zhu, Wenjin Zhao, Zhaohui Pan, Pingli Wang and Zhikun Gai. 2020. A New Genus of Sinogaleaspids (Galeaspida, stem-Gnathostomata) from the Silurian Period in Jiangxi, China.  PeerJ. 8:e9008. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.9008

[Fungi • 2020] Troglomyces twitteri • The First Laboulbeniales (Ascomycota, Laboulbeniomycetes) from An American Millipede, discovered through Social Media

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 Troglomyces twitteri Santam., Enghoff & Reboleira
male 
Cambala annulata  image by Derek Hennen. The red circles indicate two thalli of Laboulbeniales.
 

in Santamaria, Enghoff & Reboleira, 2020. 

Abstract
Laboulbeniales are highly specialized arthropod-associated fungi. The majority of the almost 2200 known species live on insects, although they also occur on other arthropod hosts. Recently, the number of Laboulbeniales associated with millipedes has increased considerably. Here we describe the first species of a Laboulbeniales fungus, Troglomyces twitteri sp. nov., from an American millipede. The new species was initially discovered on a photo of Cambala annulata (Say, 1821) from Ohio, USA, which had been shared on Twitter. A subsequent microscopic study of Cambala millipedes in museum collections in Denmark and France confirmed the discovery.

Keywords: animal-fungus interaction, collections-based research, Diplopoda, Laboulbeniaceae, social media

Figure 1. Cambala annulata, male. USA, Ohio, Adams County, West Union, Greene Township, Edge of Appalachia Preserve System, Abner Hollow Rd., on Bisher Dolostone Cliffs, 38.7139N, 83.4187W, 26 Jun 2014; M. Zloba leg. Original of image shared on Twitter on 31 Oct 2018 by Derek Hennen. Courtesy of D. Hennen. The red circles indicate two thalli of Laboulbeniales.

Figure 2. Troglomyces twitteri Santam., Enghoff & Reboleira, sp. nov. 
A–D mature thalli with labelling of cells and other elements in B, C E, F detail of perithecium at two focusing levels to show the slightly longer lip (E, arrow), and tooth-like outgrowth (F, arrow). In Fig. F, cell VI is labelled G detail of an immature thallus showing the trichogyne (tr) and the antheridium (an).
Scale bars: 50 µm (A–D), 25 µm (E–G). 
Photographs from: slides GA003-1 (A, D), GA003-2 (E–G), and C-F-95157 (B, C).

Taxonomy: 
Order Laboulbeniales Lindau
Suborder Laboulbeniineae Thaxt

Family Laboulbeniaceae Peyr
Subfamily Laboulbenioideae s. str.

Tribe Laboulbenieae Thaxt
Subtribe Stigmatomycetinae (Thaxt.) I.I. Tav.

Genus Troglomyces S. Colla, 
Nuovo Giornale Botanico Italiano 39: 450 (1932).
Type species: T. manfrediae S. Colla

Brief description: Receptacle three-celled. Cell III very narrow and adnate to the perithecium. Perithecium with 5-6 outer wall cells in each vertical row. Perithecial apex typically with four protruding lips. Nine species.


Troglomyces twitteri Santam., Enghoff & Reboleira, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Septa II–III and II–VI approximately at the same level. Dorsal and ventral margin of cell II of equal to subequal height, in contrast to all other Troglomyces, such that cell II is not adnate to either cell VI or the perithecium. Primary appendage branched. Perithecial apex bearing four slightly protruding lips, one of them being longer.

Etymology: Named after the social media platform Twitter, where it was observed for the first time.


 Sergi Santamaria, Henrik Enghoff and Ana Sofia Reboleira. 2020. The First Laboulbeniales (Ascomycota, Laboulbeniomycetes) from An American Millipede, discovered through Social Media. MycoKeys. 67: 45-53. DOI:  10.3897/mycokeys.67.51811

Bizarre new species discovered... on Twitter


[Botany • 2020] Onosma fuyunensis (Boraginaceae) • A New Species from Xinjiang, China

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Onosma fuyunensis Y. He & Q.R. Liu

in He, Xu, Zhou & Liu, 2020. 
 DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.144.33287 

Abstract
Onosma fuyunensis, a new species of Boraginaceae from northern Xinjiang, China, is described and illustrated here. Onosma fuyunensis is similar to O. simplicissima and O. gmelinii; it differs in having a particularly bristly indumentum, unbranched stems, white and yellow corollas, anthers united only at base, and nutlets with a stipitate cicatrix. An updated key to the species of Onosma from Xinjiang and Altai Mountains is also provided.

Keywords: Boraginaceae, new species, Onosma fuyunensis, Xinjiang

Figure 2. Photographs of Onosma fuyunensis.
A Habitat B inflorescence during late flowering season C habit D basal leaves (show spreading bristles) E leaves in abaxial view (show netted venation) F scanning electron micrographs of leaves in adaxial view. Photo by Yi He.



Onosma fuyunensis Y. He & Q.R. Liu, sp. nov.

Onosma gmelinii auct. non Ledeb.: Fl. Reipub. Popul. Sinicae 64(2): 54. 1989. p.p.; Fl. China 16: 352. 1995. p.p.; Clavs Plantarum Xijiangensis. 428. 2000. p.p.; Fl. Xinjiangensis 4: 157. pl. 50. 2004. p.p.

Onosma simplicissima auct. non L.: Fl. China 16: 351. 1995; Fl. Xinjiangensis. 4: 157. 2004.

Diagnosis: Closely allied to O. simplicissima L., a widespread species distributed from E Europe to E Siberia. It is differentiated by being perennial herb with rosettes (v.s. mostly subshrub with woody branching base and sterile shoots, Fig. 1B), having leaves with spreading bristles (Fig. 2 C–F, v.s. densely silky appressed pilose), larger nutlets (ca. 5 mm v.s. 2.5–3 mm), longer calyx (15–22 mm v.s. 6–13 mm) and corolla (22–27mm v.s. 18–20 mm). Also nearly to O. gmelinii Ledeb., but different through having obvious reticulate venation (v.s. obscure lateral veins), slightly elongating and straightening inflorescences in fruit (v.s. markedly elongating and straightening), longer and parallel calyx lobes in fruit (1.2–2 mm v.s. ca. 4mm, lobes converging), cream and pale yellow corolla (v.s. pale yellow), included anthers united only at base (v.s. united into a tube, Fig. 3D), nutlet with stipitate cicatrix and elongated, rectangular surfaces epidermis cells (v.s. complanate cicatrix and reticulate cells, Fig. 3A, F) and isopolar pollen grains (v.s. heteropolar, Fig. 3H).


Etymology: The specific epithet of the new species refers to its type locality, Fuyun County, Xinjiang, China.

Distribution and habitat: Onosma fuyunensis is mainly distributed in Fuyun County, Qinghe County and Altay Prefecture (Fig. 4), it is also known from W Mongolia near the border (Khovd aimag), according to the photo record by Peter Kosachev (http://www.plantarium.ru/page/image/id/128255.html). It prefers dry rocky screes and upland meadows along the hillside, from 500–1400 m a.s.l. Species growing nearby are: Echinops gmelinii Turcz, Goniolimon speciosum (L.) Boiss., Artemisia rutifolia var. altaica (Kryl.) Krasch. and Carex turkestanica Regel.


 Yi He, Xue-Min Xu, Yu Zhou and Quan-Ru Liu. 2020. Onosma fuyunensis (Boraginaceae), A New Species from Xinjiang, China. PhytoKeys. 144: 11-22. DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.144.33287

[Herpetology • 2019] Cercophis auratus • Synonymization of Uromacer ricardinii Peracca, 1897 with Dendrophis aurata Schlegel, 1837 (Squamata: Colubridae: Dipsadinae), A Rare South American Snake with a Disjunct Distribution

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Cercophis auratus (Schlegel, 1837)

in Hoogmoed, Fernandes, Kucharzewski, Moura-Leite, Bérnils, et al., 2020. 
Photo: J.L.R. Gasparini.

 Abstract  
On the basis of direct comparisons of type material, literature data, and a sample of 47 other specimens examined, we synonymize Uromacer Ricardinii, described from São Paulo, Brazil, with Dendrophisaurata, described from Suriname and never found there again. This taxon now will be known as Cercophis auratus. Additionally, we redescribe the species and provide a detailed synonymy/chresonomy. Finally, we briefly discuss its disjunct distribution, as well as current knowledge of its conservation status.

KEYWORDS: Brazil, nomenclature, snakes, Suriname

Figure 3. Portrait of live specimen of Cercophis auratus from Espírito Santo, Parque Estadual César Paulo Vinha (not collected).
Note the two small scales between the postoculars and temporals.
Photo: J.L.R. Gasparini.

Figure 4. Distribution of Cercophis auratus based on all available data. The type locality (surroundings of Paramaribo, Suriname) is indicated with an asterisk.
Map provided by Atlas of Brazilian Snakes Working Group (through C. Nogueira).


Marinus S. Hoogmoed, Ronaldo Fernandes, Christoph Kucharzewski, Julio Cesar Moura-Leite, Renato S. Bérnils, Omar Machado Entiauspe-Neto and Filipe Pereira Rêgos dos Santos. 2020. Synonymization of Uromacer ricardinii Peracca, 1897 with Dendrophis aurata Schlegel, 1837 (Reptilia: Squamata: Colubridae: Dipsadinae), a Rare South American Snake with a Disjunct Distribution. South American Journal of Herpetology. 14(2); 88–102.DOI: 10.2994/SAJH-D-17-00014.1

[Herpetology • 2017] Who is the Red-bearded Snake, Anyway? Clarifying the Taxonomic Status of Chironius pyrrhopogon (Wied, 1824) (Serpentes: Colubridae)

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 A large Chironius specimen (possibly C. fuscus) recorded in the region of Tinguá, Rio de Janeiro state, with well-marked reddish-brown labials, preying on a frog (Cycloramphus sp., Cycloramphidae). 

in Sudré,Curcio,Nunes,et al., 2017. 
Photo by D.J. Luiz.  

Abstract
We provide morphological data supporting the allocation of Chironius pyrrhopogon (Wied, 1824) in the synonymy of C. exoletus, proposed earlier in the literature without proper justification. Besides the historical (literature) data, we also examined 155 Chironius specimens previously identified as C. exoletusC. pyrrhopogon and C. quadricarinatus that could possibly fit the diagnosis and distribution of Wied’s specimens, and performed statistical tests to assess potentially informative variations in the sample. In addition, we concluded that the color features associated with C. pyrrhopogon are by no means diagnostic of a unique entity. Nonetheless, although apparently present at random in some Chironius species in the Atlantic Forest, we suggest that the reddish-brown spots are possibly linked to other phenomena involving co-evolutionary interactions with anuran potential preys.

Keywords: Reptilia, Coloration features, Chironius exoletus, Atlantic Forest, Rio Benevente, Dietary sequestration

FIGURE 5. A large Chironius specimen (possibly C. fuscus) recorded in the region of Tinguá, Rio de Janeiro state, with well-marked reddish-brown labials, preying on a frog (Cycloramphus sp., Cycloramphidae). Photo by D.J. Luiz.


Vinícius Sudré,Felipe Franco Curcio,Pedro M. Sales Nunes,Katia Cristina Machado Pellegrinoand Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues. 2017. Who is the Red-bearded Snake, Anyway? Clarifying the Taxonomic Status of Chironius pyrrhopogon (Wied, 1824) (Serpentes: Colubridae). Zootaxa. 4319(1); 143–156. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4319.1.7

[Herpetology • 2019] Phylogeny, Diversity and Biogeography of Neotropical Sipo Snakes (Serpentes: Colubridae: Chironius)

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Torres-Carvajala, Echevarría, Lobos, et al., 2019. 


Highlights: 
• A comprehensive phylogeny of Chironius (19 of 22 species) confirms its monophyly.
• Genetic diversity suggests multiple species within some widespread species.
• Current distribution patterns resulted from multiple range expansions.
• Early splits within five major clades were contemporaneous.

Abstract
Neotropical sipo snakes (Chironius) are large diurnal snakes with a long tail and big eyes that differ from other Neotropical snakes in having 10 or 12 dorsal scale rows at midbody. The 22 currently recognized species occur from Central America south to Uruguay and northeastern Argentina. Based on the largest geographical sampling to date including ∼90% of all species, we analyzed one nuclear and three mitochondrial genes using phylogenetic methods to (1) test the monophyly of Chironius and some of its widely distributed species; (2) identify lineages that could represent undescribed species; and (3) reconstruct ancestral distributions. Our best hypothesis placed C. grandisquamis (Chocoan Rainforest) + C. challenger (Pantepui) as sister to all other species. Based on phylogeny and geographic distribution, we identified 14 subclades as putative species within Chironius fuscus, C. multiventris (including C. foveatus and C. laurenti), C. monticola, and C. exoletus. Under current taxonomy, these species show nearly twice as much genetic diversity as other species of Chironius for ND4. Biogeographical analyses using BioGeoBEARS suggest that current distribution patterns of Chironius species across South America resulted from multiple range expansions. The MRCA of the clade C. challenger + C. grandisquamis was most likely distributed over the Pantepui region, the Andes, and the Chocoan Rainforest, whereas the remaining lineages probably evolved from an Amazonian ancestor.

Keywords: Ancestral area reconstruction, Biogeography, Genetic diversity, Neotropics, Snakes, Systematics






Omar Torres-Carvajala, Lourdes Y. Echevarría, Simón E. Lobos, Pablo J. Venegas and Philippe J. R. Kok. 2019. Phylogeny, Diversity and Biogeography of Neotropical Sipo Snakes (Serpentes: Colubrinae: Chironius). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 130; 315-329. DOI:  10.1016/j.ympev.2018.10.022

               


[Paleontology • 2020] First Elaphrosaurine Theropod Dinosaur (Ceratosauria: Noasauridae) from Australia — A Cervical Vertebra from the Early Cretaceous of Victoria

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Elaphrosaurinae gen. et sp. indet. 
in Poropat, Pentland, Duncan, et al., 2020.

Highlights
• First evidence of an elaphrosaurine theropod dinosaur ever reported from Australia.
• New elaphrosaurine is geologically the second youngest member of its group known worldwide.
• Elaphrosaurine theropods were capable of tolerating Cretaceous near-polar climates.

Abstract
Elaphrosaurinae is an enigmatic clade of gracile ceratosaurian theropod dinosaurs known from the Late Jurassic of Africa (Elaphrosaurus bambergi) and Asia (e.g., Limusaurus inextricabilis), and the early Late Cretaceous of Argentina (Huinculsaurus montesi). Elaphrosaurinae is often placed within Noasauridae as the sister taxon to Noasaurinae, a clade of small-bodied theropods that lived in South America, Africa, Madagascar and India throughout much of the Cretaceous. Herein, we report the first evidence of Elaphrosaurinae from Australia: a nearly complete middle cervical vertebra from the upper Lower Cretaceous (lower Albian) Eumeralla Formation of Cape Otway, Victoria, Australia. The fact that this site would have been situated at ~76°S towards the end of the Early Cretaceous (~110–107 Ma) implies that elaphrosaurines were capable of tolerating near-polar palaeoenvironments, whereas its age indicates that elaphrosaurines persisted in Australia until at least the late Early Cretaceous. The new Australian elaphrosaurine, in tandem with the recently described Huinculsaurus montesi from the Cenomanian–Turonian of Argentina, implies that the spatiotemporal distribution of Elaphrosaurinae has heretofore been greatly underestimated. Historic confusion of elaphrosaurines with coelurosaurs, especially ornithomimosaurs, coupled with our generally poor understanding of noasaurid evolution, might explain the apparent dearth of fossils of this theropod clade worldwide.

Keywords: Elaphrosaurinae, Theropoda, Gondwana, Australia, Cretaceous


  


 Systematic Palaeontology 

Dinosauria Owen, 1842 
Theropoda Marsh, 1881 
Ceratosauria Marsh, 1884 

Noasauridae Bonaparte and Powell, 1980
Elaphrosaurinae Rauhut and Carrano, 2016 

Elaphrosaurinae gen. et sp. indet.



Stephen F. Poropat, Adele H. Pentland, Ruairidh J. Duncan, Joseph J. Bevitt, Patricia Vickers-Rich and Thomas H. Rich. 2020. First Elaphrosaurine Theropod Dinosaur (Ceratosauria: Noasauridae) from Australia — A Cervical Vertebra from the Early Cretaceous of Victoria. Gondwana Research. In Press. DOI: 10.1016/j.gr.2020.03.009 

Rare long-necked dinosaur that roamed the polar world unearthed in Australia  theguardian.com/science/2020/may/18/rare-long-necked-dinosaur-that-roamed-the-polar-world-unearthed-in-australia

[Botany • 2020] Weda fragarioides & W. lutea • A New Genus with Two New Species of Euphorbiaceae‐Crotonoideae from Halmahera (North Maluku, Indonesia) and Phylogenetic Relationships of the Australasian Tribe Ricinocarpeae

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Weda fragarioides Welzen 
Weda lutea Welzen 

in van Welzen, Guerrero, Arifiani, Bangun, Bouman, et al., 2020. 

Abstract
During the environmental impact study for a proposed nickel mine near Weda Bay on Halmahera in North Moluccas (Maluku Utara Province), Indonesia, two unknown Euphorbiaceae were discovered. Morphological comparisons and molecular phylogenetic analyses using four markers (plastid trnL‐F and rbcL, and nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer and external transcribed spacer) indicated that they should be recognized as constituting a new, distinct genus of two species, which are described and illustrated here as Weda fragarioides and Weda lutea. The new taxa are members of the Australasian tribe Ricinocarpeae in subfamily Crotonoideae, and they are most closely related to Alphandia. In contrast with the otherwise mostly sclerophyllous Ricinocarpeae, Weda possesses stellate to dendritic hairs, large, long‐petiolate, glandular leaves, and inflorescences with a pair of large, leafy, subopposite bracts. The two narrowly distributed species are distinguished from each other by vegetative and floral features, molecular data, and elevational preferences. Leaf elemental analysis of Weda indicated manganese, but not nickel, accumulation. Newly resolved generic relationships and potential morphological synapomorphies within Crotonoideae are discussed, and the circumscription of Ricinocarpeae is expanded from 7 to 11 genera.

Keywords: Crotonoideae, elemental analysis, Euphorbiaceae, Malesia, molecular phylogenetics, Ricinocarpeae


Weda Welzen, gen. nov.
Type: W. fragarioides Welzen

Diagnosis: Monoecious trees with stellate to dendritic hairs and often long, simple patent hairs. Stipules lacking. Leaves alternate with long petioles, base of blades with two large, adaxial, basal glands or these at end of narrow lobes, venation raised, very distinct. Inflorescences axillary, cymose, functionally unisexual, with long peduncle and apically two unequal, subopposite, leaf‐like, (sub)sessile, late‐caducous bracts. Flowers with calyx and corolla, apparently lacking a disc. Staminate flowers with highly domed, hirsute receptacle with many short stamens or an androphore with a short free‐filament part per stamen. Pistillate flowers with three‐locular ovary, stigmas split, smooth adaxially. Fruits capsular, smooth, dehiscing loculicidally and septicidally. Seeds naked, marbled.

Distribution: The two species are each discovered from three collections made in central Halmahera (Indonesia, N Moluccas; Fig. 1).

Etymology: The genus name refers to Weda Bay where the specimens were collected.

Note: The leaf blade glands are typical, with the long peduncled inflorescences having two leaf‐like large bracts, the highly domed receptacle or androphore of the staminate flowers, and the stellate to dendritic indumentum.


Fig. 5: Weda fragarioides Welzen.
A, Habit. B, Basal leaf blade glands. C, Staminate flower with front petal removed. D, Pistillate flower with petals removed. E, Partly loculicidally split mericarps and seed. F, Columella remaining after fruit dehiscence. G, Seed, lateral (profile) view. H, Seed, ventral view.
(based on: A–D, Phillipson et al. 6448, L; E–H, Bangun et al. 971, L). 
Illustration by Esmée Winkel (2018). 

Fig. 6: Weda fragarioides Welzen.
A, Habit (Gushilman et al. 777, photo IG 5481). B, Branch tip with long petioles, exstipulate developing leaf, stellate hairs and glands at base of leaf blade (Phillipson et al. 6448, photo PBP 5058). C, Bracteate inflorescence with a single developed staminate flower (Phillipson et al. 6448, photo PBP 5079). D, Staminate flower with androecium of many free, short stamens and white petals (Phillipson et al. 6448, photo PBP 5072). E, Bracteate infructescence with young fruit (Phillipson et al. 6448, photo PBP 5059). F, Young fruit with smooth bifid stigmas and brown stellate hairs (Gushilman et al. 777, photo IG 5487).

Weda fragarioides Welzen, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Leaf blades not peltate, large glands at blade insertion. Inflorescence branches short, less than 5 cm long. Floral bracts vestigial, hairy enations. Petals white.

Habitat and Ecology: Common on Blikep in primary to secondary forest along the road at 566–777 m altitude. Flowering in September–October and fruiting in June.

Etymology: Due to the arched receptacle in the staminate flowers, the epithet refers to the strawberry (Fragaria L.), where the receptacle becomes a highly domed fruit.

Conservation: The known distribution of the new taxon is limited, as exploration of Halmahera and nearby islands is highly incomplete (see Callmander et al., 2015). It appears to be a local endemic and might at least be vulnerable, especially when the planned nickel mine begins operation.

Note: The specimen from Blikep Nu is slightly different, as the leaf blades are more elliptic, whereas the specimens of Bukit Limber are more ovate. In addition, the peduncle of the pistillate inflorescence of Blikep Nu has (next to stellate hairs) long simple hairs, not seen in the specimens of Bukit Limber, whereas many stellate hairs on the fruits in Bukit Limber have a central, much longer and stiffer arm, not seen in the fruits of Blikep Nu.


Fig. 7: Weda lutea Welzen.
A, Habit. B, Peltate leaf base with glandular appendages. C, Basal laminar gland. D, Cymose inflorescence with long branches. E, Staminate bud. F, Staminate flower, two petals removed, showing androecium. G, Young seed with apical caruncule‐like appendage, lateral (profile) view.

(based on A–C, Bangun et al. 199, L; D–F, Gushilman & Haris 178, L; G, Bangun et al. 118, L).
 Illustration by Esmée Winkel (2019).

Fig. 8: Weda lutea Welzen.
A, Habit with hairy, slightly peltate leaves (Gushilman et al. 178, photo IG 820). B, Young shoot with exstipulate developing leaves, stellate (brown) hairs and long white simple hairs (Bangun et al. 199, photo TF 2517). C, Cymose inflorescence with basal young fruit and terminal staminate flowers and buds (Bangun et al. 199, photo TF 2520). D, Staminate flower with yellow petals (Bangun et al. 199, photo TF 2510). E, Pistillate flower (Bangun et al. 118, photo TF 1228). F, Young fruit subtended by sessile bracts (Bangun et al. 199, photo TF 2521).

Weda lutea Welzen, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Leaf blades peltate, glands at base of peltation, margin with occasional somewhat smaller glands; venation basally palmate. Inflorescence branches up to more than 18 cm long (broken). Floral bracts acicular, up to 2.5 mm long, ending in a globose gland. Petals yellow.

Distribution: Indonesia, N Moluccas (Maluku Utara), Halmahera, northeast of Weda, vicinity of Weda Bay at Sake South (Fig. 1).

Habitat and Ecology: (Open) secondary forest at 78–103 m altitude. Flowering in October and November, fruiting in October.

Etymology: The epithet refers to the yellow color of the petals.

Conservation: The distribution of the Weda lutea is not adequately known, as species inventories of other areas in Halmahera and nearby islands are incomplete (see Callmander et al., 2015). It appears to be a local endemic and might at least be vulnerable; it is especially at risk because it seemingly occurs only at low altitude and will be especially endangered when the planned nickel mine begins operation.

Note: The stamens of W. lutea were difficult to observe due to the very few open staminate flowers. It is unclear as to whether the stamens are inserted on a highly domed receptacle (as is more the case in W. fragarioides) or form an androphore around whose base is a vague circular, very regular annular hirsute disc. The seeds have a poorly understood caruncule‐like appendage, not observed in W. fragarioides.



Peter C. van Welzen, Susana Arias Guerrero, Deby Arifiani, Tjut J.F. Bangun, Roderick W. Bouman, Marcel C.M. Eurlings, Iska Gushilman, Peter B. Phillipson, Iris Tabak, Esmée Winkel and Kenneth J. Wurdack. 2020. Weda, A New Genus with Two New Species of Euphorbiaceae‐Crotonoideae from Halmahera (North Maluku, Indonesia) and Phylogenetic Relationships of the Australasian Tribe Ricinocarpeae. Journal of Systematics and Evolution. DOI: 10.1111/jse.12581 

[Botany • 2020] Cryptocoryne tirtadinatae (Araceae) • A New Cryptocoryne Species from the Schwaner Mountains, West Kalimantan, Indonesia.

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Cryptocoryne tirtadinatae  Wongso

in Wongso, Hendrik, Jensen, et al., 2020. 

Abstract
A new species, Cryptocoryne tirtadinatae, from the Schwaner mountains West Kalimantan, Indonesia is described and illustrated. It differs significantly from all other Cryptocoryne species by the short leathery leaves, with the leaf blades shining green–purple pinkish with green markings on the upper surface, and the short spathe with a reddish limb and red spotted tube opening. The chromosome number 2n = 24, is the first report of this number for the genus.

Keywords: Araceae, Borneo, chromosome number, Cryptocoryne, Indonesia, Kalimantan, new species, Schwaner mountains


Cryptocoryne tirtadinatae sp. nov. 
(B) extracted plant showing the leaf blades with the shining green–purple hue with green markings,
(C) plant seen from the side with the vertical rhizome and branched roots. Photographed 19 August 2019.

Cryptocoryne tirtadinatae Wongso, sp. nov.  

Eponymy: The species is dedicated to Mr. Nichoolas Tirtadinata, who is a long‐time Cryptocoryne enthusiast and co‐founder of Wetland Biota Conservation Foundation (Yayasan Konservasi Biota Lahan Basah) and the Indonesia Cryptocoryne Community (Komunitas Cryptocoryne Indonesia).



Suwidji Wongso, Hendrik, Karen R. Jensen, Marian Ørgaard and Niels Jacobsen. 2020. A New Cryptocoryne Species (Araceae) from the Schwaner mountains, West Kalimantan, Indonesia. Nordic Journal of Botany. DOI: 10.1111/njb.02716


[Herpetology • 2020] Cryptic Diversity and Non-adaptive Radiation of Montane New Guinea Skinks (Papuascincus; Scincidae)

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Papuascincus sp.

in Slavenko, Tamar, Tallowin, et al., 2020. 

Highlights: 
Papuascincus is a genus of skinks endemic to montane regions of New Guinea.
• Papuascincus contains up to 20 previously undescribed distinct genetic lineages.
• High degrees of cryptic diversity highlight the need for taxonomic revision.
 • Divergent body sizes of sympatric lineages are suggestive of character displacement.

Abstract
New Guinea, the world’s largest and highest tropical island, has a rich but poorly known biota. Papuascincus is a genus of skinks endemic to New Guinea’s mountain regions, comprising two wide-ranging species and two species known only from their type series. The phylogeny of the genus has never been examined and the relationships among its species – as well as between it and closely related taxa – are hitherto unknown. We performed the first large-scale molecular-phylogenetic study of Papuascincus, including sampling across the genus' range in Papua New Guinea. We sequenced three mitochondrial and two nuclear markers from 65 specimens of Papuascincus and reconstructed their phylogenetic relationships. We also performed species-delimitation analyses, estimated divergence times and ancestral biogeography, and examined body-size evolution within the genus. Papuascincus was strongly supported as monophyletic. It began radiating during the mid-Miocene in the area now comprising the Central Cordillera of New Guinea, then dispersed eastward colonising the Papuan Peninsula. We found evidence of extensive cryptic diversity within the genus, with between nine and 20 supported genetic lineages. These were estimated using three methods of species delimitation and predominantly occur in allopatry. Distribution and body-size divergence patterns indicated that character displacement in size took place during the evolutionary history of Papuascincus. We conclude that the genus requires comprehensive taxonomic revision and likely represents a species-rich lineage of montane skinks.

Keywords: Island diversity, Molecular phylogeny, Mountains, Species-delimitation, Tropics


 


Alex Slavenko, Karin Tamar, Oliver J.S. Tallowin, Allen Allison, Fred Kraus, Salvador Carranza and Shai Meiri. 2020. Cryptic Diversity and Non-adaptive Radiation of Montane New Guinea Skinks (Papuascincus; Scincidae). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 146106749. DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2020.106749 

[Botany • 2020] Impatiens tirbinensis & I. shiyomiensis • Two New Balsams (Balsaminaceae) from Eastern Himalayas, India

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Impatiens shiyomiensis I. tirbinensis  Hareesh & M.Sabu

in Hareesh & Sabu, 2020. 

Abstract
Two new balsams (Impatiens), Impatiens tirbinensis and I. shiyomiensis are described from Arunachal Pradesh, India. Species shows affinities towards I. drepanophora and I. rugosipetala but distinct in many attributes. Detailed descriptions, distribution, ecology and colour photographs of the new species are provided along with the comparison of I. drepanophora.

Keywords: Arunachal Pradesh, Impatiens, I.drepanophora, Jewel weeds, new species, north-east India, Eudicots



Impatiens tirbinensis Hareesh & M.Sabu 



Impatiens shiyomiensis Hareesh & M.Sabu


Hareesh V. S. and Sabu Mamiyil. 2020. Two New Balsams (Balsaminaceae) from Eastern Himalayas, India. Phytotaxa. 437(5); 291–300. DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.437.5.3

[Paleontology • 2020] Extinction of eastern Sahul Megafauna coincides with Sustained Environmental Deterioration

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 Sahul Megafauna

in Hocknull, Lewis, Arnold, et al., 2020. 

Abstract
Explanations for the Upper Pleistocene extinction of megafauna from Sahul (Australia and New Guinea) remain unresolved. Extinction hypotheses have advanced climate or human-driven scenarios, in spite of over three quarters of Sahul lacking reliable biogeographic or chronologic data. Here we present new megafauna from north-eastern Australia that suffered extinction sometime after 40,100 (±1700) years ago. Megafauna fossils preserved alongside leaves, seeds, pollen and insects, indicate a sclerophyllous forest with heathy understorey that was home to aquatic and terrestrial carnivorous reptiles and megaherbivores, including the world’s largest kangaroo. Megafauna species diversity is greater compared to southern sites of similar age, which is contrary to expectations if extinctions followed proposed migration routes for people across Sahul. Our results do not support rapid or synchronous human-mediated continental-wide extinction, or the proposed timing of peak extinction events. Instead, megafauna extinctions coincide with regionally staggered spatio-temporal deterioration in hydroclimate coupled with sustained environmental change.



Fig. 2: Summary of field sites and diversity of fossil remains from South Walker Creek (QML1420).
a Aerial map of main South Walker Creek fossil sites SW9, SWJ and SW3 with downstream site SWCC indicated by arrow. Megafauna taxa recovered from each site indicated by numbered silhouette: 1. Pallimnarchus sp. 2. ‘Quinkana’ sp., 3. Crocodylus sp. cf. C. porosus, 4. Varanus priscus, 5. Varanus sp. (large), 6. Dromaius sp., 7. Diprotodon optatum, 8. Phascolonus gigas, 9. Sedophascolomys sp. cf. S. medius, 10. Thylacoleo sp., 11. Palorchestes sp., 12. Macropus sp. (giant), 13. Protemnodon sp., 14. Notamacropus sp. (giant), 15. Osphranter sp. cf. O. rufus, 16. sthenurine.
b Stratigraphic section A–Aʹ crossing through SW9, SWJ and SW3 (indicated by dashed line in (a)). Quaternary (Qa) alluvial sediment overlies dipping basement Permo-Triassic Rewan Group (Rw) bedrock (vertical exaggeration 5×).
 Fossil deposit surface expression at SW9 (c), SW3 (d) and SWCC (e). Summary of the diverse fossil remains recovered from SWC sites. ...



Fig. 2: Summary of field sites and diversity of fossil remains from South Walker Creek (QML1420).
 Fossil deposit surface expression at SW9 (c), SW3 (d) and SWCC (e). Summary of the diverse fossil remains recovered from SWC sites (see Supplementary Note 1 for detailed descriptions): f
 leaves and bivalves in situ at SW9; g Goodeniaceae seed; h Velesunio wilsoni bivalve; i insect elytron (?Curculionidae); j Pallimnarchus sp. osteoderm; k Crocodylus sp. cf. C. porosus osteoderm; isolated crocodile teeth from l Pallimnarchus, m Crocodylus sp. and n ‘Quinkana’; o Varanus priscus tooth; p Macropus sp. (giant) tibia in situ at SW9; q Varanus priscus dorsal vertebra; associated appendicular elements from Thylacoleo sp., r metacarpal, s phalange and t fibula; u Diprotodon optatum right dentary; v Macropus sp. (giant) humerus with crocodile puncture marks (indicated by arrows); w Articulated pelvis and caudal vertebrae of Phascolonus gigas from SW9; x associated hind limb of juvenile Protemnodon sp. from SW9.
Scale bars equal 1 mm in (g, i); 5 mm in (h, j–t, v, x); 10 mm in (u); and 50 mm in (w).

Life and Death in Tropical Australia, 40,000 years ago. Pallimnarchus stalks the world’s largest kangaroo at the edge of a drying billabong. Two Megalania fight over the carcass of Diprotodon optatum whilst another giant kangaroo, standing at 3m tall, reaches for the freshest leaves to eat. In the distance, the sun beats down on the Mt. Britton range, a silent witness to the extinctions yet to unfold.
Illustration: Ryan Bargiel, Vlad Konstantinov, Andrey Atuchin & Scott Hocknull © Queensland Museum (2020).



       


Scott A. Hocknull, Richard Lewis, Lee J. Arnold, Tim Pietsch, Renaud Joannes-Boyau, Gilbert J. Price, Patrick Moss, Rachel Wood, Anthony Dosseto, Julien Louys, Jon Olley and Rochelle A. Lawrence. 2020. Extinction of eastern Sahul Megafauna coincides with Sustained Environmental Deterioration. Nature Communications. 11, 2250. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-15785-w


     

[Herpetology • 2020] Panaspis annettesabinae • A New Species of African Snake-Eyed Skink (Scincidae: Panaspis) from Ethiopia

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Panaspis annettesabinae
 Colston, Pyron & Bauer, 2020

Sabin’s Snake-Eyed Skink  ||  DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4779.2.2

Abstract
A recent molecular phylogenetic revision of the snake-eyed skinks (genus Panaspis Cope, 1868) uncovered extensive cryptic diversity, including several new species from throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Here, we describe one of these from Ethiopia as Panaspis annettesabinae sp. nov. This description is based on a previous molecular phylogeny and morphological, scalation, and coloration data collected from the type specimen. Phylogenetic analyses place the species alone in what we term the P. annettesabinae species group from Ethiopia. This group forms the sister lineage to a large southern African radiation and suggests a potential northern origin for much of the extant diversity of Panaspis. Many new taxa have recently been discovered in the genus and region, and there are several historical records of Panaspis from elsewhere in Ethiopia. Thus, we suggest that the range of this new species (known only from a single specimen at present) may be much larger, and that additional undescribed species may exist in northern sub-Saharan Africa.

Keywords: Reptilia, Ethiopia, Panaspis annettesabinae, arid faunas, scincid lizards, cryptic radiations

 Holotype of  Panaspis annettesabinae (TJC264, ZMNH H2019,2176) in life.
 Photo by Timothy J. Colston

Panaspis annettesabinae sp. nov.  

Etymology. The specific epithet “annettesabinae” honors Annette Sabin of the Sabin family, long-time philanthropic supporters of biodiversity conservation. We propose the English vernacular name “Sabin’s Snake-Eyed Skink.”


Timothy J. Colston, R. Alexander Pyron and Aaron M. Bauer. 2020. A New Species of African Snake-Eyed Skink (Scincidae: Panaspis) from Ethiopia. Zootaxa. 4779(2); 190–200. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4779.2.2



[Herpetology • 2020] Leptodactylus barrioi, L kilombo & L. watu • Unraveling the Species Diversity and Relationships in the Leptodactylus mystaceus Complex (Anura: Leptodactylidae), with the Description of Three New Brazilian Species

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Leptodactylus barrioi,   L kilombo
Leptodactylus watu 

Silva, Magalhães, Thomassen, Leite, ... et Carvalho, 2020

Abstract
Members of the Leptodactylus mystaceus species complex are widely distributed in forests and open formations of South America east of the Andes. Species of the complex are morphologically similar or indistinguishable among each other, but acoustic data have been the cornerstone for species discrimination across their geographic ranges. In this paper, we re-examine the monophyly, species diversity, and relationships in the L. mystaceus complex on the basis of morphology, coloration, acoustics, and DNA sequences. Morphological and color patterns originally used to the allocation of species to the L. mystaceus complex are also reassessed. Our results revealed three new species from the Brazilian Atlantic Forest and Cerrado, which are named and described herein, based mainly on acoustic and molecular data. Populations assigned to the lineage widely distributed across the South American Dry Diagonal (DD), reported in this study as L. cf. mystaceus, is likely paraphyletic with respect to the nominal species (Amazonian lineage), but additional data are still needed to address the taxonomic status of the DD lineage.

Keywords: Amphibia, Amazonia, Atlantic Forest, Bioacoustics, Biodiversity, Cerrado, Cryptic diversity, Dry Diagonal



Leptodactylus kilombo (CHUFPB 28205) 

Leptodactylus kilombo sp. nov.

Etymology. The Kimbundu word kilombo (quilombo in Portuguese), used as a noun in apposition, literally means war camp. Quilombos are hinterland settlements founded by people of African origin including the quilombolas (inhabitants of quilombos), maroons, and some other names and variations by which these communities recognize themselves. Most of the original inhabitants were runaway slaves. There are hundreds of recognized quilombos throughout Brazil and also several out of record by the federal government. Such settlements carry plenty of historical, cultural, and anthropological history back into the Brazilian Imperial Age (colonial Brazil), especially in the mid-17th century, related to the slavery in the country. The type locality of Leptodactylus kilombo is located nearby an ancient quilombola settlement named Chapada dos Negros in Arraias, in the south of Tocantins State, north central Brazil (Gualberto 2017).


Leptodactylus barrioi (AAG-UFU 6183)

Leptodactylus barrioi sp. nov.

Etymology. The epithet is a homage to Avelino Barrio, who was a pioneer in characterizing calls of Leptodactylus and Physalaemus species in two comparative studies (Barrio 1965a, b). This researcher was very attentive to the relevance of acoustic data for species discrimination in both leptodactylid genera.


Leptodactylus watu (UFMG 21332)

Leptodactylus watu sp. nov. 

Etymology. The word watu, a noun in apposition, is derived from the dialect of the Borún indigenous people and is a reference to the Doce River (Costa-Reis & Genovez 2013). In 2015, the Doce River experienced the worst environmental disaster that ever took place in Brazil, the collapse of a mining tailings dam owned by Samarco (and co-owned by the Brazilian Vale and Australian BHP Billiton). The catastrophic dam failure released around 60 million cubic meters of iron ore tailings (toxic slurry) directly into the Doce River watershed, killing 20 people and affecting biodiversity across hundreds of kilometers around the river drainage, riparian lands, and the Atlantic coast, in addition to a severe contamination of the soil and water table within the affected region. The epithet is a tribute to the resistance of the Borún people and to the Watu (Doce River) in southeastern Brazil.




Leandro Alves da Silva, Felipe M. Magalhães, Hans Thomassen, Felipe S.F. Leite, Adrian A. Garda, Reuber A. Brandão, Célio F. B. Haddad, Ariovaldo A. Giaretta and Thiago R. Carvalho. 2020. Unraveling the Species Diversity and Relationships in the Leptodactylus mystaceus Complex (Anura: Leptodactylidae), with the Description of Three New Brazilian Species. Zootaxa. 4779(2); 151–189.  DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4779.2.1

[Herpetology • 2020] Oedura nesos • A New Velvet Gecko (Oedura: Diplodactylidae) from Groote Eylandt, Northern Territory, Australia

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Oedura nesos 
Oliver, Jolly, Skipwith, Tedeschi & Gillespie, 2020

Groote Eylandt Marbled Velvet Gecko ||  DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4779.3.10
photo: Chris J. Jolly twitter.com/CJollyNT 

Abstract
Over the last decade, the combination of biological surveys, genetic diversity assessments and systematic research has revealed a growing number of previously unrecognised vertebrate species endemic to the Australian Monsoonal Tropics. Here we describe a new species of saxicoline velvet gecko in the Oedura marmorata complex from Groote Eylandt, a large island off the eastern edge of the Top End region of the Northern Territory. Oedura nesos sp. nov. differs from all congeners in combination of moderate size, and aspects of tail morphology and colouration. It has not been reported from the nearby mainland regions (eastern Arnhem Land) suggesting it may be an insular endemic, although further survey work is required to confirm this. While Groote Eylandt is recognised as a contemporary ecological refuge for declining mammal species of northern Australia, newly detected endemic species suggest it may also be of significance as an evolutionary refuge for many taxa, especially those associated with sandstone escarpments.

Keywords: Reptilia, Oedura nesos sp. nov., Australian Monsoonal Tropics, ecological refuge, insular, endemism hotspots, sandstone escarpment, Top End

Oedura nesos sp. nov. uncollected specimen, subadult with original tail,
 Groote Eylandt, Northern Territory.


photo: Chris J. Jolly twitter.com/CJollyNT 

juvenile Oedura nesos sp. nov. uncollected specimen,
Groote Eylandt, Northern Territory.

photo: Chris J. Jolly twitter.com/CJollyNT 

Oedura nesos sp. nov.
Groote Eylandt Marbled Velvet Gecko

Oedura bella (in part) Oliver & Doughty, 2016
Oedura “Marmorata North 6” Rosauer et al. 2016


Etymology. Nesos (Greek) meaning island, in reference to the insular distribution of this species. Used as a noun in apposition.


Paul M. Oliver, Chris J. Jolly, Phillip L. Skipwith, Leonardo G. Tedeschi and Graeme R. Gillespie. 2020.  A New Velvet Gecko (Oedura: Diplodactylidae) from Groote Eylandt, Northern Territory. Zootaxa. 4779(3); 438–450. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4779.3.10


[Herpetology • 2020] Stumpffia froschaueri • A New Stump-toed Frog from the Transitional Forests of NW Madagascar (Microhylidae, Cophylinae, Stumpffia)

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Stumpffia froschaueri 
Crottini, Rosa, Penny, Cocca, Holderied, Rakotozafy & Andreone, 2020


Abstract
A new species of the miniaturised microhylid frog genus Stumpffia, from north-western Madagascar, is described. Stumpffia froschaueri sp. nov. differs from all other described Stumpffia species in colouration and morphology and is genetically divergent (≥ 7% uncorrected p-distance to all other nominal species of the genus) in a fragment of the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene and in a segment of the nuclear Rag-1 gene. The new species is reliably known only from a few specimens collected in the Sahamalaza (and surroundings) region. Its known distribution is limited to three forest patches severely threatened by fire, drought and high levels of forest clearance, thus suggesting a classification of “Critically Endangered” according to IUCN Red List criteria.

Keywords: Amphibia, Conservation, Stumpffia froschaueri sp. nov., UNESCO Sahamalaza – îles Radama Biosphere Reserve, Angorony Forest


Figure 1. Life colouration of Stumpffia froschaueri sp. nov. 
A dorsolateral view of holotype ZSM 169/2019 (ACZCV 0940) from Anketsakely (Anabohazo Forest) B dorsolateral view of paratype ZSM 166/2019 (ACZCV 0939) from Ankarafa Forest C dorsolateral view of paratype ZSM 168/2019 (ACZCV 0966) from Ankarafa Forest D dorsolateral view of paratype ZSM 167/2019 (ACZCV 0968) from Ankarafa Forest. Pictures by Gonçalo M. Rosa

Stumpffia froschaueri sp. nov.

Remarks: The species has been previously listed as Stumpffia sp. aff. pygmaea “Sahamalaza” in Penny et al. (2016) and Stumpffia sp. aff. pygmaea Ca “Sahamalaza” (UCS) in Penny et al. (2017), Stumpffia sp. 30 in Klages et al. (2013) and S. sp. Ca30 in Rakotoarison et al (2017). The latter two names only in the case of specimens DRV6457 and DRV6451, now considered conspecific with Stumpffia froschaueri sp. nov. Specimen DRV6487 should continue to be referred as S. sp. Ca30.

Diagnosis: A species assigned to the small-sized/miniaturised species of Clade A (Clade A1 + A2) of the genus Stumpffia based on the small size, absence of digital reduction, absence of enlarged discs on fingers and toes, occurrence in the north-west of Madagascar. The species is placed in Clade A2, which contains four nominal species (S. madagascariensis, S. pygmaea, S. yannikiRakotoarison, Scherz, Glaw, Köhler, Andreone, Franzen, Glos, Hawlitschek, Jono, Mori, Ndriantsoa, Raminosoa, Riemann, Rödel, Rosa, Vieites, Crottini & Vences, 2017, S. analamaina Klages, Glaw, Köhler, Müller, Hipsley & Vences, 2013), most similar to S. pygmaea and S. analamaina but strongly divergent in mitochondrial and nuclear DNA from these species (and see differential diagnosis below). Although we lack bioacoustic data for this taxon, we here suggest its status as new species due to the high genetic differentiation from all other species in Clade A (pairwise 16S distance ranging from 7.8% to 12.3%), a lack of haplotype sharing in the Rag-1 analysed fragment, and a combination of morphological characters: (1) miniature to small-sized species (SVL 8.9–12.8 mm); (2) manus with four fingers (not obviously reduced in length) and pes with five toes (first toe slightly reduced in length); (3) terminal phalanges of fingers and toes without enlarged discs; (4) relative hand and foot length, HAL/SVL 0.18–0.19, FOTL/SVL 0.59–0.69; (5) dorsum smooth or very slightly tubercular; (6) brownish colouration with indistinct pattern and without contrasted ventral colouration, red colour elements on ventral side, or sharp colour border between dorsum and flanks, presence of darker blotches in the lateral portion.

Etymology: The species name is a patronym in the genitive case, honouring Christoph Froschauer (ca. 1490 – April 1564). His family name means “the man from the floodplain full of frogs”. Froschauer was the first, and European wide renowned, printer in Zürich and he used to sign his books with a woodcut showing frogs under a tree in a landscape. He was notably known for printing Conrad Gessner’s encyclopaedic “Historia animalium” and the “Zürich Bible”, a complete translation into German of the Bible several years before Luther’s Bible appeared. Froschauer published works by Zwingli, Bullinger, Gessner, Erasmus von Rotterdam and Luther during his lifetime. His activity represents the nucleus of the Orell Füssli publishing house, which celebrated its 500th birthday on 9th November 2019, which is the date he was given citizenship in Zürich as a gift for his art.

Distribution: This species is known only from north-western Madagascar and apparently restricted to three forest blocks embedded in a matrix of highly degraded habitat: 1) Anketsakely (within Anabohazo Forest block), 2) Ankarafa Forest, and 3) Angorony Forest. The latter locality is assigned to this species based on the DNA sequences deposited in GenBank (accession numbers KC351357 and KC351351) that correspond to specimens DRV6457 and DRV6451 (not examined by us). This forest fragment lays in close proximity to Sahamalaza Peninsula and it is ca. 30 km away from Anketsakely. The range encompasses elevations from 100–340 m above sea level. 

Natural history: In Anketsakely and Ankarafa this species has been found only in areas with relatively undisturbed forest. Active individuals were found during the day within the leaf-litter on the forest floor, where discreet calling males were also detected.


 Angelica Crottini, Gonçalo M. Rosa, Samuel G. Penny, Walter Cocca, Marc W. Holderied, Lovasoa M. S. Rakotozafy and Franco Andreone. 2020. A New Stump-toed Frog from the Transitional Forests of NW Madagascar (Anura, Microhylidae, Cophylinae, Stumpffia).  ZooKeys. 933: 139-164. DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.933.47619

[Ichthyology • 2020] Hippocampus nalu • A New Species of Pygmy Seahorse (Teleostei, Syngnathidae) from South Africa, and the First Record of A Pygmy Seahorse from the Indian Ocean

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Hippocampus nalu 
Short, Claassens, Smith, Brauwer, Hamilton, Stat & Harasti, 2020

 DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.934.50924
  (photograph Richard Smith / oceanrealmimages.com).

Abstract
A new species and the first confirmed record of a true pygmy seahorse from Africa, Hippocampus nalu sp. nov., is herein described on the basis of two specimens, 18.9–22 mm SL, collected from flat sandy coral reef at 14–17 meters depth from Sodwana Bay, South Africa. The new taxon shares morphological synapomorphies with the previously described central Indo-Pacific pygmy seahorses, H. colemani, H. japapigu, H. pontohi, and H. satomiae, and H. waleananus, including diminutive size, twelve trunk rings, prominent cleithral ring and supracleithrum, spines on the fifth and twelfth superior and lateral trunk ridges, respectively, and prominent wing-like protrusions present on the first and/or second superior trunk rings posterior to the head. Hippocampus nalu sp. nov. is primarily distinguished from its pygmy seahorse congeners by highly distinct spine morphology along the anterior segments of the superior trunk ridge. Comparative molecular analysis reveals that the new species demonstrates significant genetic divergence in the mitochondrial COI gene from the morphologically similar H. japapigu and H. pontohi (estimated uncorrected p-distances of 16.3% and 15.2%, respectively). Hippocampus nalu sp. nov. represents the eighth member of the pygmy seahorse clade to be described from the Indo-Pacific, the first confirmed record from the African continent and the Indian Ocean, and an extension of more than 8000 km beyond the previously known range of pygmy seahorses from the Central and Western Indo-Pacific.

Keywords: Africa, COI, cryptobenthic, ichthyology, marine fish, morphology, Sodwana Bay, taxonomy


Figure 5. Hippocampus nalu in situ, SAMC-F041933, holotype, female, Sodwana Bay, South Africa at 14 m depth
(photograph Richard Smith / oceanrealmimages.com). 

Figure 6. Hippocampus nalu in situ, SAMC-F041934, paratype, male, Sodwana Bay, South Africa at 14 m depth
(photograph Richard Smith / oceanrealmimages.com).

Hippocampus nalu sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Hippocampus nalu sp. nov. is diagnosed by the following combination of characters: tail rings 29–30; dorsal fin rays twelve; pectoral fin rays ten; subdorsal rings four; two pairs of bilateral wing-like protrusions behind the head formed by a pair of large oblong spines projecting anterolaterad on the first superior trunk ridge and a pair of unique double cuspidate spines projecting anteriad on the second superior trunk ridge; double spine above the eyes; absence of spines at the sixth superior trunk and eighth inferior trunk ridges; superior trunk ridge ending with two subdorsal spines protruding laterad; the posteriormost spine greatly enlarged on twelfth trunk ridge.

Etymology: Named after Savannah Nalu Olivier who discovered the new species in Sodwana Bay. In the South African languages, Xhosa and Zulu, nalu refers to the expression ‘here it is’ and therefore we extend its meaning in this case to the simple fact that H. nalu was there all along until its discovery. Additionally, the species name nalu is also the Hawaiian word that refers to the waves or surf of the moana (ocean), for that reason we find the name relevant as H. nalu was observed moving about in strong surge to different locations in the sandy habitat. A noun in the genitive.

New English Names: Sodwana pygmy seahorse, African pygmy seahorse, and Honeypot seahorse are proposed here for Hippocampus nalu.

Figure 7. Hippocampus nalu in situ, juvenile, approximately 10 mm SL, Sodwana Bay, South Africa at 14 m depth 
(photograph Richard Smith / oceanrealmimages.com). 

Figure 8. Distribution of Hippocampus nalu. Type locality in red.


 Graham Short, Louw Claassens, Richard Smith, Maarten De Brauwer, Healy Hamilton, Michael Stat and David Harasti. 2020. Hippocampus nalu, A New Species of Pygmy Seahorse from South Africa, and the First Record of A Pygmy Seahorse from the Indian Ocean (Teleostei, Syngnathidae). ZooKeys. 934: 141-156. DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.934.50924

[Herpetology • 2020] Gracixalus trieng • A New Species of Phytotelm Breeding Frog (Anura: Rhacophoridae) from the Central Highlands of Vietnam

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Gracixalus trieng 
Rowley, Le, Hoang, Cao & Dau, 2020

Trieng Tree Frog | Ếch cây giẻ triêng  ||  DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4779.3.3 
Abstract
We describe a new species of phytotelm-breeding rhacophorid frog from central Vietnam.Gracixalus trieng sp. nov. is distinguished from all congeners by a combination of (1) body size medium (37.2–41.4 mm in five adult males), (2) snout rounded in dorsal and lateral views, (3) dorsal surface brown or yellowish with a darker brown interorbital crossbar and inverse-Y shape on the back, (4) throat and chest yellow or yellowish brown with pinkish mottling and belly and ventral surfaces of limbs including hands and feet pinkish, (5) tympanum and supratympanic fold distinct, (6) iris pale gold with darker gold radiating out from anterior and posterior edges of pupil, (7) majority of dorsal body and limb surfaces smooth in adults, with some individuals having sparsely distributed low, irregular tubercles, (8) nuptial pads on fingers I and II in adult males, and (9) eggs deposited as a tightly spaced array of non-pendent eggs on the wall of a phytotelmon. The species occurs in syntopy with G. lumarius. At present, Gracixalus trieng sp. nov. is known only from montane bamboo and evergreen forest (>1700 m) on Mount Ngoc Linh and adjacent peaks; and it is likely to be restricted to high-elevation forest with an estimated geographical distribution of <1000 km2.

Keywords: Amphibia, Anura, Gracixalus, Southeast Asia, Vietnam

Gracixalus trieng sp. nov.male holotype AMS R176206, diurnal coloration.

FIGURE 2. Diurnal dorsolateral view (A), nocturnal dorsolateral view (B), dorsal view (C) and ventral view (D) of the holotype of Gracixalus trieng sp. nov. (AMS R176206) in life.

Gracixalus trieng sp. nov.

Diagnosis: The new species is assigned to the family Rhacophoridae by the presence of intercalary cartilage between the terminal and penultimate phalanges of digits, tips of digits expanded into large discs bearing circummarginal grooves, vomerine teeth absent, pupil horizontal, large, conical tubercles/spines present on the upper eye-lid (Liem 1970; Duellman & Trueb 1986; Brown & Alcala 1994; Delorme et al. 2005), and to the genus Gracixalus by the presence of a dark X, inverted V or inverted Y-shape marking present on the dorsal surface of the trunk (Fei et al. 2009). Gracixalus trieng sp. nov. is distinguished from all congeners by a combination of 1) body size medium (37.2–41.4 mm in five adult males), (2) snout rounded in dorsal and lateral views, (3) dorsal surface brown or yellowish with a darker brown interorbital crossbar and inverse-Y shape on the back, (4) throat and chest yellow or yellowish brown with pinkish mottling and belly and ventral surfaces of limbs including hands and feet pinkish, (5) tympanum and supratympanic fold distinct, (6) iris pale gold with darker gold radiating out from anterior and posterior edges of pupil, (7) majority of dorsal body and limb surfaces smooth in adults, with some individuals having sparsely distributed low, irregular tubercles, (8) nuptial pads on fingers I and II in adult males, and (9) eggs deposited as a tightly spaced array of non-pendent eggs on the wall of a phytotelmon.

Gracixalus trieng sp. nov., male paratype UNS 00342/AMS R176204, nocturnal coloration. 



Gracixalus trieng sp. nov.male paratype UNS 00343/AMS R176205, diurnal coloration. 

FIGURE 6. (A) Montane evergreen and bamboo forest at ~2000 m elevation, habitat of Gracixalus trieng sp. nov. and (B) tree hole withGracixalus triengsp. nov. eggs (AMS R176211) deposited, and where the male holotype of G. trieng (AMS R176206) was found.


Etymology: The specific name is in reference to the Giẻ Triêng people, most of whom live in Kon Tum Province in the Central Highlands of Vietnam, and who assisted us greatly during our surveys. The species epithet is used as a noun in apposition. 

Suggested Common Name: Trieng Tree Frog (English). Ếch cây giẻ triêng (Vietnamese). 



Jodi J. L. Rowley, Duong Thi Thuy Le, Huy Duc Hoang, Trung Tien Cao and Vinh Quang Dau. 2020.  A New Species of Phytotelm Breeding Frog (Anura: Rhacophoridae) from the Central Highlands of Vietnam. Zootaxa. 4779(3); 341–354. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4779.3.3  

An unusual tree frog discovered in the mountains of Vietnam


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