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[Herpetology • 2025] Hyla dabieshanensis • A New Species of the Genus Hyla (Anura: Hylidae) from the Dabie Mountains, Anhui, China

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Hyla dabieshanensis  Zhang, Zhang & Zhang, 

in C.-W. Zhang, Y. Zhang, Cai, Yu, Pang, Jiang, Ding, Gong et B.-W. Zhang, 2025.

Abstract
Hyla tsinlingensis (Hu et al., 1966), is endemic to China, and is widely distributed in the Qinling and Dabie Mountains. Previous studies have suggested that genetic differentiation and geographical isolation exist between the Qinling Mountains population and Dabie Mountains population of H. tsinlingensis, and that the Dabie Mountains population is a cryptic species. Several Hyla specimens were collected from the Dabie Mountains of western Anhui Province, China during herpetological surveys from 2022‒2024; these specimens belonged to a species previously identified as H. tsinlingensis. Herein, we utilized phylogenetic analyses, morphological comparisons, and advertisement call comparisons, revealing significant differences from those of other known congeners; thus, we describe them as a new species. The discovery of this species implies that there are currently 18 identified species in the genus Hyla, 7 of which are found in China.

Keywords: Dabie Mountains, Hyla dabieshanensis sp. nov., Hyla tsinlingensis, Taxonomy, Morphology

Photographs of holotype AHUWFS001 of Hyla dabieshanensis sp. nov.
 A: Right lateral view; B: Left lateral view; C: Dorsal view; D: Ventral view; E: Dorsal view of hand; F: Ventral view of hand; G: Dorsal view of foot; H: Ventral view of foot.
Scale bars equal to 10 mm. Photos by Cai-wen Zhang and Yong Zhang.


Hyla dabieshanensis sp. nov. Zhang, Zhang, and Zhang

 

Cai-Wen Zhang, Yong Zhang, Yin-Fan Cai, Lei Yu, Da-Peng Pang, Qing-Yue Jiang, Jun Ding, Da-Jie Gong, Bao-Wei Zhang. 2025. A New Species of the Genus Hyla (Amphibia: Anura: Hylidae) from the Dabie Mountains, Anhui, China. Zoological Research: Diversity and Conservation. 2(1): 42-54. DOI: doi.org/10.24272/j.issn.2097-3772.2024.026 


[Botany • 2025] Begonia bukitrayaensis & B. kalimantana (Begoniaceae, sect. Petermannia) • Two New Species from Bukit Baka Bukit Raya National Park, Kalimantan, Indonesia

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Begonia kalimantana Randi & Ardi, 

in Randi, Mustaqim, Kadhafi, Nursub’i et Ardi, 2025. 

Abstract
Two new species of Begonia were discovered during an expedition to Mount Bukit Raya, the highest peak in Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo. Full descriptions with colour plates and distribution map are provided.

Begonia bukitrayaensisBegonia kalimantana, herbs, national park,plant taxonomy, west Malesia, Eudicots


Begonia bukitrayaensis Randi & Mustaqim, sp. nov. 
§. Petermannia 
 
Diagnosis:—Begonia bukitrayaensis is similar to Begonia chakensis S.Julia & C.Y.Ling (2015: 108) in its creeping habit and ovate, asymmetric leaves, but differs in having glabrous vegetative parts except for stiff red bristle-like trichomes between the veins on the adaxial leaf surface (vs. densely pilose stems, petioles, and abaxial veins in B. chakensis). The leaves of B. bukitrayaensis have red-dentate margins and a rounded to slightly cordate base (vs. minutely serrate margins and an acute or slightly cordate base). The stipules are falcate with recurved margins and a cuspidate apex (vs. broadly ovate, serrate, and acute). Male flowers bear fewer stamens (25–28 vs. 39–40).


Begonia kalimantana Randi & Ardi.
A. Plant habit in the wild; B–C. Adaxial and abaxial surface of leaves; D. Stipule; E. Stem and inflorescences; F. Staminate flower (top view); G–H. Pistillate flower (top and side view).
Photographs: A. Randi (all from Randi AR-1366).

Begonia kalimantana Randi & Ardi, sp. nov. 
§. iPetermannia  

Diagnosis:—Begonia kalimantana resembles Begonia eutricha Sands (1997: 434) in erect habit with distichous and falcate leaves, however it can be easily distinguished by striking consistent color pattern, dark olive green with shiny silvery white stripe along the midrib (vs. plain green), lamina surface hirtellous (vs. densely hispid); shorter male flower pedicels 8–12 mm long (vs. 22–24 mm long); ovary reddish and glabrous (vs. ovary white tinged with pink, and covered with soft white erect hairs), wings margin glabrous (vs. ciliate), and longer ovary beaked 3–5 mm long (vs. 1 mm long).


Agusti RANDI, Wendy A. MUSTAQIM, Andi M. KADHAFI, Firasadi NURSUB’I and Wisnu H. ARDI. 2025. Two New Species of Begonia (Begoniaceae) from Bukit Baka Bukit Raya National Park, Kalimantan, Indonesia.  Phytotaxa. 704(2); 99-105. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.704.2.1 [2025-06-06]

[Entomology • 2023] Epithemis wayanadensis • A New Species of Epithemis Laidlaw, 1955 (Odonata: Libellulidae), from the Western Ghats, India

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[A, B] Epithemis wayanadensis sp. nov. 
Chandran, Raju, Jose & Mirza, 2023
  
[E, F] E. mariae (Laidlaw, 1915)  


 Abstract  
The monotypic genus Epithemis Laidlaw, 1955, is endemic to the Western Ghats and is represented by the nominate species Epithemis mariae (Laidlaw, 1915). Epithemis mariae is distributed across the Western Ghats, and as part of an ongoing study, we identified a distinct population from Wayanad. Morphological and molecular data for E. mariae and the population from the Wayanad plateau affirm that the two are distinct taxa and allow us to describe a new species. Epithemis wayanadensis sp. nov. is described based on male specimens collected from Wayanad, a part of the Western Ghats in Kerala state, southern India.
 
Keywords: Anisoptera, barcode, biodiversity, dragonfly, endemic


Epithemis wayanadensis sp. nov.: A, in habitat; B, frontal view of the face; C, lateral view of caudal appendages; D, lateral view of secondary genitalia, 
Epithemis mariae; E, in habitat; F, frontal view of face; G, lateral view of caudal appendages; H, lateral view of secondary genitalia.

 Epithemis wayanadensis sp. nov. 
 
 
Ayikkara Vivek Chandran, David Valiyaparambil Raju, Subin Kaniyamattathil Jose and Zeeshan Ayaz Mirza. 2023. A New Species of Epithemis Laidlaw, 1955 (Odonata: Libellulidae), from the Western Ghats, India. Journal of Asia-Pacific Biodiversity. 16(4); 597-604. DOI: doi.org/10.1016/j.japb.2023.08.006 

[Botany • 2025] Aster mayangheense (Asteraceae: Astereae) • A New Species from Guizhou Province, China

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Aster mayangheense  Z.Li, 

in Li, Wu, Wang, Zhou et An, 2025.
麻阳河紫菀  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.257.145670 
 
Abstract
Aster mayangheense Z.Li (Asteraceae, Astereae), a new species from Guizhou, China, is described and illustrated here. Morphological and molecular analyses based on nuclear ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer (nrDNA ITS) confirm its distinct status. The species is morphologically similar to A. saxicola, but differs by its falcate, adaxially shiny upper leaves 3.5–5.0 × 0.8–2.0 cm with long-acuminate to caudate apices (versus oblong-lanceolate to lanceolate leaves in A. saxicola); 5-seriate, abaxially red-purple phyllaries (versus 3–5-seriate with purple-tipped phyllaries); and fewer florets (7–12 ray florets and 5–9 disc florets versus 9–14 ray florets and 10–18 disc florets). Phylogenetic analysis strongly supports its distinctness, with four samples forming a monophyletic clade (PP = 1.00, BS = 100%) nested within Aster.

Key words: Aster, morphology, molecular phylogeny, new taxon

Habitat and morphology of Aster mayangheense
 A habitat B flowering plants C capitula arranged on a branch D top view of the capitula E rhizomes F upper leaves, falcate with shiny surface G side view of two capitula H phyllaries (from outer to inner, left to right) I a disc floret (left) and a ray floret (right).

 Aster mayangheense Z.Li, sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis. Aster mayangheense differs from A. saxicola by its falcate upper leaves (3.5–5.8 × 0.8–2.0 cm) with adaxially shiny surfaces and long-acuminate to caudate apices (vs. oblong-lanceolate to lanceolate leaves 1.0–6.7 × 0.4–1.5 cm, margins entire, shortly petiolate to sessile), 5-seriate red-purple to purple phyllaries abaxially (vs. 3–5-seriate phyllaries purple/purplish only at apex) and fewer florets per capitulum (ray florets: 7–12 vs. 9–14; disc florets: 5–9 vs. 10–18) (Figs 1, 2, Table 1).

Etymology. The specific epithet indicates the type locality, Mayanghe, Yanhe County, Guizhou Province, China. The locality name is rendered “Mayanghe National Nature Reserve” in Chinese Pinyin.

Vernacular name. 麻阳河紫菀 mā yáng hé zī wǎn in Chinese Pinyin.


Zhi Li, Jiang-hua Wu, Yu-jie Wang, Qi-xian Zhou, Ming-tai An. 2025. Aster mayangheense (Asteraceae, Aster), A New Species from Guizhou Province, China. PhytoKeys. 257: 179-190. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.257.145670 

[Paleontology • 2025] Diverse Dinosaur Tracks from the Upper Jurassic – Lower Cretaceous Chacarilla Formation of Quebrada de Arcas, northeast Chile: Evidence of high ichnodiversity in an arid palaeoenviroment

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 Paleoartistic reconstruction of the Quebrada de Arcas. 

in Gesualdi, Belvedere, Yurac, ... et Meyer, 2025. 
Illustration by Joschua Knüppe.
 
Highlights: 
• New track-bearing surfaces are found in the Chacarilla Fm. in Quebrada des Arca.
• Five morphotypes: one of sauropod and four for different size theropod tracks are defined.
• Huge theropod tracks have been found and identified.

Abstract
We report diverse dinosaur tracks from siltstone to fine-grained sandstone facies of the Chacarilla Formation, Quebrada de Arcas of northeast Chile. Track-bearing surfaces were studied using 3D modelling and false-colour depth maps, derived from UAV photographs. Five morphotypes are identified based on morphology and morphometric criteria. Morphotype I comprises rounded tracks with a consistent narrow-gauge and resembles the sauropod ichnogenus, Parabrontopodus; diplodocids or titanosaurids are probable trackmakers. Morphotype II is assigned to the theropod ichnotaxon Abelichnus astigerrae and comprises some of the largest theropod tracks ever recorded from South America with a maximum footprint length of 51 cm; the trackmaker was most likely a large carcharodontosaurid, such as Giganotosaurus carolinii. Morphotype III is an indeterminate theropod track, which shows a distinctive and prominent metatarsal impression, but does not closely match any ichnotaxon although it bears some morphometrical affinity to Changpeipus carbonicus. The Morphotypes IV and V both belong to small-sized theropod trackmakers, and resemble Grallatoridae and Kayentapus-like forms, respectively. Additional theropod material cannot be assigned to specific morphotypes or trackmakers, due to poor preservation. Our findings show the existence of three distinct size classes (small, medium and large) of theropod morphotypes and point to a high ichnodiversity at the Jurassic-Cretaceous transition in the subtropical arid environments of Gondwana.

Keywords: Dinosaur tracks, Abelichnus astigerrae, Chacarilla Formation, Gondwana, Jurassic-Cretaceous boundary

 Sedimentary structures in the Chacarilla Fm. Ripple marks (a, d, e), planar lamination (a, c), microbial mats from surface QA12 (b), Ophiomorpha (f) and cross-section dinosaur tracks (c).
Scale bars are: 50 cm in (a), 18 cm in (b), 25 cm in (c), 10 cm in (d, e, f).

 Paleoartistic reconstruction of the Quebrada de Arcas.
 Illustration by Joschua Knüppe.

 
Vincenzo Gesualdi, Matteo Belvedere, Marko Yurac, Dorothee Hippler, Nejla Hurem, Christian Salazar, Javiera Mendez and Christian A. Meyer. 2025. Diverse Dinosaur Tracks from the Upper Jurassic – Lower Cretaceous Chacarilla Formation of Quebrada de Arcas, northeast Chile: Evidence of high ichnodiversity in an arid palaeoenviroment. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 113088; In Press. DOI: doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2025.113088 [9 June 2025]

[Paleontology • 2025] Khankhuuluu mongoliensis • A new Mongolian tyrannosauroid and the Evolution of Eutyrannosauria

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Khankhuuluu mongoliensis 
Voris, Zelenitsky, Kobayashi, Modesto, Therrien, Tsutsumi, Chinzorig & Tsogtbaatar, 2025


Abstract
Eutyrannosaurians were large predatory dinosaurs that dominated Asian and North American terrestrial faunas in latest Cretaceous times. These apex predators arose from smaller-bodied tyrannosauroids during the ‘middle’ Cretaceous that are poorly known owing to the paucity of fossil material. Here we report on a new tyrannosauroid, Khankhuuluu mongoliensis gen. et sp. nov., from lower Upper Cretaceous deposits of Mongolia that provides a new perspective on eutyrannosaurian origins and evolution. Phylogenetic analyses recover Khankhuuluu immediately outside Eutyrannosauria and recover the massive, deep-snouted Tyrannosaurini and the smaller, gracile, shallow-snouted Alioramini as highly derived eutyrannosaurian sister clades. Khankhuuluu and the late-diverging Alioramini independently share features related to a shallow skull and gracile build with juvenile eutyrannosaurians, reinforcing the key role heterochrony had in eutyrannosaurian evolution. Although eutyrannosaurians were mainly influenced by peramorphosis or accelerated growth, Alioramini is revealed as a derived lineage that retained immature features through paedomorphosis and is not a more basal lineage as widely accepted. Our results reveal that Asian tyrannosauroids (similar to Khankhuuluu) dispersed to North America, giving rise to Eutyrannosauria in the mid-Late Cretaceous. Eutyrannosauria diversified and remained exclusively in North America until a single dispersal to Asia in the latest Cretaceous that established Alioramini and Tyrannosaurini. Stark morphological differences between Alioramini and Tyrannosaurini probably evolved due to divergent heterochronic trends—paedomorphosis versus peramorphosis, respectively—allowing them to coexist in Asia and occupy different ecological niches.




Khankhuuluu mongoliensis gen. et sp. nov.



Jared T. Voris, Darla K. Zelenitsky, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi, Sean P. Modesto, François Therrien, Hiroki Tsutsumi, Tsogtbaatar Chinzorig and Khishigjav Tsogtbaatar. 2025. A new Mongolian tyrannosauroid and the Evolution of Eutyrannosauria. Nature. DOI: doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08964-6 [11 June 2025]

[Invertebrate • 2025] Breviturma securis • A New brittle star of the Genus Breviturma (Ophiuroidea: Ophiocomidae), with a new record from Taiwan

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Breviturma securis 
 Chang & Shih, 2025 


Abstract
The genus Breviturma, a group of brittle stars inhabiting intertidal and shallow subtidal zones, includes eight recognized species distributed mainly across the Indo-West Pacific. This study describes a new species, Breviturma securis sp. nov., from Taiwan. The new species is distinguishable from its congeners through both morphological and molecular evidence, including disc granule density, arm spine sequences, and distinctive color patterns on the dorsal disc and dorsal arm plates. Phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rRNA and COI genes support its unique status, revealing interspecific divergence distances of 18.27–26.66% between B. securis and other congeners in the Indo-West Pacific. Based on the distribution patterns of its congeners, B. securis is expected to be widely distributed in other regions of the Indo-West Pacific. A newly recorded species, Breviturma krohi (Stöhr, Boissin & Hoareau, 2013), from Taiwan is also reported.

Keywords: Breviturma securis sp. nov., Breviturma krohi, East Asia, 16S rDNA, cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI)


Breviturma securis sp. nov.
A–F. In situ.A–D. Adults.E–F. Juveniles.G–H. A specimen(NCHUZOOL 17241) with a parasitic snail (Eulimidae sp.) attached at the base of an arm. G. Ventral view. H. Dorsal view.

Breviturma securis sp. nov.

Etymology: The species name securis is derived from the Latin word meaning ‘axe’, referencing the axe-shaped dark patterns on the dorsal arm plates. The name is used as a noun in apposition.


Kai Chang and Hsi-Te Shih. 2025. Description of A New brittle star of the Genus Breviturma (Ophiuroidea: Ophiocomidae), with a new record from Taiwan. European Journal of Taxonomy. 997(1); 28–50. DOI: doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2025.997.2919

[Botany • 2025] Passiflora quimiana (Passifloraceae) • A New Species of Passiflora Subgenus Decaloba from the Cordillera del Cóndor: Ecuador's far-flung frontier

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Passiflora quimiana  Kuethe & H.Garzón,  

in Kuethe, Garzón-Suárez, Jiménez, Zavatin et Goucher, 2025. 

Abstract
A new species of Passiflora subgenus Decaloba, supersect. Decaloba, from the Cordillera del Cóndor in Ecuador, is described and illustrated, with its morphological similarities to other species being discussed in this paper. Passiflora quimiana exhibits the unique combination of narrow ovate to long-oval leaves and small foliaceous bracts. Morphologically it is the most similar to Passiflora quadriflora from Peru, from which it differs by the size of the floral organs, the foliaceous bracts, the structure of the corona, with the inner series slightly swollen at the apices, and the raised limen. It is currently known from a single locality only, occurring as a vine in submontane vegetation of sandstone plateaus.

Keywords: condorita, Decaloba, El Quimi Biological Reserve, Granadilla, Maracuja, Passionflower

Lankester composite dissection plate (LCDP) of Passiflora quimiana sp. nov., showing the morphological anatomy of the species.
LCDP constructed by Danilo A. Zavatin and 
composed of pictures taken by Henry Garzón-Suárez and Andreas Kay.

(A–C) Comparative plate between Passiflora quimiana sp. nov. and (D–F) Passiflora quadriflora. Note the differences in floral coloration, vegetative vestiture and variegation. Photos taken in situ.
Photo courtesy by Henry Garzón-Suárez (B–C); Jhon Yuca (D–F). The late Andreas Kay took photo A.

Passiflora quimiana Kuethe & H.Garzón sp. nov.  

Diagnosis: A species similar to Passiflora quadriflora, but differing in the larger flower (>4 cm versus <4 cm), the foliaceous bracts (opposed to setaceous), the vegetative pubescence on both stems and leaves (versus glabrous throughout), the slightly laterally compressed outer corona series (versus filiform), and the capitate structure of the inner corona (versus capillary).

 Etymology: The species is named after the Reserva Biológica El Quimi, one of the biological reserves within the Cordillera del Cóndor and the location of its discovery.


J. R. Kuethe, Henry Garzón-Suárez, Marco M. Jiménez, Danilo A. Zavatin and Dave Randall Goucher. 2025. Passiflora quimiana, A New Species from the Cordillera del Cóndor: Ecuador's far-flung frontier. Nordic Journal of Botany. DOI: doi.org/10.1002/njb.04854  [04 June 2025]


[Arachnida • 2025] Scorpiops doiphukha • A Newly discovered Species of the Genus Scorpiops Peters, 1861, subgenus Euscorpiops Vachon, 1980 (Scorpiones: Scorpiopidae) from Doi Phu Kha National Park, Thailand

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Scorpiops (Euscorpiopsdoiphukha  

 Ythier, Košulič, Nawanetiwong & Lourenço, 2025

Abstract
A new scorpion speciesScorpiops (Euscorpiopsdoiphukha sp. nov., belonging to the family Scorpiopidae Kraepelin, 1905, is described based on 12 specimens of both sexes (three adults and nine immatures) collected in Doi Phu Kha National Park, Nan Province, Thailand. The new species presents key features exhibited by scorpions of the subgenus Euscorpiops and can be characterized notably by a large size, a sexual dimorphism strongly marked with male pedipalps elongated, a distinct trichobothrial pattern and other morphological features. This new taxon represents the 115th species among the currently recognized species for the genus Scorpiops Peters, 1861, and the 44th species described for the subgenus Euscorpiops Vachon, 1980. It is likely an endemic element of Thailand’s scorpion fauna, raising the number of known Scorpiops (Euscorpiops) species in the country to 13. Ecological and distributional aspects of the new species are discussed and compared with closely related Scorpiops species, highlighting its distinctiveness within the genus.

Key words: Description, ecology, forest, morphology, scorpion, Southeast Asia, taxonomy

Scorpiops (Euscorpiopsdoiphukha sp. nov. 
 A, B. Male holotype, habitus, dorsal and ventral aspects, respectively;
C, D. Female paratype, habitus, dorsal and ventral aspects, respectively. Scale bar: 2 cm.

Scorpiops (Euscorpiopsdoiphukha sp. nov., alive.
A. Male holotype and female paratype, in their natural habitat; B. Female, alive with pre-juveniles (instar I).
 
Natural habitat of Scorpiops (Euscorpiopsdoiphukha sp. nov. in Doi Phu Kha National Park, Nan Province, Thailand.
A. Track trail near a small stream; B. Rock wall where the male holotype and female paratype were discovered. Both specimens were found hiding in small rock crevices.


 Eric Ythier, Ondřej Košulič, Wasin Nawanetiwong and Wilson R. Lourenço. 2025. A Newly discovered Species of the Genus Scorpiops Peters, 1861, subgenus Euscorpiops Vachon, 1980 from Doi Phu Kha National Park, Thailand (Scorpiones, Scorpiopidae). ZooKeys. 1241: 171-184. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1241.142549 [12-06-2025]
 

[Herpetology • 2025] Cyrtodactylus peninsularis • The Taxonomy of Cyrtodactylus consobrinus (Peters, 1871) (Squamata: Gekkonidae) and the Description of A New Species from the Thai-Malay Peninsula

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Cyrtodactylus peninsularis 
 L. L. Grismer, Kaatz, J. L. Grismer, Nguyen, Grergory, P. L. Wood, Murdoch, Anuar, Onn, Muin, Pawangkhanant, Suwannapoom, Poyarkov & Quah, 2025
 
Giant Bent-toed Gecko | ตุ๊กกายมลายู  ||  DOI:  doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1241.149552 
photos by Evan S. H. Quah, L. Lee Grismer and Kin Onn Chan. 

Abstract
Phylogenetic analyses based on 1459 base pairs of the mitochondrial gene ND2 and its flanking tRNAs indicate that Cyrtodactylus consobrinus from the type locality in Sarawak, East Malaysia (Borneo) and C. consobrinus from Peninsular Malaysia are not conspecific. Both populations as well as C. hutan from East Malaysia form a strongly supported monophyletic group even though their relationships to one another remain unresolved. Cyrtodactylus consobrinus from peninsular Malaysia is described herein as the new species C. peninsularis sp. nov. whose type locality is Gunung Belumut, Johor State. Cyrtodactylus peninsularis sp. nov. is diagnosable from all other species in the malayanus group by having statistically different morphospatial positions in multiple factor analyses (MFA) based on size-corrected morphometric and meristic characters. ANOVA analyses of these characters recovered significantly different mean values between C. peninsularis sp. nov. and varying combinations of all other malayanus group species across several size-corrected morphometric and meristic characters. Genetic variation within C. peninsularis sp. nov. is geographically structured across six well supported monophyletic mitochondrial lineages bearing an uncorrected pairwise sequence divergence ranging from 0.97–4.5%. Despite its well supported phylogeographic structure, PCAs and ANOVAs recovered statistically weak morphological separation among the lineages and as such, all are considered conspecific pending a genomic analysis. The phylogeographic structure within the forest-dwelling C. peninsularis sp. nov. is quite similar to that of the stream-adapted ranid frog genus Amolops and less so to that of the microhabitat specialists of the C. pulchellus group and the forest generalist C. quadrivirgatus, all of whom are sympatric across Peninsular Malaysia.

Key words: Bent-toed Gecko, Borneo, integrative taxonomy, Peninsular Malaysia, phylogeny, Thailand

Color and banding pattern variation among the lineages of Cyrtodactylus peninsularis sp. nov.
 A NEL— adult male, Lata Kekabu, Setiu, Terengganu, La Sierra University Digital Photograph Collection (LSUDPC) 13548, photo by Evan S. H. Quah B EL—juvenile, Endau-Rompin National Park, Johor, LSUHC 2585, photo by L. Lee Grismer C NWL—adult male, Sungai Enam, Perak LSUDPC 13549 (paratype LSUHC 11267), photo by Evan S. H. Quah D WL—adult female, Gunung Ledang, Johor LSUDPC 13550, photo by Evan S. H. Quah
E NCL—adult female, Gunung Tebu, Terengganu LSUDPC 7997, photo by L. Lee Grismer F WL—adult female, Gunung Korbu, Perak, LSUDCP 13548, photo by Kin Onn Chan G NEL—adult male, Hutan Lipur Sekayu, Terengganu, LSUDPC 5951, photo by L. Lee Grismer H SL—adult female, Gunung Pulai, Johor, LSUDPC 13552, photo by Evan S. H. Quah.

 Cyrtodactylus peninsularis sp. nov.

Etymology. The species name peninsularis is in reference to the distribution of this species which is restricted to the Thai-Malay Peninsula of southern Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia, and Singapore.

Distribution. Cyrtodactylus peninsularis sp. nov. ranges from extreme southern Thailand southward through nearly all habitats in Peninsular Malaysia to Singapore (Grismer 2011) (Fig. 1). The Pulau Singkep population of Indonesia has not been investigated.



 L. Lee Grismer, Amanda Kaatz, Jesse L. Grismer, Eddie Nguyen, Jeren J. Grergory, Perry L. Wood Jr., Matthew L. Murdoch, Shahrul Anuar, Chan Kin Onn, Muhamad A. Muin, Parinya Pawangkhanant, Chatmongkon Suwannapoom, Nikolay A. Poyarkov and Evan S. H. Quah. 2025. The Taxonomy of Cyrtodactylus consobrinus (Peters, 1871) (Squamata, Gekkonidae) and the Description of A New Species from the Thai-Malay Peninsula. ZooKeys 1241: 105-137. DOI:  doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1241.149552 [12-06-2025] 


[Ichthyology • 2025] Prionotus pictus • A New endemic Species of Searobin (Scorpaeniformes: Triglidae) from the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador

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Prionotus pictus 
 Victor, 2025


A new endemic searobin, Prionotus pictus n. sp., is described from the Galapagos Archipelago in Ecuador. The prior literature generally assumed that all Prionotus searobins in the archipelago were Prionotus miles, discovered by Charles Darwin on San Cristobal (Chatham Island) and described as endemic by Jenyns (1842). However, almost all underwater photographs from the islands, and surprisingly few museum specimens (three out of dozens), prove to be a quite different-appearing and colorful species. The new species is the island sister species to Prionotus albirostris which is found on deeper trawling grounds along the continental shelf, from Baja California to Peru. The second species found in the Archipelago, Darwin's Prionotus miles, is uncommonly observed, rarely photographed underwater, and so far accounts for only a handful of the hundreds of searobins photographed in Galapagos. The COI mtDNA sequence (DNA barcode) of P. miles shows that it is an island sister species of continental Prionotus stephanophrys (4.87% sequence divergent), which it resembles in a number of basic features, in particular the smooth and gently sloping head and body shape and relatively shorter pectoral fins. A review of the original P. miles holotype and other museum specimens show that P. miles has been inadequately described and guidebooks typically amalgamate and combine characters of the two species, and almost all use photographs of P. pictus to illustrate P. miles. Prionotus pictus is distinguished from P. miles (and P. stephanophrys) by a concave, sharply sloped, duck-billed head profile with more prominent head spines; longer, colorful, and prominently spotted pectoral fins; a triangular spinous dorsal-fin outline with the second spine longest following a stout and serrated first spine of almost the same length; no black blotches on the distal fourth or fifth dorsal-spine membranes; thicker, prominently banded, free pectoral (walking) rays; and a variety of head, fin, and body markings. The new species differs from continental P. albirostris in having a rounded snout (vs. squared off) and distinctive colorful and contrasting patterns (hence pictus meaning 'painted'). It is notable that a large, conspicuous, and relatively common new endemic fish species has eluded recognition for this long.

Key words: taxonomy, ichthyology, tropical eastern Pacific Ocean, coral-reef fishes, marine biogeography, gurnard, Painted Searobin, DNA barcoding, Charles Darwin, Leonard Jenyns
 
Prionotus pictus n. sp.
 Tagus Cove, Isla Isabela, Galapagos Archipelago, Ecuador (Carlos J. Estape).
colorful pattern, Galapagos Archipelago, Ecuador (Roger Uzun, shutterstock.com).

Prionotus pictus n. sp.
 juvenile, Tagus Cove, Isla Isabela, Galapagos Archipelago, Ecuador (Frank Krasovec).
newly settled juvenile, Tagus Cove, Isla Isabela, Galapagos Archipelago, Ecuador (William Bensted-Smith).

Prionotus pictus, n. sp. 
Painted Searobin, Gallineta Pintada

Diagnosis. Dorsal-fin rays X,12; anal-fin rays 11; pectoral-fin rays 14 plus three ventral free rays; pelvic-fin rays I,5; first dorsal fin nearly triangular, first three spines about equal in length, second spine longest, first spine slightly shorter, third spine slighly shorter than second, anterior margin of first spine with pronounced serrations; membranes without a black spot or ocellus specifically on fourth or fifth membranes; pectoral fins fan-shaped semicircular when expanded and long, usually reaching to last third of second-dorsal-fin base or beyond when flat (but variable); snout concave, sharply rising, duck-billed profile, eyes protruding well above profile, snout broadly rounded from dorsal view, no prominent rostral extensions or spiny edges to lachrymal plate; nasal cirrus present, about twice length of nasal opening, no supraocular cirrus; mouth relatively small, lower jaw subterminal and without a knob; head with prominent bony plates, ridges and granulations; head spines comprising preocular, postocular, sphenotic, pterotic, parietal, nuchal, opercular, preopercular (without a supplemental spine), and a cleithral (humeral) spine over pectoral fin (rostral, preorbital, and suborbital spines absent and no postfrontal groove); scales ctenoid and small, about 48 pored lateral-line scales, about 94 vertical rows of lateral scales, nuchal and opercular-flap scales present, ventral scales extend forward just past level of anterior insertion of pelvic fins. Color pattern from common brownish orange pattern to blotched in colors varying from brown to red, to a darker, almost black-and-white pattern; often bright orange ventrally; white patches like splashed paint on head and body in individual unique patterns; a line of prominent white spots highlighting some of the pored lateral-line scales; lip markings a variety of spots and bars (not a simple three dark bands on a white background, at front, middle and corner of jaw); pectoral fin with irregular spot pattern, clearest on common color form, with small rounded spots concentrated on fifth through tenth membranes, becoming reticulations on distal lowermost rays; a thick blue margin on lower 10 rays; pectoral-fin base around origin of rays with an irregular pattern (not discrete rounded spots); caudal fin with dark bars, one at base and a distal wide bar often splitting into two (dark fish can have a black striped pattern); free pectoral-fin rays thick and prominently banded. Juvenile with brown mottled color pattern and relatively longer pectoral fins, reaching past end of second dorsal fin. Newly settled juvenile uniform orangish with two prominent black-edged white saddles along dorsal midline in front of and behind soft-dorsal-fin base; gill rakers short spiny tubercles in two rows of 11, inner and outer, on lower limb of first arch.

Etymology. The species name pictus, Latin for painted, refers to the variegated patterns and colors and individual distribution of colors, with white markings as if splashed with paint. The epithet is considered a masculine adjective.


Benjamin C. VICTOR. 2025. Prionotus pictus, A New endemic Species of Searobin from the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador (Teleostei: Triglidae). Journal of the Ocean Science Foundation. 43, 12-38. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.15596906
 

[Herpetology • 2025] Nymphargus viglei • A Biogeographic Oddity in A Disappearing Ecosystem: A New Glassfrog (Centrolenidae: Nymphargus) from the Ecuadorian Chocó

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Nymphargus viglei
Guayasamin, Franco-Mena & Vega-Yánez, 2025

Illustration: Valentina Nieto Fernández.

Abstract
Nymphargus is a genus of glassfrogs primarily known from the Andes. The discovery of a Nymphargus species in the lowland Chocó region represents a biogeographic oddity. Herein we describe this new taxon based on the following main traits: (i) absence of hand webbing, (ii) green dorsum with numerous black flecks and scarce yellow false ocelli, (iii) absence of vomerine teeth, and (iv) relatively large body size (SVL > 30 mm). Despite extensive subsequent herpetological efforts in the area, no additional specimens have been found, underscoring its rarity and vulnerability. Given its limited range in the Chocó ecoregion and the ongoing threats of habitat destruction (i.e., logging, agricultural expansion, mining), we classify this new taxon as Critically Endangered, according to IUCN criteria. Lastly, we analyzed the forest cover of the Ecuadorian Chocó during 1985–2022; during this time period 194,007 hectares have been deforested, representing a 20 % destruction of the original ecosystem. We estimate that an average of 5,243 hectares of forest are lost annually; this data highlights the urgency for conservation actions in the Chocó. 

Keywords: Chocó ecoregion, Amphibia, New species, Singleton, Taxonomy

Nymphargus viglei sp. nov. and similar species in life.
A. Nymphargus viglei sp. nov., holotype. Photo: Greg Vigle. (B) N. prasinus, ICN 19645. Photo: John D. Lynch. (C) N. balionotus, ZSFQ 533. Photo: José Vieira. (D) N. buenaventura, DHMECN 10982. Photo: Juan Carlos Sánchez Nivicela. (E) N. chami, MAR-2869. Photo: Marco Rada.

Nymphargus viglei sp. nov. in its natural environment.
Illustration: Valentina Nieto Fernández.

Nymphargus viglei sp. nov.




Juan Manuel Guayasamin, Daniela Franco-Mena and Mateo A. Vega-Yánez. 2025. A BIOGEOGRAPHIC ODDITY IN A DISAPPEARING ECOSYSTEM: A NEW GLASSFROG (CENTROLENIDAE: NYMPHARGUS) FROM THE ECUADORIAN CHOCÓ [UNA RAREZA BIOGEOGRÁFICA EN UN ECOSISTEMA QUE DESAPARECE: UNA NUEVA RANA DE CRISTAL (CENTROLENIDAE: NYMPHARGUS) DEL CHOCÓ ECUATORIANO] Revista Latinoamericana De Herpetología. 8(2), e1148 (185 – 202). DOI: 10.22201/fc.25942158e.2025.2.1148

[Botany • 2025] Pedicularis rajeshiana (Orobanchaceae) • A New hemiparasitic Species from Western Himalaya, India

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Pedicularis rajeshiana Arti Garg, 
in Garg, 2025. 

Abstract
A new hemiparasitic species, Pedicularis rajeshiana (Orobanchaceae), from Rohtang in the Western Himalayas, India is described and illustrated. The new species differs from all the previously known species of Pedicularis by it’s corolla having deeply-incised labium lobes and unusual staminal insertion points at three levels on the corolla tube. Critical macro- and micro-morphological character analysis including the pollen morphology, supported this species delineation from all the other known species of Pedicularis L. and the new species is placed in the series Debiles of section Orthorrhynchae, subsection Euorthorrhynchae having plants with low grassy habit and the filaments inserted above middle of corolla tube. The new species is closely allied to the two species, P. porrecta and P. heydei but differs from both these by its tiny size, fewer-flowered inflorescence, fewer leaf-pinnae, deeply-incised labium lobes almost to the base, stamens inserted at three different levels on corolla tube and bicolpate, prolate pollen grains with crotonoid exine sculpture. Two flowers with twin (double) galea were observed which is an innovative floral trait never found earlier in this genus, suggesting acquired, adaptive and evolutionary transition towards more precise pollination.

Himachal Pradesh, Rohtang, Pedicularis porrectaPedicularis heydeiPedicularis series Debiles, Eudicots




Arti GARG. 2025. Pedicularis rajeshiana (Orobanchaceae), A New hemiparasitic Species from Western Himalaya, India. Phytotaxa. 702(2); 149-165. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.702.2.3 [2025-05-27] 

[Paleontology • 2025] Spathagnathus roeperi • A New Species and the earliest Occurrence of the Gnathosaurinae (Pterosauria) from the Late Kimmeridgian of Brunn, Germany

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Spathagnathus roeperi
 Fernandes, Tischlinger, Rothgaenger & Rauhut, 2025

Artistic reconstruction by Alessio Ciaffi
 
Abstract
The so-called “Solnhofen limestones” of southern Germany are widely recognized for their abundance of Late Jurassic fossil vertebrates, with pterosaurs being no exception. Within the recognized plenitude of the pterosaurs within this assemblage, although ctenochasmatid remains are relatively abundant, gnathosaurines are scarce, with only one known Solnhofen representative of the group known thus far. The Late Kimmeridgian locality of Brunn (near Regensburg, Germany) represents the oldest locality of the Solnhofen complex (“Solnhofen Archipelago” in recent literature), with only one pterosaur having been described from this locality to date. Here, a second pterosaur taxon from within this locality and a new gnathosaur is introduced, Spathagnathus roeperi gen. et sp. nov., whose novel tooth and dental enamel features add to the known dental diversity for the group. The new taxon represents the oldest occurrence of a gnathosaurine and contributes to the paleoenvironmental stratigraphic range for the Gnathosaurinae within the overall fossil assemblage of the Solnhofen Archipelago. Furthermore, the new taxon adds to the known diversity of ctenochasmatids in the Late Jurassic and underlines the importance of this early radiation of pterodactyloid pterosaurs during this time.

Keywords: Pterosauria, Gnathosaurinae, Mesozoic, Jurassic, Germany, Solnhofen Archipelago

SNSB-BSPG 1993 XVIII 1006 Spathagnathus roeperi gen. et sp. nov. photographed under normal light (A) and UV light (B).
Scale bar represents: 10 mm

Systematic paleontology
Order PTEROSAURIA Owen, 1842
Suborder PTERODACTYLOIDEA Plieninger, 1901

Family CTENOCHASMATIDAE Nopcsa, 1928 sensu Unwin, 2003
Subfamily GNATHOSAURINAE Nopcsa, 1928 sensu Unwin, 2002

Genus Spathagnathus gen. nov.

Spathagnathus roeperi gen. et sp. nov.

Diagnosis (autapomorphies indicated with asterisk). dorsoventrally compressed rostrum with lateral spatulate expansion on the anterior end of the premaxilla, laterally directed musiform teeth, tooth girth increasing from anterior to posterior end of the rostrum, dental enamel coating approximately half of tooth crowns, strongly veined enamel texture on tooth surface, presence of carinae.

Etymology. From the Latin “spatha” for “spatula”, and “gnath” for “jaw”; “roeperi” in honor of the late Martin Röper, long term director of the Bürgermeister-Müller-Museum in Solnhofen and leader of the excavations at the locality Brunn since the early 1990’s.

Artistic reconstruction of Spathagnathus roeperi by Alessio Ciaffi
 
 
Alexandra E. Fernandes, Helmut Tischlinger, Monika Rothgaenger and Oliver W. M. Rauhut. 2025. A New Species and the earliest Occurrence of the Gnathosaurinae (Pterosauria) from the Late Kimmeridgian of Brunn, Germany. PalZ. DOI: doi.org/10.1007/s12542-025-00725-0 [06 June 2025]


[Botany • 2025] Jacquemontia verae (Convolvulaceae) • A New Species from Brazilian Savannas

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Jacquemontia verae   

in Pastore, Moreira, Morais, Romeiro et Simão-Bianchini, 2025.
 
Abstract
Jacquemontia verae is described as a new species from “cerrado rupestre” vegetation in the Cerrado biome of Goiás, Brazil. Line drawings and photographs illustrate the new species, including optical and scanning electron microscope images of pollen. It is compared morphologically with similar species of Jacquemontia and an identification key to species from the state of Goiás is provided. The conservation status of the new species is informally assessed as Critically Endangered (CR). Its relationships within Jacquemontia and its stigma structure are discussed.

Cerrado, endangered plant, palynology, taxonomy, tropical America, Eudicots




 


Mayara PASTORE, André Luiz C. MOREIRA, Isa Lucia de MORAIS, Luiza A. ROMEIRO and Rosângela SIMÃO-BIANCHINI. 2025. Jacquemontia verae (Convolvulaceae): A New Species from Brazilian Savannas.  Phytotaxa. 701(1); 56-68. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.701.1.4 [2025-05-13]
 
Nova espécie de planta do Cerrado é descoberta por professora da UEG 



[Arachnida • 2025] Yuelushannus danxia • A New Species of Spider in the Genus Yuelushannus (Araneae: Linyphiidae) from Guangdong, China

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 Yuelushannus danxia  He and Guo,

in He, Chen, Zhu et Guo, 2025.
丹霞岳麓山蛛  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.1080/24750263.2025.2490065

Abstract
A new species of the genus Yuelushannus Irfan, Zhou, Bashir, Mukhtar and Peng, 2020 is described here from Danxia Mountain National Nature Reserve, Guangdong, China: Y. danxia He and Guo, sp. nov. Detailed descriptions, photographs of copulatory organs and somatic features, and a distribution map are provided.
 
Keywords: Biodiversity, description, morphology, sheet-web spiders, taxonomy


Family Linyphiidae Blackwall 1859
Subfamily Erigoninae Emerton, 1882

Genus Yuelushannus Irfan et al., 2020 

Type Yuelushannus barbatus Irfan et al. Citation2020 from Hunan, China; gender masculine.

Genus Yuelushannus comprises five species distributed in Hubei and Hunan Provinces, China (World Spider Catalog, 2024).

 Yuelushannus danxia sp. nov., male, holotype (a–c) and female paratype (d–f). (a, d). Habitus, dorsal view. (b, e). Habitus, lateral view. (c, e). Habitus, ventral view. Scale bars: 0.5 mm.

Yuelushannus danxia He and Guo, sp. nov. 
(丹霞岳麓山蛛)

 
A.L. He, F. Chen, J.H. Zhu and J. Guo. 2025. A New Species of Spider in the Genus Yuelushannus (Araneae, Linyphiidae) from Guangdong, China. The European Zoological Journal. 92(1); 528-534. DOI: doi.org/10.1080/24750263.2025.2490065 [20 May 2025]

[Botany • 2024] Microlicia ferricola (Melastomataceae: Lavoisiereae) • A New Species from the Iron Quadrangle, Minas Gerais, Brazil

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Microlicia ferricola Versiane, M.J.R.Rocha & R.Romero, 

in Versiane, Rocha, Santos et Romero, 2024. 
 
Abstract
Here, we describe Microlicia ferricola, a newly discovered species exclusive to the Iron Quadrangle, Minas Gerais state. Additionally, we provide an illustration plate, field images, occurrence map, and comparisons with its morphological relatives such as M. longicalycina, M. woodgyeriana, and M. trichocalycina. This new species is characterized by its green-reddish to reddish branches, leaves, hypanthia, and sepals covered with glandular trichomes, lanceolate to elliptic-lanceolate leaves, setose at the apices, campanulate-oblong hypanthia, long-triangular sepals, dimorphic and bicolorous androecium with tetrasporangiate anthers. Microlicia ferricola is found in the Serra do Rola-Moça State Park and is considered a Least Concern (LC) taxon since it is within a conservation unit, ensuring its preservation.

 Canga, Espinhaço Range, Iron soil, Mining activities, Serra do Rola-Moça State Park, Eudicots

Microlicia ferricola Versiane, M.J.R.Rocha & R.Romero. Photos of living specimens.
A-B. Habitat in the Rola-Moça State Park, Minas Gerais, Brazil. C. Habit of an individual on slope habitat. D. Flowering branch with green leaves. E. Flowering branch with green-reddish to reddish leaves. F. Flower.
Photos: M.J.R. Rocha (Rocha 1437 [A, B, E]; Rocha 1451 [C, D]).



Ana Flávia Alves VERSIANE, Maria José Reis da ROCHA, Amanda Alves SANTOS and Rosana ROMERO. 2024. Microlicia ferricola (Lavoisiereae), A New Species of Melastomataceae from the Iron Quadrangle, Minas Gerais, Brazil.  Phytotaxa. 671(1); 105-112. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.671.1.7 [2024-11-07]
https://www.agenciaminas.mg.gov.br/multimidia/galeria/nova-especie-da-flora-brasileira-e-encontrada-no-parque-estadual-da-serra-do-rola-moca

[Botany • 2025] Microlicia geraizeira (Melastomataceae: Lavoisiereae) • A Newly discovered Species from northern Minas Gerais, Brazil

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Microlicia geraizeira Versiane & R.Romero, 

in Versiane, Rocha et Romero, 2025. 

Abstract
One-third of Brazilian melastomes occur in Minas Gerais, the most floristically diverse state in the country. In this paper, we introduce Microlicia geraizeira, a new species of Melastomataceae exclusively collected in the Serra Nova e Talhado State Park, northern Minas Gerais. The new species has leaves, hypanthia, and sepals densely covered with spherical glands mixed with glandular trichomes, elliptic-lanceolate to oblong-lanceolate leaf blades, urceolate hypanthia, triangular to narrowly triangular sepals, pentamerous flowers, dimorphic and concolor androecium, tetrasporangiate anthers, and five locular ovaries. We compare M. geraizeira to M. gentianoides, M. indurata, M. macrantha, M. mellobarretoi, M. pilosa, and M. septentrionalis. Also, we provide an illustration plate, field images, an occurrence map, and an identification key for closely similar species.

Keywords: campo rupestre, conservation area, endemism, Espinhaço Range, Gerais



Microlicia geraizeira Versiane & R.Romero, sp. nov. 

Etymology: the specific epithet honors the geraizeiros, traditional communities (see Decree nº 8.750/2016) inhabiting northern Minas Gerais, where this new species is endemic. the term comes from the region known as Gerais, which is in the transitional zone between the Cerrado and Caatinga biomes (Dayrell 1998). the geraizeiros have long fought to protect the Gerais’ biodiversity, but since the 1970s, it has been severely threatened by Eucalyptus sp. monocultures, mining, and cattle ranching (Dayrell 1998; Nogueira 2009; Magalhães and Amorim 2015).


Ana Flavia Alves Versiane, Maria José Reis da Rocha and Rosana Romero.2025. Microlicia geraizeira (Melastomataceae, Lavoisiereae): A Newly discovered Species from northern Minas Gerais, Brazil. Webbia. Journal of Plant Taxonomy and Geography. 80(1); 43-50. DOI: doi.org/10.36253/jopt-17079  [2025-04-17]

[Ichthyology • 2025] Neotrygon romeoi • A New Blue-spotted Maskray Species (Myliobatiformes: Dasyatidae: Neotrygon) from Fiji

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Live colouration of Neotrygon romeoi n. sp. from around Fiji:
(a) Lautoka, mixed rocky and sand habitat (©Leon Perrie, observed 1 July 2023, inaturalist.org); (b) Near South Sea Island, rocky reef, (©Jack Crosbie, 17 August 2023,  inaturalist.org); (c) Drawaqa Island, Yasawas on sand flat with some seagrass in ≃18 m of water, (©Robert Macfarlane, 7 January 2024, modified); (d) Suva foreshore, on seagrass in ≃0.2 m of water (©Tom Vierus, observed 24 March 2022, inaturalist.org); (e) Mana Island, over seagrass (©Floyd E. Hayes, observed 27 March 2018, inaturalist.org).

Glaus, White, O'Neill, Thurnheer & Appleyard, 2025

Abstract
Neotrygon romeoi n. sp. (Dasyatidae), a new species of blue-spotted maskray from Fiji, previously confused with Neotrygon kuhlii (Müller and Henle 1841) or Neotrygon trigonoides (Castelnau 1873), is described based on nine specimens (310–397 mm disc width) from Fiji. Neotrygon romeoi n. sp. is a large maskray with a broadly angled snout, long claspers in adult males and a median row of thornlets extending from the nape to the tail base. Fresh specimens have a brownish dorsal surface with dark mask-like marking covering across and between the eyes (sometimes indistinct), two large brown to black branchial blotches posterior to the spiracles, numerous black pepper-like spots mainly concentrated in masked area and the branchial blotches, and sometimes having small, dark-edged pale blue to whitish spots. The new species is further characterized by ocellated spots in the medial belt usually absent. Molecular analysis based on 570 bp of partial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (COI) mitochondrial gene also supports that N. romeoi n. sp. is a distinct species from other congeners. The new species, known only from the Fiji Islands, may thus warrant inclusion in Fiji's Endangered and Protected Species Act.

Keywords: Fiji, endemic, new species, Oceania, South Pacific Ocean, species complex

Live colouration of Neotrygon romeoi n. sp. from around Fiji:
(a) Lautoka, mixed rocky and sand habitat (©Leon Perrie, observed 1 July 2023, modified, www.inaturalist.org/observations/171357979); (b) Near South Sea Island, rocky reef, (©Jack Crosbie, observed 17 August 2023, modified, www.inaturalist.org/observations/180044335); (c) Drawaqa Island, Yasawas on sand flat with some seagrass in ≃18 m of water, (©Robert Macfarlane, 7 January 2024, modified); (d) Suva foreshore, on seagrass in ≃0.2 m of water (©Tom Vierus, observed 24 March 2022, modified, www.inaturalist.org/observations/109579248); (e) Mana Island, over seagrass (©Floyd E. Hayes, observed 27 March 2018, modified, www.inaturalist.org/observations/99347812).

Neotrygon romeoi n. sp. 

 Etymology: The epithet is dedicated to the late Romeo Glaus, the father of the first author, in recognition of his lasting inspiration, enduring support and deep respect for nature. 
Vernacular: Fiji Maskray.


Kerstin Glaus, William T. White, Helen L. O'Neill, Sarah Thurnheer and Sharon A. Appleyard. 2025. A New Blue-spotted Maskray Species (Neotrygon, Dasyatidae) from Fiji. Journal of Fish Biology. DOI: doi.org/10.1111/jfb.70094 [09 June 2025]

[Entomology • 2025] Mukaria sakaeratensis • A New Species of Bamboo Leafhopper (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae: Deltocephalinae) from Sakaerat Biosphere Reserve, Thailand

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Mukaria sakaeratensis Piraonapicha & Chomphuphuang, 

in Piraonapicha, Kaewtongkum, Chomphuphuang, Kimsawat, Kumtanom et Samung, 2025. 
เพลี้ยจักจั่นสะแกราช, เพลี้ยเพ็กสะแกราช  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1239.145803 

Abstract
Mukaria sakaeratensis Piraonapicha & Chomphuphuang, sp. nov. is described based on male and female specimens recently collected in Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand. The new species is herein described by an integrative approach combining morphological and molecular evidence. Genetic distance analyses revealed a potential barcoding gap (K2P) of 0.20–12.07% for COI in Mukaria. Species delimitation methods ABGD and ASAP demonstrated promising results for the COI gene. This species clearly differs from all its congeners in the aedeagal shaft abruptly narrowed and curved inward in the distal half, and with a pair of spines pointed anteriorly. Mukaria sakaeratensis sp. nov. has been found on the bamboo Vietnamosasa pusilla (A. Chev. & A. Camus) T.Q. Nguyen. This finding constitutes the first recorded instance of a specialized member of the tribe Mukariini (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae: Deltocephalinae) feeding exclusively on bamboo from the genus Vietnamosasa. The holotype has been deposited in the Entomology Section, Queen Sirikit Botanic Garden, The Botanical Garden Organization, Thailand.

Key words: Barcoding gene, COI, deciduous dipterocarp forests, identification key, molecular identification, morphology, Mukariini, Thailand, Vietnamosasa

Mukaria sakaeratensis Piraonapicha & Chomphuphuang, sp. nov.,
 A–F (male) G–L (female):
A, C, G, I, J dorsal view B, H lateral view C, I head in dorsal view, D, J face E, K forewing in dorsal view F, L hindwing in dorsal view.
Scale bar: 0.5 mm.

Mukaria sakaeratensis Piraonapicha & Chomphuphuang, sp. nov., living female, dorsolateral view.

Mukaria sakaeratensis Piraonapicha & Chomphuphuang, sp. nov.
เพลี้ยจักจั่นสะแกราช, เพลี้ยเพ็กสะแกราช


 Kanyakorn Piraonapicha, Nithina Kaewtongkum, Narin Chomphuphuang, Panrak Kimsawat, Kittisak Kumtanom and Yudthana Samung. 2025. Mukaria sakaeratensis sp. nov. (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae, Deltocephalinae), A New Species of Bamboo Leafhopper from Sakaerat Biosphere Reserve, Thailand. ZooKeys. 1239: 305-320.  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1239.145803 

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