Showing posts with label Tanzania. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tanzania. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2019

[Paleontology • 2019] Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia • A New African Titanosaurian Sauropod Dinosaur from the middle Cretaceous Galula Formation (Mtuka Member), Rukwa Rift Basin, Southwestern Tanzania


Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia 
Gorscak & O’Connor. 2019

Abstract
The African terrestrial fossil record has been limited in its contribution to our understanding of both regional and global Cretaceous paleobiogeography, an interval of significant geologic and macroevolutionary change. A common component in Cretaceous African faunas, titanosaurian sauropods diversified into one of the most specious groups of dinosaurs worldwide. Here we describe the new titanosaurian Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia gen. et sp. nov. from the Mtuka Member of the Galula Formation in southwest Tanzania. The new specimen preserves teeth, elements from all regions of the postcranial axial skeleton, parts of both appendicular girdles, and portions of both limbs including a complete metatarsus. Unique traits of M. moyowamkia include the lack of an interpostzygapophyseal lamina in posterior dorsal vertebrae, pronounced posterolateral expansion of middle caudal centra, and an unusually small sternal plate. Phylogenetic analyses consistently place M. moyowamkia as either a close relative to lithostrotian titanosaurians (e.g., parsimony, uncalibrated Bayesian analyses) or as a lithostrotian and sister taxon to Malawisaurus dixeyi from the nearby Aptian? Dinosaur Beds of Malawi (e.g., tip-dating Bayesian analyses). M. moyowamkia shares a few features with M. dixeyi, including semi-spatulate teeth and a median lamina between the neural canal and interpostzygapophyseal lamina in anterior dorsal vertebrae. Both comparative morphology and phylogenetic analyses support Mnyamawamtuka as a distinct and distant relative to Rukwatitan bisepultus and Shingopana songwensis from the younger Namba Member of the Galula Formation with these results largely congruent with newly constrained ages for the Mtuka Member (Aptian–Cenomanian) and Namba Member (Campanian). Coupled with recent discoveries from the Dahkla Oasis, Egypt (e.g., Mansourasaurus shahinae) and other parts of continental Afro-Arabia, the Tanzania titanosaurians refine perspectives on the development of African terrestrial faunas throughout the Cretaceous—a critical step in understanding non-marine paleobiogeographic patterns of Africa that have remained elusive until the past few years.


         

Systematic paleontology
DINOSAURIA  
SAURISCHIA  

SAUROPODA 
TITANOSAURIFORMES 
TITANOSAURIA 

LITHOSTROTIA  

MNYAMAWAMTUKA MOYOWAMKIA, gen. et sp. nov.

Etymology: Mnyamawamtuka (Mm-nya-ma-wah-mm-too-ka), ‘mnyama’ is the Kiswahili word for ‘animal’ or ‘beast’ and acts as a conceptual proxy to the titans in Titanosauria, and ‘wa Mtuka' is Kiswahili for ‘of the Mtuka’ in reference to the river drainage that yielded the type specimen. Moyowamkia (Mm-oh-yo-wa-mm-key-ah), ‘moyo’ is the Kiswahili word for heart and ‘wa mkia’ is Kiswahili for ‘of the tail’, in reference to the posterolateral expansion of the posterior centrum on the middle caudal vertebrae that gives the posterior centrum surface a heart-shape outline.

Holotype: RRBP 05834, a partial skeleton including an anterior cervical vertebral neural arch and four cervical vertebral centra, seven partial dorsal vertebrae, a sacral neural arch, three partial sacral centra, three sacral ribs, seven caudal vertebral neural arches and seven centra, four chevrons, numerous dorsal rib fragments, a right scapula, a right sternal plate, a partial left humerus and distal right humerus, partial left ulna, right metacarpal I and left metacarpal III, a partial left ischium, a partial right pubis, partial left and right femora, left tibia and partial right tibia, a left fibula, left metatarsal I, left metatarsal II, right metatarsal III, left metatarsal IV, left metatarsal V, two pedal phalanges, a left ungual, and numerous unidentifiable fragments. The majority of the fossils were prepared at the Ohio University Fossil Preparation Facility, with some of the first-discovered elements prepared by J. P. Cavigelli. Preperation used standard manual and technical techniques including hand tools and pneumatic air scribes. Repository information of RRBP 05834 is the Rukwa Rift Basin Project, Tanzanian Antiquities Unit, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The fossils are, at time of publication, on temporary loan and deposited at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. All of the fossils are accessible by request. Research casts will permanently be housed at Ohio University and in the collections at Denver Museum of Science and Nature.

Fig 1. Map of research area. Map of Africa, A, with expanded regional map of the Rukwa Rift Basin of Tanzania, B, with the type localities of Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia and Rukwatitan bisepultus quarry near the Galula study area, C, and the Shingopana songwensis quarry near the Nsungwe study area, D. Malawi Dinosaur Beds (DB) marked in B to demonstrate the proximity of the deposits to the Galula Formation.


Fig 2. Quarry map of the Mtuka bonebed locality RRBP 2004–06. Recovered elements of Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia are color-coded and separated by dashed lines according to the year they were collected. The quarry map is represented as a four-by-six-meter grid. Unmarked elements on the map are either fragments or unidentified.

Abbreviations: cac, caudal vertebral centrum; cana, caudal vertebral neural arch; cr, cervical rib; cvc, cervical vertebral centrum; dc, dorsal vertebral centrum; dic, distal caudal vertebra; dr, dorsal rib; dv, dorsal vertebra; fem, femur; fib, fibula; ha, haemal arch; hum, humerus; isc, ischium; mtc I, metacarpal I; sac, sacral centrum; scap, scapula; sp, sternal plate; sr, sacral rib; tib, tibia; ul, ulna; un, ungual.

Type locality and horizon: The specimen was recovered in the Mtuka Member of the Cretaceous Galula Formation. The Mtuka Member is dominated by coarse sandstone fluvial deposits and abundant overbank siltstone and mudstone lenses within an extensive fluvial braidplain system. The holotype of M. moyowamkia was recovered from a quarry developed along the Mtuka River drainage in southwestern Tanzania (Fig 1). The quarry is roughly 20 kilometers south of Lake Rukwa near the coordinates of 32° 34’ E and 8° 34’ S. The initial discovery was made in 2004 at locality RRBP 2004–06, with additional elements recovered sequentially during the 2005–2008 field seasons by the Rukwa Rift Basin Project field teams (Fig 2). Generally, larger and more complete elements, such as appendicular remains, were recovered in the western part of the quarry whereas smaller and more fragmented elements were recovered from the eastern part of the quarry, indicating short-distance transport (Fig 2). Excavation permits were issued by The United Republic of Tanzania, Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, Antiquities Unit, P.O. Box 2280, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania to P. M. O’Connor under the specific permit numbers: 14–2004; EA 402/605/01; EA 402/605/01/78; EA 402/605/01/20; and EA 402/604/01/7. In a broader context, the M. moyowamkia discovery and excavation was made in the early years of the Rukwa Rift Basin Project with the aim of addressing the paucity of fossils recovered from the Cretaceous of sub-Saharan Africa.

Age and distribution: The materials were recovered from the Mtuka Member of the Galula Formation of the Red Sandstone Group, Rukwa Rift Basin, southwestern Tanzania. Based on previous lines of evidence, including faunal data within the overlying Namba Member, the age of the Galula Formation was best constrained to the middle Cretaceous (Aptian–Cenomanian) with potential dates of 100–110 Ma. However, new paleomagnetic data place the Mtuka Member (i.e., the specific unit from which M. moyowamkia was recovered) within the Cretaceous long normal with estimates of Aptian–Cenomanian for the unit and a younger date for the overlying Namba Member as either Campanian or Cenomanian–Santonian.

Fig 3. Teeth associated with Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia skeleton.
Teeth recovered from the Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia quarry. A–D, tooth Morph A; E–F, tooth Morph B; and G–J, tooth Morph C. A, G, distal; B, E, H, labial; C, I, mesial; D, J, lingual; and F, occlusal views. Abbreviations: labwf, labial wear facet; linwf, lingual wear facet. Scale bar equals 1 cm.

Diagnosis: 
 ...
Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia is diagnosed by the following suite of autapomorphies: (1) middle and posterior dorsal vertebrae with vertical lamina between neural canal and interprezygapophyseal lamina that bifurcates dorsally; (2) posterior dorsal vertebra with no interpostzygapophyseal lamina as the postspinal lamina continues to the dorsal margin of the neural canal; (3) prominent dorsolateral expansion on the posterior centrum of the middle caudal vertebra; (4) curved crest with accompanying fossa within the dorsomedial region of the proximal scapular blade; (5) sternal plate unusually small, estimated to be, at most, 42% of humerus length.
....


Eric Gorscak and Patrick M. O’Connor. 2019. A New African Titanosaurian Sauropod Dinosaur from the middle Cretaceous Galula Formation (Mtuka Member), Rukwa Rift Basin, Southwestern Tanzania.  PLoS ONE. 14(2): e0211412. DOI:  10.1371/journal.pone.0211412
Mnyamawamtuka: New dinosaur with heart-shaped tail provides evolutionary clues for African continent  phys.org/news/2019-02-mnyamawamtuka-dinosaur-heart-shaped-tail-evolutionary.html via @physorg_com

    

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

[Arachnida • 2018] Chinja gen. nov. • A New Genus of Spider (Araneae, Zoropsidae) from the Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania; Chinja chinja & C. scharffi


 Chinja scharffi
 Polotow & Griswold, 2018


Abstract
The new zoropsid spider genus Chinja Polotow & Griswold is diagnosed and described and the following two new species are described: Chinja chinja sp. nov. and Cscharffi sp. nov. The species were collected in the Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania and appear to be endemic to this region. The genus belongs to the oval-calamistrum clade (OC Clade), which also includes Dionycha and Lycosoidea. Based on the synapomorphies and diagnostic characters of members of the OC Clade, Chinja is considered a member of Zoropsidae, although without a clear subfamily placement due to insufficient data. Males of Chinja can be distinguished from other Zoropsidae by a straight PER, by lacking a tibial crack, by having a male palpal cymbium with a retrobasal process and the male palpal tibia with an RTA and a retromedian cluster of stout setae. Females have a divided cribellum with cribellar spigots evenly arranged, and the epigynum with the median plate broad and laterally procurved into hooks, and the lateral lobes each with a wide tooth. The following set of characters can be also helpful to identify the genus: presence of a third tarsal claw, absence of claw tufts and presence of a cribellum and calamistrum.

Keywords: Araneae, Africa, Eastern Arc Mountain Hotspot, Lycosoidea, OC Clade, new species


TAXONOMY 
ZOROPSIDAE BERTKAU, 1882

 Type genus: Zoropsis Simon, 1878: 327
(Type species by monotypy: Dolomedes spinimanus Dufour, 1820)

Composition. The living Zoropsidae include 26 genera and 180 species (World Spider Catalog 2018). Wunderlich (2017) recognizes four genera and 16 Palaeogene, extinct species from Bitterfeld and Baltic amber. 

Distribution. Worldwide. 


Chinja Polotow & Griswold, new genus 

Etymology. Name is an arbitrary combination of letters and is to be considered feminine in gender. 

Type species. Chinja chinja sp. nov., here designated. 
Composition. Two species: Chinja chinja sp. nov. and C. scharffi sp. nov. 

Natural history. All species have been collected in the leaf litter and on the soil surface of closed-canopy, moist forest. Although the cribellum and calamistrum appear functional, we have no data on the web, if any. 

Distribution. Endemic to the Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania.



 Chinja chinja sp. nov

Etymology. The species epithet is an arbitrary combination of letters.

Natural history. This species occurs in the leaf litter and on the soil surface of closed-canopy, moist forest. 

Distribution. Eastern Usambara Mountains, Tanzania.


Chinja scharffi sp. nov., holotype male, CASENT9006146, dorsal.
Illustration by Jenny Speckels.

Chinja scharffi sp. nov.

Etymology. The species epithet is a patronym in honor of Nikolaj Scharff, a leader in biodiversity studies and conservation in the Eastern Arc Biotic Hotpot of Tanzania and collector of this and many other endemic Eastern Arc species.

Natural history. This species occurs in the leaf litter and on the soil surface of closed-canopy, moist forest, and is found at low (700 m) to high (1850 m) elevations.

 Distribution. Uzungwa and Uluguru Mountains, Tanzania. 


Daniele Polotow and Charles Griswold. 2018. Chinja, A New Genus of Spider from the Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania (Araneae, Zoropsidae).  Zootaxa. 4472(3); 545–562. DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4472.3.7  

Saturday, June 30, 2018

[Diplopoda • 2018] The Genus Eviulisoma Silvestri, 1910 (Polydesmida, Paradoxosomatidae), in the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania, and related species from other Eastern Arc Mountains. With notes on Eoseviulisoma Brolemann, 1920, and Suohelisoma Hoffman, 1963 [A Mountain of Millipedes VII]


Eviulisoma zebra Enghoff, 2018
one of the strikingly marked species from the Udzungwa Mts. 

Photograph by Martin Nielsen.

Abstract

 Twenty-two new species of the genus Eviulisoma Silvestri, 1910, from the Eastern Arc Mountains, Tanzania, are described: Eviulisoma acaciae sp. nov., E. aequilobatum sp. nov., E. akkariae sp. nov., E. angulatum sp. nov., E. articulatum sp. nov., E. biquintum sp. nov., E. breviscutum sp. nov., E. cetafi sp. nov., E. chitense sp. nov., E. commelina sp. nov., E. coxale sp. nov., E. ejti sp. nov., E. grumslingslak sp. nov., E. kalimbasiense sp. nov., E. navuncus sp. nov., E. nessiteras sp. nov., E. ottokrausi sp. nov., E. paradisiacum sp. nov., E. sternale sp. nov. and E. zebra sp. nov. from the Udzungwa Mts, E. culter sp. nov. from the Rubeho Mts and E. kangense sp. nov. from the Kanga Mts. Eviulisoma kwabuniense Kraus, 1958, and E. dabagaense Kraus, 1958, both from the Udzungwa Mts, are redesribed based on new material. Notes are provided on E. iuloideum (Verhoeff, 1941) based on type material. Eoseviulisoma Brolemann, 1920, is synonymized under Eviulisoma, based on newly collected material of E. julinum (Attems, 1909), type species of Eoseviulisoma. New material of Suohelisoma ulugurense Hoffman, 1964, type species of Suohelisoma Hoffman, 1964, has revealed that the gonopod structure is more similar to that of Eviulisoma than originally thought, but Suohelisoma is retained as a valid genus. Four species groups are recognized among Eviulisoma species from the Udzungwa Mts, but the need for a revision of the entire genus is emphasized. Two types of epizootic fungi are recorded from Eviulisoma spp., and an enigmatic amorphous mass, which may be a kind of plugging substance, is recorded from the gonopod tips and excavated sixth sternum of several species. 

Keywords: Taxonomy, new species, epizootic fungi, copulatory plug. 


Fig. 1. Eviulisoma zebra sp. nov., one of the strikingly marked species from the Udzungwa Mts.
Photograph by Martin Nielsen.


Henrik Enghoff. 2018. A Mountain of Millipedes VII: The Genus Eviulisoma Silvestri, 1910, in the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania, and related species from other Eastern Arc Mountains. With notes on Eoseviulisoma Brolemann, 1920, and Suohelisoma Hoffman, 1963 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Paradoxosomatidae)European Journal of Taxonomy. 445: 1–90. DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2018.445

Monday, April 30, 2018

[Botany • 2018] A Revision of Xylopia L. (Annonaceae): The Species of Tropical Africa


 Xylopia aethiopica from Gabon Xylopia longipetala from Mali, representing a record for the country not otherwise documented Xylopia piratae from Ivory Coast Xylopia odoratissima from Zambia Xylopia arenaria from Tanzania

in Johnson & Murray, 2018.

Abstract
A revision of the 45 species of the pantropical genus Xylopia in Tropical Africa includes descriptions of six new species and a new section of the genus. The fruits and seeds of Xylopia show specializations that promote vertebrate dispersal, primarily by hornbills and monkeys. Over half of the African species have an Area of Occupancy (AOO) less than 80 km2, suggesting that they are in need of protection. African species are classified into five sections. Section Neoxylopia , with four species, is centered in the Guineo-Congolian Region and includes Xylopia globosa sp. nov. Section Ancistropetala, with three species, occurs in the same region. Both of these sections are endemic to Africa. Section Xylopia, which extends to Madagascar and the American tropics, has only a single species in Africa, X. aethiopica. The three species of section Verdcourtia sect. nov. are restricted to the East African coast and Madagascar. The largest number of African species, (34) belong to section Stenoxylopia, in which the seeds lack the arils found in the other sections and instead have a fleshy sarcotesta. Section Stenoxylopia is divided into two informal groups, one centered in eastern and southern Africa (X. odoratissima group) and the other centered in the wetter forests of western and central Africa (X. acutiflora group). Five new species are described in section StenoxylopiaXylopia nilotica sp. nov. from Sudan, South Sudan, and Uganda, Xylopia calva sp. nov. from Nigeria and Cameroon, which is allied to X. phloiodora, and Xylopia monticola sp. nov. from Nigeria and Cameroon, X. piratae sp. nov. from Ivory Coast and Ghana, and X. unguiculata sp. nov. from Gabon. The latter three species are segregates of the former Xylopia acutiflora s. l. One new combination is made at the species level, X. shirensis comb. nov. Keys, descriptions, illustrations, distribution maps, and an index to numbered collections document diversity and assist with species identification. The name Unona oliveriana Baill. was found to pre-date the name Unona lepidota Oliv., requiring the combination Meiocarpidium oliverianum comb. nov.

Keywords: Xylopia, pantropical Annonaceae, Tropical Africa, long distance dispersal, bird/monkey syndrome, X. aethiopica, conservation, new species

Figure 3. Flowers of representative Xylopia species.
A Flower from type collection of Xylopia globosa from Gabon B Xylopia tenuipetala from Mozambique C Xylopia quintasii from Gabon D Xylopia aethiopica from Gabon E Xylopia longipetala from Mali, representing a record for the country not otherwise documented F Xylopia piratae from Ivory Coast G Xylopia odoratissima from Zambia H Xylopia arenaria from Tanzania I Xylopia collina from Tanzania.
A, D by Thomas L. P. Couvreur B by Frances Chase C by Ehoarn Bidault E by Philip Birnbaum F by Céline Pirat G by Warren McClelland H and I by D. M. Johnson.

Xylopia globosa D. M. Johnson & N. A. Murray, sp. nov.

Xylopia nilotica D. M. Johnson & N. A. Murray, sp. nov.

 Xylopia calva D. M. Johnson & N. A. Murray, sp. nov.

 Xylopia monticola D. M. Johnson & N. A. Murray, sp. nov.

Xylopia piratae D. M. Johnson & N. A. Murray, sp. nov.

Figure 4. Fruits and seeds of representative Xylopia species.
A Xylopia staudtii from Democratic Republic of the Congo B Xylopia aethiopica from Republic of the Congo C Xylopia quintasii from Cameroon D Xylopia tenuipetala from Mozambique E Xylopia collina from Mozambique F Xylopia gracilipes from Mozambique G Xylopia hypolampra from Gabon H Xylopia tanganyikensis from Tanzania.

A by Quentin Luke B by David Harris C, G by Thomas L. P. Couvreur D by Jonathan Timberlake E, F by Mervyn Lötter H by Noriko Itoh. C reproduced with permission of Thomas L. P. Couvreur and of the American Society of Plant Taxonomists D reproduced with the permission of Jonathan Timberlake and of the Board of Trustees, Royal Botanic Gardens Kew.


 David M. Johnson and Nancy A. Murray. 2018. A Revision of Xylopia L. (Annonaceae): The Species of Tropical Africa.  PhytoKeys. 97: 1-252.  DOI:  10.3897/phytokeys.97.20975


Friday, March 30, 2018

[Paleontology • 2018] Mandasuchus tanyauchen • A Pseudosuchian Archosaur from the Manda Beds (?Middle Triassic) of Tanzania


Mandasuchus tanyauchen
 Butler, Nesbitt, Charig, Gower & Barrett, 2018


ABSTRACT
The diverse assemblage of extinct archosaur species known from the Manda Beds of Tanzania has provided key insights into the timing and tempo of the early part of the archosaur radiation during the Middle Triassic. Several archosaur specimens were collected from the Manda Beds in 1933 by F. R. Parrington, and three of these were subsequently described and made the basis of a new genus, ‘Mandasuchus,’ in a 1956 doctoral dissertation. However, this important fossil material was never formally published, and >60 years later ‘Mandasuchus’ and ‘Mandasuchus tanyauchen’ remain nomina nuda, despite frequent references to them in the literature. Here, we provide a detailed description of this material, provide the first formal diagnosis of Mandasuchus tanyauchen, gen. et sp. nov., and assess its phylogenetic position. The holotype of M. tanyauchen includes a well-preserved partial postcranial skeleton and fragmentary cranial remains. Four referred specimens include two partial skeletons, consisting primary of postcranial remains, a partial maxilla that was previously assigned to the dinosaur clade Saurischia, and a well-preserved astragalus and calcaneum that may belong to the holotype individual. Mandasuchus tanyauchen is diagnosed by a unique combination of character states, as well as by two possible autapomorphies (ascending process of maxilla thin and compressed from anterolateral to posteromedial; femur with distinct pit lateral to the distal-most expression of the posteromedial tuber). Our phylogenetic analysis recovered M. tanyauchen within Paracrocodylomorpha, as the sister taxon to all other sampled members of Loricata.

FIGURE 1. Reconstruction of Mandasuchus and accompanying caption commissioned for the Brooke Bond Picture Card album on ‘Prehistoric Animals’ (Charig and Wilson, 1971).
 twitter.com/ButlerLabBham 

FIGURE 27. Life reconstruction of Mandasuchus tanyauchen, gen. et sp. nov.

created by Mark Witton/Natural History Museum, London. @MarkWitton

FIGURE 3. Skeletal reconstructions showing the majority of the elements preserved in, and relative sizes of, each of the three partial skeletons referred to Mandasuchus tanyauchen, gen. et sp. nov.
A, NHMUK PV R6792; B, NHMUK PV R6793; C, NHMUK PV R6794.
Reconstructions created by Mark Witton. Scale bar equals 1 m.

SYSTEMATIC PALEONTOLOGY

ARCHOSAURIA Cope, 1869–1870
PSEUDOSUCHIA Zittel, 1887–1890
SUCHIA Krebs, 1974
LORICATA Merrem, 1820

MANDASUCHUS TANYAUCHEN, gen. et sp. nov.

‘Ein Saurischier-Rest’ Huene, 1939:65.
Mandasuchus longicervix’ Charig, 1956:25, pl. 1–32.
Mandasuchus’ Huene, 1956:453.
Mandasuchus’ Charig et al., 1956:215.
Mandasuchus’ Romer, 1966:368.
Mandasuchus tanyauchen’ Charig in Appleby et al., 1967:709.
Mandasuchus tanyauchen’ Charig, 1972:131, pl. 3.
Mandasuchus’ Sill, 1974:320.
Mandasuchus’ Krebs, 1976:75.
Mandasuchus tanyauchen’ Krebs, 1976:75.
Mandasuchus tanyauchen’ Cruickshank, 1979:170.
Mandasuchus’ Parrish, 1993:297.
Mandasuchus’ Juul, 1994:6.
Mandasuchus’ Gower, 2000:450.
Mandasuchus tanyauchen’ Gower, 2000:465.
Mandasuchus tanyauchen’ Gower, 2001:121, fig. 1.
Mandasuchus tanyauchen’ Thomas, 2004:17, figs. 2.4–2.13, 2.15–2.16, pls. 2.1–2.9.
Mandasuchus’ Sen, 2005:188, fig. 9F.
Mandasuchus’ de Ricqles et al., 2008:65, table 1, pl. 2.2.
Mandasuchus’ Lautenschlager and Desojo, 2011:376.
Mandasuchus’ Nesbitt, 2011:9.
Mandasuchus tanyauchen’ Nesbitt et al., 2013a:252, table 1, fig. 3.
Mandasuchus longicervix’ Nesbitt et al., 2014:1358, 1369.

....

Etymology— Genus name is derived from ‘Manda,’ for the Manda Beds, combined with ‘suchus,’ the Greek term for the Egyptian crocodile-headed god Sobek. The species name is derived from the Greek ‘tany-,’ meaning long, and ‘auchen,’ meaning neck. The genus and species names were created by A. J.C., with the species name intended to reference the elongate neck vertebrae.

Life Reconstruction:  A new life reconstruction, prepared by Mark Witton, is presented here (Fig. 27). The reconstruction is based on the proportions of the largest known specimen (NHMUK PV R6794), and missing body parts (primarily the skull) were based largely on the closely related taxon Prestosuchus.

  
Richard J. Butler, Sterling J. Nesbitt, Alan J. Charig, David J. Gower  and Paul M. Barrett. 2018. Mandasuchus tanyauchen, gen. et sp. nov., A Pseudosuchian Archosaur from the Manda Beds (?Middle Triassic) of Tanzania; pp. 96–121 in Christian A. Sidor and Sterling J. Nesbitt (eds.), Vertebrate and Climatic Evolution in the Triassic Rift Basins of Tanzania and Zambia. Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Memoir 17. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 37(6, Supplement).  DOI:  10.1080/02724634.2017.1343728   


Monday, March 12, 2018

[Entomology • 2018] Osmanthedon domaticola • A New Genus and Species of Myrmecophile Clearwing Moth (Lepidoptera: Sesiidae) from East Africa


Osmanthedon domaticola  Agassiz & Kallies, 2018

   DOI:  10.11646/zootaxa.4392.3.8 

Abstract

A new genusOsmanthedon Kallies gen. nov., in the tribe Synanthedonini and a new speciesOsmanthedon domaticola Agassiz & Kallies spec. nov., are described. This is the first record of a sesiid species associated with ant galls (domatia) found on whistling thorn Acacia, Vachellia drepanolobium (Harms ex Sjöstedt) P.J.H.Hurter (Fabaceae), in East Africa.

Keywords: Lepidoptera, Acacia, Afrotropical, Osmanthedon, Synanthedonini, new taxa, Kenya, Tanzania



David Agassiz and Axel Kallies. 2018. A New Genus and Species of Myrmecophile Clearwing Moth (Lepidoptera: Sesiidae) from East Africa. Zootaxa. 4392(3); 588–594. DOI:  10.11646/zootaxa.4392.3.8

Saturday, August 26, 2017

[Paleontology • 2017] Shingopana songwensis • The Second Titanosaurian (Dinosauria: Sauropoda) from the middle Cretaceous Galula Formation, southwestern Tanzania, with Remarks on African Titanosaurian Diversity


Shingopana songwensis
Gorscak, O'Connor, Roberts & Stevens, 2017 


ABSTRACT
The paleobiogeographic significance of continental Africa during the middle and Late Cretaceous is not well understood, in part due to incomplete sampling from large portions of the landmass during these intervals. Intensified field efforts in the Galula Formation exposed in southwestern Tanzania have revealed a diverse vertebrate fauna, including the novel titanosaurian Shingopana songwensis, gen. et sp. nov., described herein. Based on a left angular, cervical vertebrae, cervical and dorsal ribs, a left humerus, and a partial left pubis, Shingopana exhibits morphology indicating affinities with the Late Cretaceous aeolosaurine titanosaurians of South America. The bulbous expansion of the cervical vertebral neural spine is similar to the condition in Bonitasaura salgadoi, Overosaurus paradasorum, and Trigonosaurus pricei. The dorsal ribs of Shingopana also present proximal anterior and posterior flanges that previously were proposed to be unique to Overosaurus. Furthermore, Shingopana is diagnosed by a divided spinoprezygapophyseal lamina in the middle-to-posterior cervical vertebrae. Parsimony and both uncalibrated and tip-dated Bayesian phylogenetic approaches support Shingopana as the first African titanosaurian that is closely related to aeolosaurines. Comparisons with other African titanosaurians, such as the co-occurring Rukwatitan bisepultus and geographically proximate Malawisaurus dixeyi, suggest that southern African forms represent diverse taxa rather than forming a monophyletic group. Moreover, southern African forms exhibit stronger affinities with South American clades than with representative northern African form, suggesting that tectonically driven separation of the two landmasses may have influenced the development of progressively isolated southern African faunas throughout the Cretaceous.


Excavation of Shingopana songwensis showing ribs and other bones being prepared for plaster-jacketing.
photo: Nancy Stevens

Reconstruction of Shingopana songwensis and the landscape in which it lived, in what is now Tanzania.
 Illustration: Mark Witton, www.markwitton.com

SYSTEMATIC PALEONTOLOGY

DINOSAURIA Owen, 1842
SAURISCHIA Seeley, 1887

SAUROPODA Marsh, 1878
TITANOSAURIA Bonaparte and Coria, 1993
LITHOSTROTIA Upchurch, Barrett, and Dodson, 2004

SHINGOPANA SONGWENSIS, gen. et sp. nov.

Etymology—Shingopana, ‘shingo’ is the Kiswahili word for neck and ‘pana’ is the Kiswahili word for wide, in reference to the bulbous expansion of the neural spine exhibited by the wellpreserved cervical vertebra A. The Latinized specific epithet, songwensis, refers to the Songwe area and geologic sub-basin of southwestern Tanzania from which the type specimen was recovered.

....

Wide shot of the southwestern Tanzania locality from which the new dinosaur was excavated. 
photo: Eric Roberts

Eric Gorscak, Patrick M. O'Connor, Eric M. Roberts and Nancy J. Stevens. 2017. The Second Titanosaurian (Dinosauria: Sauropoda) from the middle Cretaceous Galula Formation, southwestern Tanzania, with Remarks on African Titanosaurian Diversity.
 Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. DOI: 10.1080/02724634.2017.1343250

Meet the new #dinosaur, Shingopana songwensis, discovered by #NSFfunded scientists working in Tanzania:  @NSF 



Tuesday, August 22, 2017

[Entomology • 2017] Dendrobia gen. nov. • A New Genus and other New Species of Agraeciini (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae; Conocephalinae) from the Eastern Arc Mountains, East Africa


Dendrobia amaniensis  
Hemp, Ingrisch & Heller, 2017


Abstract

The genus Dendrobia n. gen. is erected to include Dendrobia amaniensis n. sp. from the East Usambara Mountains as type species. A second species in this genus, Dendrobia octopuncata n. sp., is described from the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania. Dendrobia n. gen. is a canopy dweller found only high up on trees in closed submontane and montane forest. The peak frequency of its song is lower than in all other known African Agraeciini, correlating with the large resonant areas in the tegmina. Two new Afroanthracites species, Afroanthracites ngologolo n. sp. and Afroanthracites nguru n. sp. are described from the Eastern Arc Mountains in Tanzania. These species are dwellers of understory vegetation in closed forest in the Udzungwa and Nguru Mountains respectively.

Keywords: Orthoptera, new genus, new species, Eastern Arc Mountains, East Africa, bioacoustics




Claudia Hemp, Sigfrid Ingrisch and Klaus-Gerhard Heller. 2017. A New Genus and other New Species of Agraeciini from the Eastern Arc Mountains, East Africa (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae; Conocephalinae; Agraeciini). Zootaxa. 4311(1); 1–22. DOI:  10.11646/zootaxa.4311.1.1

Sunday, August 20, 2017

[Ichthyology • 2017] Taxonomic Revision of the Seasonal Killifish Genus Nothobranchius (Cyprinodontoidei: Aplocheilidae) from Zanzibar, East Africa



ABSTRACT
Nothobranchius guentheri and Nothobranchius melanospilus, the two seasonal killifishes of the genus Nothobranchius occurring in Zanzibar Island, Tanzania, were involved in past taxonomical mistakes and are still misidentified in museum collections. A historical review is herein presented and both species are redescribed on the basis of type material and recent collections. Nothobranchius guentheri, a popular aquarium fish, is endemic to Zanzibar, and N. melanospilus, geographically widespread in East Africa, occurring both in Zanzibar and in continental river basins. These species are distinguished by a series of morphological features not previously reported in the literature, including pre-dorsal length and relative position of the anterior portion of the dorsal-fin skeletal support and vertebrae; number of gill-rakers of the first branchial arch, caudal-fin rays, scales of the longitudinal series, series of scales around caudal peduncle, and vertebrae; frontal squamation; and arrangement and number of neuromasts of the supraorbital series. The present taxonomic revision comprising N. guentheri and N. melanospilus, the oldest species names of the genus in the East African biodiversity hotspot, is important to improve the knowledge of the genus in a region where its taxonomy is still problematic

KEYWORDS: Biodiversity hotspot, East African coastal forests, systematics, Unguja Island


Figure 2. Nothobranchius guentheri (Pfeffer 1893), live exemplars: (a) UFRJ 8420, male, 33.1 mm SL; (b) UFRJ 8420, female, 29.3 mm SL.
Figure 6. Nothobranchius melanospilus (Pfeffer 1896), live exemplars: (a) UFRJ 6515, male, 32.6 mm SL; (b) UFRJ 6515, female, 31.1 mm SL.



Wilson J. E. M. Costa. 2017. Taxonomic Revision of the Seasonal Killifish Genus Nothobranchius from Zanzibar, East Africa (Cyprinodontoidei: Aplocheilidae). Journal of Natural History. 51(27-28); 1069-1624.  DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2017.1330976

Thursday, July 13, 2017

[Botany • 2016] Barleria mirabilis • A Remarkable New Tree Species (Acanthaceae) from west Tanzania


Barleria mirabilis  I. Darbysh. & Q. Luke


Summary
A new species of Barleria (Acanthaceae), discovered in 2014 on the Uzondo Plateau of West Tanzania, is described and illustrated and its affinities are discussed. This is the first documented tree species in the genus Barleria. Its conservation status is assessed using the categories and criteria of IUCN; it is considered to be globally Vulnerable.

Key Words: conservation, IUCN Red List assessment, Mpanda, taxonomy, Uzondo 


Barleria mirabilis, Uzondo Plateau, Tanzania. (photo:I. Darbyshire). 

Barleria mirabilis, Uzondo Plateau, Tanzania, with M. Vorontsova providing scale
 (photo: Q. Luke).

RECOGNITION: Barleria mirabilis is most similar to B. crassa C. B. Clarke and B. nyasensis C. B. Clarke but differs markedly from both in being a tree to 4 – 6 m tall at maturity (vs a perennial herb or shrub 0.3 – 2.5 m tall); in having broader, elliptic or oblanceolate bracteoles 3 – 5 mm wide and lacking a spine tip (vs bracteoles linear-lanceolate with a spine tip or reduced to a simple spine, 0.5 – 3 mm wide); in the bracteoles and posterior and anterior calyx lobes having numerous conspicuous capitate “mushroom” glands externally (these absent in B. crassa and B. nyasensis which only have scattered small glandular hairs on the calyx); in the anterior and posterior calyx lobes being more convex and with markedly involute, entire margins (vs calyx lobes with margin not or hardly involute; denticulate to spinulose-dentate or rarely almost entire); and in the anthers being larger (6.3 – 6.6 mm vs 3 – 5 mm long).

DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the Uzondo Plateau of West Tanzania.

ETYMOLOGY: The species epithet “mirabilis” (miraculous, astonishing) refers both to the fact that this is a truly remarkable species, being the only tree Barleria recorded to date, and to the fact that such a striking and locally frequent species has not been found previously despite considerable past botanical exploration at the collecting locality.


Iain Darbyshire and Quentin Luke. 2016. Barleria mirabilis (Acanthaceae): A Remarkable New Tree Species from west Tanzania.
 Kew Bulletin. 71; 13. DOI:  10.1007/s12225-016-9622-0


Tuesday, May 9, 2017

[Entomology • 2017] Revision of the Genus Amytta (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae, Meconematinae) and New Species from East Africa


Amytta mram Hemp, 2017


Abstract

New species of Amytta are described from East Africa. Beside tegminal length, they differ mainly in the structure of the complicated male genitalic organs, notably the last abdominal tergite and cerci. Data on habitat and the acoustics of some species and a key to the species are provided. The songs of all seven Amytta species studied are very similar, consisting of long trills with a syllable repetition rate of about 60 Hz (at 20ºC) and a broad frequency peak in the ultrasound at around 40 kHz. The biogeographic pattern and phylogenetic relationships are discussed for the group.

Keywords: Meconematinae, Amytta, new species, Tanzania, Eastern Arc Mountains, biogeography, Orthoptera, East Africa


 Male Amytta mramba n. sp., endemic to the utmost western part of the North Pare Mountains. 

Amytta digitata n. sp. Hemp
Amytta hanangensis n. sp. Hemp 
Amytta judithae n. sp. Hemp 
Amytta kilomeni n. sp. Hemp 
Amytta meruensis n. sp. Hemp 

Amytta merumontana n. sp. Hemp 
Amytta mramba n. sp. Hemp 
Amytta savannae n. sp. Hemp
Amytta taitensis n. sp. Hemp 
        

 Claudia Hemp and Klaus–Gerhard Heller. 2017. Revision of the Genus Amytta (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae, Meconematinae) and New Species from East Africa.    Zootaxa. 4263(2); 295–317.  DOI:  10.11646/zootaxa.4263.2.5


Tuesday, March 28, 2017

[Botany • 2017] New species of Xylopia (Annonaceae) from East Africa; Xylopia lukei, X. tenuipetala, X. tanganyikensis & X. keniensis



Fig. 1: Xylopia lukei: A buds; B open flowers, showing petal orientation.
X. tenuipetala: C flowers; D dehisced monocarp, showing red endocarp, black seed, and white aril.
X. keniensis: E flowers, lateral view; F flower, apical view.

photos:a – c, e – f Quentin Luke; d Jonathan Timberlake.
DOI:  
10.1007/s12225-017-9681-x

Summary
Four new species of the pantropical genus Xylopia L. (Annonaceae) in East Africa are proposed. Two of the new species, Xylopia lukei D. M. Johnson & Goyder and X. tenuipetala D. M. Johnson & Goyder, most closely resemble the East African species X. mwasumbii D. M. Johnson. This species group is confined to the lowland coastal dry forests extending from central Tanzania to northern Mozambique. Problems with the circumscription of X. parviflora (A. Rich.) Benth. in eastern Africa are presented. East African plants identified as that species differ in numerous ways from the plants in central and western Africa, and in this paper are distinguished as X. parviflora sensu Verdcourt. Complicating the picture further is the fact that two rare but readily distinguishable species, X. tanganyikensis D. M. Johnson and X. keniensis D. M. Johnson, both described here, have been confused with X. parviflora sensu Verdcourt. The newly described species are narrowly distributed and most sites are threatened by habitat alteration, three of the four species having provisional IUCN conservation assessments of EN B1ab(iii)+ B2ab(iii).

Key Words: Coastal dry forest, endemism, Kenya, Mozambique, Tanzania 



David M. Johnson, Quentin Luke, David J. Goyder and Nancy A. Murray. 2017. 
New species of Xylopia (Annonaceae) from East Africa.
Kew Bulletin.  72:11.  DOI:  10.1007/s12225-017-9681-x