Tuesday, February 24, 2026

[Crustacea • 2026] Galathea balasubramaniani • A New Species of the Squat Lobster Genus Galathea Fabricius, 1793 (Decapoda: Galatheidae) from Lakshadweep, India

 

 Galathea balasubramaniani  
Sureandiran, Divya, Naeem, Sundaramanickam & Kumar, 2026 

 
Abstract
A new species of galatheid squat lobster, Galathea balasubramaniani sp. nov. is described from Lakshadweep Island, India. The G. balasubramaniani sp. nov. belongs to the ‘Gmauritiana’ group, identified through having a pterygostomian flap with 1 or 2 spines and an uninterrupted mesogastric ridge. This group includes: G. acis Macpherson & Robainas-Barcia, 2015, G. aequata Macpherson & Robainas-Barcia, 2015, G. ahyongi Macpherson & Robainas-Barcia, 2015, G. mauritiana Bouvier, 1914 and G. senta Macpherson & Robainas-Barcia, 2015. The G. balasubramaniani sp. nov. resembles G. mauritiana Bouvier, 1914, but differs based on the presence of an epipod on P1, and P2 with propodus 4.2–4.7 times as long as wide and the merus with the proximal spine reaching or slightly over-reaching the distal margin of the article. Maximum Likelihood analysis of the new species, using mitochondrial genes cytochrome c oxidase (COI) and 16S rRNA also supported the findings and suggests that G. balasubramaniani sp. nov. is closely related to G. mauritiana, with pairwise genetic distances estimated at 6.0–14.3 % (COI) and 3.1–16.9% (16S rRNA).

Crustacea, Arabian Sea, Galatheid squat lobster, Genetic divergence, Indian Ocean, Phylogeny

 Galathea balasubramaniani sp. nov. 
A–H, holotype female, GALGBAL/NBFGR (PCL 2.85 mm); I, paratype male, GALGBAL/NBFGR.2 (PCL 1.88 mm). A, carapace, dorsal view; B, pterygostomian flap, left lateral view; C, right P1, dorsal view; D–F, right P2–4, lateral view; G, maxilliped 3 dorsal view; H, thoracic sternum, ventral view; I right G2, dorsal view. Scale bar for A–F, H = 1 mm, G–I = 0.5 mm.

 Galathea balasubramaniani sp. nov. in live condition, collected from Agatti Island, Lakshadweep. Specimen not preserved.

Galathea balasubramaniani sp. nov.


B. SUREANDIRAN, P.R. DIVYA, U.P. MOHAMMED NAEEM, A. SUNDARAMANICKAM, T.T. AJITH KUMAR. 2026. A New Species of the Squat Lobster Genus Galathea Fabricius, 1793 from Lakshadweep, India (Crustacea: Decapoda: Galatheidae).  Zootaxa. 5757(4); 382-392. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5757.4.6 [2026-02-09]

Monday, February 23, 2026

[Herpetology • 2026] Zig zagZigzags in the White Sand Belt: A New, highly divergent lineage of Sand-swimmer Skink (Squamata: Scincidae) from Madagascar


Zig zag  
 Miralles, Schmidt, Belluardo, Rahagalala, Monvoisin, Ratsoavina, Köhler, Glaw & Vences, 2026 
 

Abstract
The present work reports on the discovery of a new sand swimming lizard (Scincidae: Scincinae) in Madagascar. This limbless and eyeless skink was found during fieldwork in the northern part of the “great white sand belt”, a series of patchy white sand areas encircling the island’s western sedimentary basins. The new taxon shows a distinctive combination of derived morphological traits (miniaturized, limbless, elongated body, with absent or scale-covered eyes and ear openings, and a reduced head scale pattern) reminiscent of other Malagasy fossorial skinks adapted to sandy habitats (e.g. Voeltzkowia, Grandidierina and some Paracontias). Phylogenetic analyses based on two datasets (multilocus DNA from Sanger sequencing and genome-wide DNA sequences derived from double-digest Restriction Associated DNA [ddRAD]) reveal a highly divergent phylogenetic position of this taxon and, given its distinct morphology, justify its description as a new species in a new genus, Zig zag gen. nov. & sp. nov. This marks the first genuine field discovery of a new genus of Scincidae in Madagascar since the 19th century, i.e., the discovery of a formerly unknown deep clade rather than an identification (and split) from an already recognized genus. Our results also shed light on the ancient evolutionary history of this taxon and its sister clade, Paracontias. Finally, the present work explores the factors that may explain why ecosystems characterized by white sand substrates, an ecosystem often neglected in biodiversity research, but present in various regions of the globe (e.g., Florida sand scrub, South American WS savannah, Indonesian Keranga) have seemingly so frequently promoted the convergent evolution of fossorial squamates.

Taxonomy, new genus, new species, Phylogenomics, psammophily, fossoriality

Overview of the White Sand Belt: Map of Madagascar showing WS patches identified by Miralles et al. (2025) (white dots), with the distribution of sand-specialist, legless and fossorial skink genera (data from the present study; Glaw & Vences 2007; Köhler et al. 2010; Miralles et al. 2011b, 2015, 2016a, 2025).

Coloration in life of Zig zag gen. nov. et  sp. nov.:
 Holotype MNHN-RA-2025.0001 and paratype ZSM 104/2023 in dorsolateral and lateral views, both from Baie de Baly; and paratypes ZSM 105/2023, ZSM 107/2023 (close-up of the dorsal, lateral and ventral view of the head), ZSM 108/2023 and ZSM 112/2023 (juvenile), all four from Benetsy. Not to scale.

Zig gen. nov. 
Type species. Zig zag sp. nov. See the species description below. 

Etymology. The name Zig is an arbitrary combination of letters in the sense of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature Articles 30.1.4.1 and 30.2.2, and we assign it the feminine gender. We have searched all available taxonomic databases and could not find any evidence that this name has ever been used to refer to a genus of animals, and we therefore conclude that it is available. 

Diagnosis of the genus ZigBased on molecular phylogenetic relationships, a genus in the family Scincidae, subfamily Scincinae, sister to Paracontias. The genus Zig is distinguished from all other known Malagasy scincines by the following combination of characters: (1) the complete absence of limbs (versus four well developed and pentadactyl limbs in Madascincus, Amphiglossus, Flexiseps, Brachyseps, and relictual fore- and hindlimbs in some—but not all—species of Grandidierina, Pygomeles, Pseudoacontias, Voeltzkowia), (2) a “blind” morphotype (versus presence of an eye-opening, in Amphiglossus, Flexiseps, Brachyseps, Madascincus, Pygomeles, Pseudoacontias, and all Paracontias species except P. minimus), (3) the presence of a single supraocular (versus two to four supraoculars, most often four, in ... ... with the last supralabial and the nuchal (versus presence of two secondary temporals in all the other genera), and (7) the position of the subocular scale corresponding to the second supralabial (versus the third, the fourth, or occasionally the fifth in all the other genera).

Distribution. Madagascar, Mahajanga basin, western bank of the Betsiboka River. 


Zig zag sp. nov.

Etymology. The specific epithet ‘zag’, an arbitrary combination of letters, is used here to form a pun on ‘zig zag’, in reference to the very characteristic sinusoidal tracks left by this species when moving in the white sand. It is treated as an invariable noun in apposition to the genus name.

 Diagnosis. As Zig represents a monotypic genus, the generic diagnosis of Zig above is also suitable to distinguish the species Zig zag from any other Malagasy scincine species. Additionally, Zig zag differs from the other superficially similar worm-like Malagasy species (i.e. limbless, “blind”, elongated and miniaturized morphotype such as Grandidierina spp., Voeltzkowia spp. and Paracontias minimus) by the following combination ...

White sand substrate in Zig zag gen. nov. et  sp. nov. habitats:
In situ view of sand soil surface, with sigmoidal tracks let by Zig zag in Baie de Baly (A), and detailed views (B, C) of the almost pure quartz sand present in Benetsy (identical in Baly, see Miralles et al. 2025).
(D) Diagram illustrating the physical properties of white sands when exposed to heavy rainfall or, conversely, to intense solar radiation. Photographs B and C by André Freiwald.

Habitat of Zig zag gen. nov. et  sp. nov. 
 (A) White-sand savannah with Bismarckia palm trees near the village de Baly. (B) Shrubby white-sand savannah near the village of Benetsy.
(C) Soil stratification in Zig zag microhabitat at Benetsy: (1) vegetation patches providing shade, (2) layer of dry vegetal litter, (3) dense mat of fine roots, (4) deeper layer made of almost pure white sand.


Aurélien MIRALLES, Robin SCHMIDT, Francesco BELLUARDO, Ny Ando RAHAGALALA, Evariste MONVOISIN, Fanomezana M. RATSOAVINA, Jörn KÖHLER, Frank GLAW and Miguel VENCES. 2026. Zigzags in the White Sand Belt: A New, highly divergent lineage of Sand-swimmer Skink from Madagascar (Squamata: Scincidae).  Megataxa. 19(1); 176-212. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/megataxa.19.1.3 [2026-02-23]

  

[Crustacea • 2026] Palaemon bijagosensis • A New Species of Palaemon (Decapoda: Caridea: Palaemonidae) from the tropical eastern Atlantic

 

Palaemon bijagosensis
Fransen & Wirtz, 2026


Abstract
Fieldwork in the Bijagos Islands, Guinea-Bissau, in 2023, yielded specimens of a species of Palaemon new to science. The specimens are herein described, illustrated, and compared with related species. We obtained sequences of the mitochondrial markers 16S and COI, as well as of the nuclear marker H3 of the Palaemon specimens from the Bijagos Islands. We used these sequences to analyse the phylogenetic position of the new species within the genus Palaemon. The new species is most closely related to P. floridanus and P. northropi from the tropical western Atlantic.

Keywords: Decapoda; Caridea; Palaemon; new species; phylogeny; East Atlantic

Palaemon bijagosensis spec. nov., live specimen. Photo credit Peter Wirtz.

Taxonomy 
Family Palaemonidae Rafinesque, 1815 
Genus Palaemon Weber, 1795 

Palaemon bijagosensis spec. nov.  

Etymology.— The specific name is after the archipelago where the type material was collected.


 Charles H.J.M. Fransen and Peter Wirtz. 2026. A New Species of Palaemon (Decapoda, Caridea, Palaemonidae) from the tropical eastern Atlantic. Crustaceana. 1–36. DOI: doi.org/10.1163/15685403-bja10509 [30 Jan 2026]

[Crustacea • 2021] Macromedaeus adelus • A New Species of intertidal xanthid crab of the Genus Macromedaeus Ward, 1942 (Decapoda: Brachyura: Xanthidae) from Singapore


Macromedaeus adelus
Mendoza, 2021

RAFFLES BULLETIN OF ZOOLOGY. 69 

Abstract
 Four species of marine crab (Brachyura) are reported for the first time from Singapore. Three of these have been previously reported from other localities in the Indo-West Pacific region, while one is a new species described herein. The camptandriid crab, Exagorium fidelisi Naruse, Chung & Tangah, 2015, originally described from northeastern Sabah, Malaysia, is reported from the mangroves of northern Singapore. Two xanthid crabs are newly recorded as well: Hepatoporus guinotae (Zarenkov, 1971) and Medaeops edwardsi Guinot, 1967, previously described from the Red Sea and Indian Ocean, respectively. Another xanthid crab, Macromedaeus adelus, new species, is described from the intertidal areas of Singapore. It is most similar to M. distinguendus (De Haan, 1835) and M. voeltzkowi (Lenz, 1905), primarily in having a distinctly areolated and granular carapace and having four teeth on the carapace anterolateral margin. It can, however, be distinguished from congeners by morphological features of the carapace, chelipeds, ambulatory legs, and the male first gonopods. 

Key words. Xanthidae, Camptandriidae, taxonomy, biodiversity, Macromedaeus adelus, Hepatoporus, Exagorium

Live colouration. Macromedaeus adelus, new species (ZRC 2017.0466), West Coast Park, Singapore.
A, paratype, male, 16.0 × 10.3 mm; B, paratype, male, 11.8 × 7.7 mm.
Scale bar: A, B = 5.0 mm.

Macromedaeus adelus, new species
 
Etymology. The specific epithet of the new species is derived from the Greek “adelos”, meaning “unseen, unknown, and obscure”, because the true identity of this crab remained concealed for many decades. Used as a Latin adjective.


Jose Christopher E. Mendoza. 2021. Marine Crabs new to Singapore, with A Description of A New Species of intertidal xanthid crab of the Genus Macromedaeus Ward, 1942 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura). RAFFLES BULLETIN OF ZOOLOGY. 69: 463–480. [5 November 2021]


[Arachnida • 2026] Titanidiops kolhapurensis • A New Species of the Trapdoor Spider Genus Titanidiops Simon (Araneae: Idiopidae) from western Maharashtra, India

 
Titanidiops kolhapurensis
Gangalmale, Thackeray, Khandekar & Gaikwad, 2026


ABSTRACT
A new species, Titanidiops kolhapurensis sp. n., is described on the basis of six adult female and three adult male specimens collected from the outskirts of Kolhapur City, western Maharashtra, India. Specimens of both sexes are described in detail and they are distinguished from all other known peninsular Indian congeners of Titanidiops and Idiops in several non-overlapping morphological characters. Notes on natural history, and on intraspecific variation of genital characters, as well as measurements and meristic data of the new species are provided. Additionally, we present preliminary observations on occurrence of the new species and other sympatric habitat specialist taxa in natural and altered/modified habitats from the type locality and nearby localities. We emphasise the urgent need to halt further alteration or modification of the natural habitat of T. kolhapurensis sp. n. and to implement habitat restoration measures to safeguard the new species and other habitat specialists from the imminent risk of local extinction.

KEYWORDS: Anthropogenic pressure, grassland and savanna, habitat loss, morphology, taxonomy, urban biodiversity


 Live habitus of Titanidiops kolhapurensis:
(A) holotype, (NRC-AA-1191) and (B) paratype, (NRC-AA-1196).
Photos by: Akshay Khandekar.

 Titanidiops kolhapurensis sp. n.


Satpal Gangalmale, Tejas Thackeray, Akshay Khandekar and Sunil M. Gaikwad. 2026. A New Species of the Trapdoor Spider Genus Titanidiops Simon (Araneae: Idiopidae) from western Maharashtra, India. Journal of Natural History. 60(5-8); 401-421. DOI: doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2025.2603654 [28 Jan 2026]


[Crustacea • 2022] Raymunida shraddhanandi, Munidopsis bengala & M. kadal • Squat Lobsters of the Genera Raymunida and Munidopsis (Decapoda: Anomura: Galatheoidea) from the Indian Exclusive Economic Zone, with Descriptions of Three New Species

  

Raymunida shraddhanandi 
Munidopsis bengala and M. kadal  
Tiwari, Padate, Cubelio & Osawa, 2022
   

ABSTRACT
We report four squat lobster species of the genera Raymunida Macpherson and Machordom, 2000 (Munididae) and Munidopsis Whiteaves, 1874 (Munidopsidae) from the Indian Exclusive Economic Zone. The genus Raymunida is recorded for the first time from Indian waters, including a new species Raymunida shraddhanandi sp. nov. and R. vittata Macpherson, 2009 based on material from the Andaman Sea. Raymunida shraddhanandi sp. nov. differs from its closest congener R. formasanus Lin, Chan and Chu, 2004 in the armatures of the anterior branchial carapace region, antennal peduncle and third maxilliped merus, and the length of the fourth pereopod. Two new species of the genus Munidopsis, referred to the Anoplonotus group, are described from the south-western Bay of Bengal and the south-eastern Arabian Sea. Munidopsis bengala sp. nov. and M. kadal sp. nov. are distinguished from all of their allies – M. bruta Macpherson, 2007, M. shulerae Vázquez-Bader, Gracia and Lemaitre, 2014, and M. truculenta Macpherson and Segonzac, 2005 – by the unarmed dorsodistal margin of the third maxilliped merus and the relative length of the antennal peduncle, respectively.
 
KEYWORDS: new record, new species, fauna, Indian ocean


Raymunida shraddhanandi sp. nov.  
Munidopsis bengala sp. nov.  
M. kadal sp. nov.

 
Shivam Tiwari, Vinay P. Padate, Sherine S. Cubelio and Masayuki Osawa. 2022. Squat Lobsters of the Genera Raymunida Macpherson & Machordom, 2000 and Munidopsis Whiteaves, 1874 (Decapoda: Anomura: Galatheoidea) from the Indian Exclusive Economic Zone, with Descriptions of Three New Species. Journal of Natural History. 56(41-44); 1819-1839. DOI: doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2022.2138600 [29 Nov 2022]
 

Sunday, February 22, 2026

[Botany • 2025] Psephellus avajiqensis (Asteraceae: Cardueae) • A New Species from West Azerbaijan Province, NW Iran

 

Psephellus avajiqensis Negaresh, 

in Rezaei, Saeidi et Negaresh, 2025. 

 Abstract  
Psephellus avajiqensis Negaresh sp. nova (Asteraceae) is described and illustrated from West Azerbaijan Province, NW Iran. It resembles P. xanthocephalus subsp. xanthocephalus but differs from it by having a densely greyish-floccose-tomentose indumentum on both sides of leaves; undivided basal and lower cauline leaves; oblanceolate and wider median cauline leaves; hemispherical and wider involucres; denticulate and shiny white appendages; white flowers; shorter central floret; purplish achenes; and longer pappus. The chromosome number of P. avajiqensis, counted from root tips, is 2n = 2x = 30.


Psephellus avajiqensis Negaresh sp. nova


Elham Rezaei, Hojjatollah Saeidi and Kazem Negaresh. 2025. Psephellus avajiqensis (Asteraceae, Cardueae), A New Species from West Azerbaijan Province, NW Iran. Annales Botanici Fennici. 62(1); 315-320. DOI: doi.org/10.5735/085.062.0149 (5 November 2025)

[Botany • 2025] Tessmannia princeps (Fabaceae: Detarieae) • A New rainforest Tree from the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania


Tessmannia princeps A.Bianchi, Tomasi, Mwakisoma, Barbieri & Q.Luke, 

in BianchiTomasiMwakisomaBarbieri et Luke, 2025. 
 
Abstract
Tessmannia princeps, a new canopy emergent rainforest tree species from the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania, is described and illustrated. It is a montane, unarmed tree distinguished by its large stature, extensively buttressed bole, and high number of leaflets. Tessmannia princeps shows morphological affinities with another Tanzanian species, T. densiflora, nevertheless the two species can be distinguished by morphological characters as well as by ecology and geography. A diagnostic key to the East African species of Tessmannia is provided. Due to its restricted range and small number of recorded mature individuals, the conservation status of T. princeps is assessed as Vulnerable under the IUCN criteria.

Eastern Arc, Fabaceae, Detarieae, new species, taxonomy, Eudicots 




Tessmannia princeps A.Bianchi, Tomasi, Mwakisoma, Barbieri & Q.Luke, sp. nov. 

Diagnosis:—Superficially comparable to Tessmannia densiflora, but Tessmannia princeps is a taller tree, growing up to 40 m in height; leaves bear 18–24 pairs of leaflets on a rachis 68–94 mm long; leaflets are opposite to alternate, sub-rectangular or oblong in shape; flowers are white, with sepals and tepals up to 5 mm in length. Tessmannia densiflora is a smaller tree, reaching 20–25 m in height; leaves bear 8–13 pairs of leaflets on a rachis 30–60 mm long; leaflets are sub-opposite to alternate and may be oblong, lanceolate, ovate-oblong, or ovate-lanceolate in shape; flowers are red, with sepals and tepals measuring 10–20 mm in length.


ANDREA BIANCHI, LAURA TOMASI, ALOYCE MWAKISOMA, MATTEO BARBIERI and QUENTIN LUKE. 2025. Tessmannia princeps (Fabaceae), A New rainforest Tree from the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania.  Phytotaxa. 694(2); 109-118. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.694.2.1 [2025-03-20]
https://news.mongabay.com/2025/03/3000-year-old-trees-in-tanzania-are-new-species/

[Botany • 2025] Oreocharis konkakinhensis (Gesneriaceae) • A New Species from the Central Highlands, Vietnam

 

Oreocharis konkakinhensis   T.V.Do & T.T.D.Pham, 

in Pham, Hoang, Lu, Ho, Wen, Ito et Do, 2026. 

Abstract
Oreocharis konkakinhensis, a new species of Gesneriaceae, is described and illustrated from the Central Highlands, Vietnam. The new species is morphologically most similar to Oreocharis phuongii, a recently described species from central Vietnam. However, it clearly differs from the latter by having stems without stolons, subulate bracts, yellow inner surface of corolla lobes with purple patches, and filaments sparsely puberulent at the base. A detailed morphological description, along with a color illustration, and information on its phenology, distribution, ecology, and preliminarily conservation status, as well as a comparison with its similar species, are also presented.

Morphological illustration of Oreocharis konkakinhensis sp. nov. from the Central Highlands, Vietnam.
 (A) Habitat, (B) adaxial leaf surface, (C) abaxial leaf surface, (D) top view of opened flower, (E) frontal view of opened flower, (F) lateral view of opened flower, (G) ventral view of opened flower, (H) detailed view of longitudinally dissected flower, (I) shape of young fruits.
Photos by Thi Thanh Dat Pham. Scale bar: (A) = 1 cm, (B)–(C) = 5 mm, (D) = 5 mm, (E) = 5 mm, (F)–(G) = 5 mm, (H) = 5 mm, (I) = 1 cm.

Morphological comparison between Oreocharis konkakinhensis sp.nov. (A–C) and O. phuongii (D–F).
(A, D) abaxial leaf surface, (B, E) lateral view of opened flower, (C, F) frontal view of opened flower.
(A)–(C) photos by Thi Thanh Dat Pham and (D)–(F) photos by Truong Van Do.

Oreocharis konkakinhensis T.V.Do & T.T.D.Pham sp. nov. 

Oreocharis konkakinhensis is most similar to O. phuongii by sharing acaulescent and rosette-forming stems, elliptic to ovate leaf blade with 4–5 pairs secondary veins, yellow, zygomorphic flowers with tubular corolla, abruptly constricted at the base, stamens 4 with two pairs of coherent anthers, and absent staminode, but it clearly differs from the latter by having stems without stolons (versus conspicuous stolons), subulate bracts (versus linear-lanceolate to elliptic), yellow inner surface of corolla lobes with purple patches (versus exclusively yellow without patches, dots and striations), and sparsely puberulent filaments at the base (versus glabrous).


Thi Thanh Dat Pham, Thao Thi Hoang, Ngan Thi Lu, Thanh Tam Ho, Fang Wen, Yu Ito and Truong Van Do. 2026. Oreocharis konkakinhensis (Gesneriaceae) sp. nov. from the Central Highlands, Vietnam. Nordic Journal of Botany. DOI: doi.org/10.1002/njb.05071 [16 February 2026]

Saturday, February 21, 2026

[Herpetology • 2026] Hemidactylus aravalliensis • A New Species of Hemidactylus Goldfuss, 1820 (Sauria: Gekkonidae) of the H. persicus complex from Aravalli hills, India

 
Hemidactylus aravalliensis 
Patel, TEJAS THACKERAY, RAJU VYAS & Mirza, 2026
 

Abstract
We describe a new species of leaf-toed gecko of the genus Hemidactylus from the southern Aravalli Hills in Gujarat, India. The new species is a member of the H. persicus complex and has previously been reported as conspecific with H. persicus. In light of the recent revision of H. persicus, we reassessed the status of the population reported from Gujarat, India. The population was found to be genetically and morphologically distinct and is here described as a new species. The new species is diagnosable by the following suite of characters: a medium-size (adult snout-vent length up to 65 mm); dorsal scalation on trunk granular, intermixed with slightly enlarged, regularly arranged transverse rows of 14 oval, feebly keeled or sub-trihedral tubercles; original tail lacks any enlarged tubercles; males with 3–8 precloacal pores. The new species, Hemidactylus aravalliensis sp. nov. is the third endemic species of gecko described from the Aravalli Hills and highlights the rich and unique diversity of this ancient yet understudied land mass.

Reptilia, Arid clade, endemic, gekkonid lizard, morphology, taxonomy


Hemidactylus aravalliensis sp. nov.


HARSHIL PATEL, TEJAS THACKERAY, RAJU VYAS and ZEESHAN A. MIRZA. 2026. A New Species of Hemidactylus Goldfuss, 1820 (Squamata: Sauria: Gekkonidae) of the H. persicus complex from Aravalli hills, India.  Zootaxa. 5759(5); 526-542. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5759.5.2 [2026-02-19]

[Herpetology • 2025] Pareas melanops • A New Species of Pareas (Squamata: Pareidae) from southwestern Yunnan, China

 

Pareas melanops 
 Liu, Li, Yang & Rao, 2025

Black-eyed Slug-eating Snake  |  DOI: doi.org/10.1590/S1984-4689.v42.e24068 
 
ABSTRACT
A new species of Pareas is described from Gengma County, Lincang City, Yunnan Province, China, based on morphological comparisons and phylogenetic analysis. The new species is phylogenetically closely related and morphologically similar to P. nigriceps and P. tigerinus. It can be distinguished from P. nigriceps and P. tigerinus and other congeners by a combination of the following characters: snout-vent length 352-472 mm in adults, tail length/snout-vent length 0.25-0.29, preoculars 1-2, subocular single, postocular single, one row of vertebral scales enlarged, 1-7 rows of dorsal scales keeled at mid-body, ventral scales 172-176, subcaudals 68-77, maxillary teeth 4-5, dorsal head solid black, 62-69 black bars on trunk, 27-33 black bars on tail, iris solid black.

KEYWORDS: Molecular; morphology; slug-eating snake; taxonomy.

The holotype (KIZ 2024092) of Pareas melanops sp. nov. in life:
 (A) general view; (B) dorsal view of the head; (C) lateral view of the head.


Pareas melanops sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis. Body size moderate (SVL 352-472 mm in adults), tail moderately long (TL/SVL 0.25-0.29), prefrontal bordering orbit, preoculars 1-2, subocular single, postocular single, subocular and postocular not fused, supralabials 7-8, infralabials seven, infralabial not fused with chin-shield, anterior temporal 1-3, posterior temporals 2-3, one row of vertebral scales slightly enlarged, 1-7 rows of dorsal scales keeled at mid-body, ventral scales 172-176, subcaudals 68-77, maxillary teeth 4-5, dorsal head solid black, dark nuchal band present, two large black spots on each side of head, 62-69 vertical black bars on each side of trunk, 27-33 vertical black bars on each side of tail, iris solid black.

Etymology. The specific epithet “melanops” is an adjec tive in the nominative case derived from the Ancient Greek “melanos” for “black” and “ops” for “eye”, and is given in reference to the conspicuous uniform black iris coloration of the new species. We recommend “Black-eyed Slug-eating Snake” for the common English name and Pinyin: heī yǎn dùn tóu shé for the common Chinese name of the new species.

 
Shuo Liu, Zhimin Li, Tong Yang and Dingqi Rao. 2025. A New Species of Pareas (Squamata: Pareidae) from southwestern Yunnan, China. Zoologia (Curitiba). 42; DOI: doi.org/10.1590/S1984-4689.v42.e24068

Friday, February 20, 2026

[Paleontology • 2026] Spinosaurus mirabilis • Scimitar-crested Spinosaurus species from the Sahara caps stepwise spinosaurid radiation


Spinosaurus mirabilis
Sereno, Vidal, Myhrvold, Johnson-Ransom, Ciudad Real, Baumgart, Sánchez Fontela, Green, Saitta, Adamou, Bop, Keillor, Fitzgerald, Dutheil,  Laroche, Demers-Potvin, Simarro, Gascó-Lluna,  Lázaro, Gamonal, Beightol, Reneleau, Vautrin, Bertozzo, FGranados, Kinney-Broderick, Mallon, Lindoso, Ramezani & Jahandar, 2026
 
Artwork: Dani Navarro

 Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The fossils of Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, a giant sail-backed, fish-eating theropod dinosaur from northern Africa, have inspired competing lifestyle interpretations, either as a semiaquatic ambush predator stalking shorelines and shallows or a fully aquatic predator in pursuit of prey underwater. Its bones and teeth have been found only in coastal deposits near marine margins, a locale potentially consistent with either lifestyle interpretation.

RATIONALE: In the central Sahara, a new fossiliferous area (Jenguebi) was discovered in beds equivalent in age [Farak Formation; Cenomanian ~95 million years ago (Mya)] to those yielding fossil remains of S. aegyptiacus. We describe from this area a new species, Spinosaurus mirabilis sp. nov., which is very similar to S. aegyptiacus in skeletal form but with a much taller, scimitar-shaped cranial crest. Two new sauropods were found in close association with the new spinosaurid buried in fluvial sediments indicative of an inland riparian habitat.

RESULTS: Spinosaurus mirabilis sp. nov. is distinguished by the low profile of its snout, a hypertrophied nasal-prefrontal crest, greater spacing of posterior maxillary teeth, and other features. Its features highlight the extraordinary specializations of both species of the genus Spinosaurus, including interdigitating upper and lower teeth. Principal component analysis of body proportions places spinosaurids between semiaquatic waders (e.g., herons) and aquatic divers (e.g., darters) distant from all other predatory dinosaurs. A time-calibrated phylogenetic analysis resolves three evolutionary phases: an initial Jurassic radiation when their distinctive elongate fish-snaring skull evolved and split into two distinctive designs, baryonychine and spinosaurine; an Early Cretaceous circum-Tethyan diversification when both reigned as dominant predators; and a final early Late Cretaceous phase when spinosaurines attained maximum body size as shallow water ambush specialists limited geographically to northern Africa and South America.

CONCLUSION: The discovery of the tall-crested S. mirabilis sp. nov. in a riparian setting within an inland basin supports a lifestyle interpretation of a wading, shoreline predator with visual display an important aspect of its biology. At the end of the Cenomanian about 95 million years ago, an abrupt eustatic rise in sea level and the attendant climate change brought the spinosaurid radiation to an end.





Sheathed bony head crests in extinct and living dinosaurs. Spinosaurus mirabilis sp. nov., evolved the tallest head crest of any theropod dinosaur, drawing attention to the midline ornamentation that characterizes the cranium and axial skeleton of all spinosaurids. In life, the crest would have been extended to some degree by a keratinous sheath, as in the living helmeted guinea fowl (Numida meleagris). Visual signaling, as is the case in guinea fowl and other crested avians, was likely the function of spinosaurid cranial crests and trunk and tail sails. Scale bar, 20 cm for S. mirabilis and 3 cm for N. meleagris.

Spinosaurus mirabilis



A single Spinosaurus mirabilis rears over a carcass of the coelacanth Mawsonia on the forested bank of a river some 95 million years ago in what is now the Sahara Desert in Niger. A scimitar-shaped head crest and interdigitating teeth characterize this wading giant, one of the last-surviving species of a spinosaurid radiation some 50 million years in the making.
Artwork: Dani Navarro

Sereno, Paul C.; Vidal, Daniel; Myhrvold, Nathan P.; Johnson-Ransom, Evan; Ciudad Real, María; Baumgart, Stephanie L.; Sánchez Fontela, Noelia; Green, Todd L.; Saitta, Evan T.; Adamou, Boubé; Bop, Lauren L.; Keillor, Tyler M.; Fitzgerald, Erin C.; Dutheil, Didier B.; Laroche, Robert A. S.; Demers-Potvin, Alexandre V.; Simarro, Álvaro; Gascó-Lluna, Francesc; Lázaro, Ana; Gamonal, Arturo; Beightol, Charles V.; Reneleau, Vincent; Vautrin, Rachel; Bertozzo, Filippo; Granados, Alejandro; Kinney-Broderick, Grace; Mallon, Jordan C.; Lindoso, Rafael M.; Ramezani, Jahandar. 2026. Scimitar-crested Spinosaurus species from the Sahara caps stepwise spinosaurid radiation. Science. 391 (6787) eadx5486. DOI: doi.org/10.1126/science.adx5486 [19 Feb 2026] 
 
Editor’s summary: Recent descriptions of and debates about the massive, fish-eating dinosaur Spinosaurus have brought this striking predator to the forefront of the dinosaur pantheon. Its huge size and distinctive morphology have stimulated much debate about the degree to which it lived an aquatic lifestyle. Sereno et al. describe a crested fossil Spinosaurus found in northern Africa as a new species. The researchers argue that this group of dinosaurs underwent three phases of evolution with increasing aquatic adaptations and existence in habitats around the Tethys Sea. —Sacha Vignieri