Saturday, June 6, 2026

[Botany • 2026] Telipogon vasqueznunezii (Orchidaceae: Oncidiinae) • A New Species for Northern Peru

 

Telipogon vasqueznunezii C.Martel, Chamaya & Iberico,
  
in Martel, Chamaya Gonzáles, Ibérico Vela, Edquén, Rodríguez et Iturralde. 2026. 

Abstract
Telipogon is a highly diverse genus in the Andes, yet it remains incompletely documented in northern Peru. Telipogon vasqueznunezii is morphologically similar to T. hystrix but differs in the oblong-ligulate lip, the two small lobes at the lip base, the absence of a protrusion on the lip, and the tuft of acicular setae on the columnar appendix. A detailed description, illustrations, a distribution map, and a conservation assessment are provided here.

Keywords: Andes, miniature Telipogon, montane forest relic, Telipogon embreei, Telipogon hystrix

Telipogon vasqueznunezii.
 A. Habit. B. Portion of inflorescence with flowers. C. Flower, lateral view. D. Flower, ¾ view. E. Details of setae with stellate apices. F. Anther cap with pollinarium and tuft of setae on the columnar appendix, ventral view. G. Pollinarium, ventral view.
Based on J.Chamaya 106 (holotype CPUN). Drawn by Juan F. Montoya Quino.

Telipogon vasqueznunezii.
 A. Habit. B. Portion of inflorescence with flowers. C. Leaves. D. Bract of the inflorescence. E. Flower bud. F. Flower, frontal view. G. Flower, lateral view. H. Dissected flower. I. Details of the lip trichomes. J. Ovary and column, lateral view. K. Column, frontal view. L. Column, ventral view. M. Anther cap, frontal and dorsal views. N. Pollinarium.
Based on W. Tafur 131 (UNACH). Plate prepared by Jose D. Edquén.

Telipogon vasqueznunezii.
 A. Plant in situ. B. Vegetative plant. C. Two plants with sub-erect inflorescences. D. The same individual shown in the background in C, with the inflorescence becoming pendant during further development.
Photos by James A. Chamaya G.

Comparison of flowers of Telipogon vasqueznunezii and T. hystrix
A. Flower of Telipogon vasqueznunezii, ¾ view. B. Flower of T. vasqueznunezii , lateral view.
C. Flower of T. hystrix, ¾ view. D. Flower of T. hystrix, lateral view.
Photos by James A. Chamaya G. (A–B) and Gabriel Iturralde (C–D).

Telipogon vasqueznunezii C.Martel, Chamaya & Iberico, sp. nov. 

Diagnosis: Telipogon vasqueznunezii is most similar to Telipogon hystrix (Dodson) N.H.Williams & Dressler but is distinguished by the larger flowers (9–11 × 8–13 mm vs. 5 × 5 mm), the obovate to sub-oblong petals (vs. narrowly ovate), the oblong-ligulate lip (vs. elliptical to oblong), the sub-auriculate lip base with a pair of small lobes (vs. the sagittate base with two long lobes), the absence of a protrusion on the lip (vs. a hump-like protrusion on the lower half), and one tuft of acicular setae on the columnar appendix (vs. one tuft of setae with a stellate apex on the columnar appendix).

Eponymy: The species is named after Dr Leopoldo Pompeyo Vásquez Núñez, a Peruvian botanist and professor at Universidad Nacional Pedro Ruiz Gallo. Professor Vásquez has dedicated his life to better understanding the plant diversity of northern Peru with a focus on potentially useful plants.


Carlos Martel, James Alexander Chamaya Gonzáles, Gustavo Ibérico Vela, José D. Edquén,
William Tafur Rodríguez and Gabriel A. Iturralde. 2026. A New Species of Telipogon (Orchidaceae: Oncidiinae) for Northern Peru. LANKESTERIANA. 26(2): 83–92. DOI: doi.org/10.15517/j4h3bb59 [29 May 2026] 

 

Friday, June 5, 2026

[Botany • 2026] Primula xingyiensis (Primulaceae) • A New Species from Guizhou, China


Primula xingyiensis  Z.K.Wu & C.Y.Deng,

in Shi, Deng, Lang, Liu et Wu, 2026.

Abstract
Primula xingyiensis Z.K.Wu & C.Y.Deng, a new species of Primulaceae from Guizhou, China, is described and illustrated. Morphological evidence places P. xingyiensis within Primula sect. Carolinella, a section characterised by plants completely efarinose but bearing pubescent or glandular hairs; leaf base cordate to rounded, rarely broadly cuneate, with distinct petioles; calyx campanulate or narrowly campanulate, longer than its diameter, split to 1/3–1/2 of its length; and capsule oblong, dehiscing nearly calyptrate at maturity. The new species is distinguished by its gracile habit, shortened stem, small leaves with long villous hairs on both surfaces, long-styled homostylous flowers, and a corolla that is 7–8 times as long as the calyx. Information on the distribution, morphological comparisons with closely related species, and the conservation status of the new species is also provided, along with a key to the known species of Primula sect. Carolinella.

Key words: Conservation status, diversity, Guizhou, nomenclature, taxonomy, xing yi bao chun

Primula xingyiensis sp. nov.
  
A, B. Habitat; C, D. Habit during flowering; E. Leaves, the left: adaxial surface, the right: abaxial surface; F. Scape; G. Frontal view of flower; H. Dissected corolla showing anthers and stigmas; I. Capsule.
Photographed by Zhikun Wu.

Two morphologically similar taxa and Primula xingyiensis.
A. Holotype of P. calyptrata (X Gong 02815, KUN!); B. Isotype of P. intanoensis (M. Tagawa, K. Iwatsuki & N. Fukuoka 2863, HUH!); C. Holotype of Primula xingyiensis (ZKWU2025210, KUN!);
D. P. calyptrata; E, F. P. xingyiensis; D–F. Photographed by Zhikun Wu.


 Xiang-Ting Shi, Chao-Yi Deng, Yuan-Xing Lang, Zeng-Cai Liu and Zhi-Kun Wu. 2026. Primula xingyiensis (Primulaceae), A New Species in Primula sect. Carolinella from Guizhou, China. PhytoKeys. 276: 1-11. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.276.195710 [5 Jun 2026]

[Paleontology • 2026] Jian changmaensis • First non-Avian Theropod (Dromaeosauridae: Microraptorinae) from the Bird-bearing Lower Cretaceous Xiagou Formation of the Changma Basin, Gansu Province, Northwestern China

 

Jian changmaensis 
Zhou, Lamanna, Poust, Li, You & O’Connor, 2026
attacks the early bird Gansus yumenensis 
  
 illustration by Lewis LaRosa, colorized by Jão Canola.

ABSTRACT
Lacustrine sediments of the Lower Cretaceous (lower Aptian) Xiagou Formation exposed near the village of Changma in the Changma Basin of northwestern Gansu Province, China have yielded more than 100 avian partial skeletons, many of which also preserve remnants of soft tissues such as feathers and skin. Collectively, these fossils characterize a rich avifauna dominated by the crownward ornithuromorph Gansus yumenensis Hou and Liu, 1984. Despite this wealth of Early Cretaceous bird material, no skeletal remains of other dinosaurs have been described from Changma to date. Here we report the first non-avian dinosaur body fossil from the Xiagou Formation of the Changma Basin. Consisting of an articulated left pectoral girdle and forelimb lacking the carpus and manus, the specimen pertains to a new dromaeosaurid theropod taxon, Jian changmaensis, gen. et sp. nov. Phylogenetic analysis recovers Jian within Microraptorinae, expanding the definitive fossil record of this clade to include northwestern China. The new Changma microraptorine constitutes an additional similarity between the theropod faunas of the Xiagou Formation of the Changma Basin and penecontemporaneous strata of the Jehol Group of northeastern China. In particular, the Changma theropod assemblage closely resembles that of the Sihedang locality of the Jehol Group in that both include representatives of Microraptorinae and are overwhelmingly dominated by single ornithuromorph taxa that phylogenetic analyses have repeatedly resolved as close relatives. This raises the possibility that the two sites were deposited under comparable paleoenvironmental settings that are otherwise poorly represented at known Jehol localities. 

Key Words: Early Cretaceous, Gansus yumenensis, Jian changmaensis, microraptorine, paleobiogeography, paleoenvironment, phylogeny, Sihedang.

SYSTEMATIC PALEONTOLOGY 

Dinosauria Owen, 1842 
Saurischia Seeley, 1888 
Theropoda Marsh, 1881 
Maniraptora Gauthier, 1986 
Dromaeosauridae Matthew and Brown, 1922 
Microraptorinae Xu, 2002 

Holotype of Jian changmaensis, gen. et sp. nov. (GSGM-D050), an articulated partial left pectoral girdle (scapulocoracoid) and forelimb (humerus, radius, and ulna). A, silhouette of generalized microraptorine dromaeosaurid theropod (courtesy Scott Hartman) showing skeletal elements preserved; B, photograph of specimen as preserved, exposed primarily in dorsomedial (scapulocoracoid), caudodorsal (humerus), and dorsal (radius and ulna) views; C, interpretive line drawing of B; D, detail photograph of scapulocoracoid and proximal end of humerus in caudodorsal view, showing supracoracoid fenestra and other structures; E, interpretive line drawing of D.
Abbreviations: ac, acromion; bc, bicipital crest; C, coracoid; cr, caudal ridge; dep, dorsal epicondyle; dpc, deltopectoral crest; dr, dorsal ridge; ed, epicondylar depression; fs?, fossa for M. supinator?; H, humerus; hh, humeral head; lp, lateral process; ‘mb’, ‘medial bar’; op, olecranon process; R, radius; S, scapula; scb, scapular blade; scf, supracoracoid fenestra; sta, sternal articulation; U, ulna.

Jian changmaensis, gen. et sp. nov.

Diagnosis.—Medium-sized (intermediate in skeletal dimensions between adult specimens of Microraptor zhaoianus and Sinornithosaurus millenii Xu et al., 1999; see Table 2) microraptorine dromaeosaurid theropod characterized by the following three autapomorphies: (1) a coracoid that is proportionally longer relative to the humerus than in any other microraptorine (~36% humerus length; the next closest individuals are the immature Microraptor IVPP V31612, with a value of ~35%, and IVPP V12811, the holotype of Sinornithosaurus, with a value of 33%) (Table 2); (2) humeral distal condyles developed on the cranial surface of this bone (Figs. 2B–C, 3E; a local autapomorphy within Microraptorinae, shared with nonmicroraptorine theropods such as the therizinosaur Erlikosaurus andrewsi Barsbold and Perle, 1980, and Aves); and (3) a well-developed foramen on the ventral aspect of ...

Etymology.—The genus name is for the Jiān (鹣), a one winged bird in Chinese mythology, in reference to the bird-like, possibly volant nature of this microraptorine taxon and the skeletal composition of its holotype (an isolated partial pectoral girdle and forelimb). The specific name is for Changma (昌马), the locality where the holotype was discovered.

 The new microraptor dinosaur Jian changmaensis (left) attacks the early bird Gansus yumenensis (right) in what is now the Changma Basin of northwestern China approximately 120 million years ago. 
 illustration by Lewis LaRosa, colorized by Jão Canola.


Ling-Qi Zhou, Matthew C. Lamanna, Ashley W. Poust, Da-Qing Li, Hai-Lu You and Jingmai K. O’Connor. 2026. First non-Avian Theropod (Dromaeosauridae, Microraptorinae) from the Bird-bearing Lower Cretaceous Xiagou Formation of the Changma Basin, Gansu Province, Northwestern China. ANNALS OF CARNEGIE MUSEUM. 92(2); 89–110. [4 June 2026]

[Crustacea • 2026] Geosesarma penrissen • A New Species of Vampire Crab of the Genus Geosesarma De Man, 1892 (Brachyura: Sesarmidae) from A montane forest in southwestern Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo

 

Geosesarma penrissen
Grinang, P. Y. C. Ng & P. K. L. Ng, 2026 
 
The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 74


Abstract 
 A new species of semiterrestrial crab, Geosesarma penrissen, new species, is described herein from Mount Penrissen in southwestern Sarawak, Malaysia. It represents the third species of Geosesarma known from the montane forests of Borneo, the other two being G. larsi Ng & Grinang, 2018 from Mount Ampungan in Serian, Sarawak, and G. aurantium Ng, 1995 from Mount Silam in Sabah. Diagnostic characters distinguishing G. penrissen, new species, from its congeners are provided, together with ecological notes on its highland habitat. 

Key words. freshwater crab, semiterrestrial, taxonomy, lowland forest, comparative morphology

Geosesarma penrissen, new species, live colouration.
A–C, holotype male (10.6 × 10.2 mm) (ZRC 2024.0567); D, paratype male (10.7 × 10.5 mm) (ZRC 2024.0171); E, adult male, on shrub, Batu Panggah trail, photographed 2311 hrs; 6 July 2023 (not collected); F, subadult, on shrub, Batu Panggah trail, photographed 2118 hrs, 6 July 2023 (not collected).
All specimens from Sarawak. E, F, photographed by Chien Lee.

 Geosesarma penrissen, new species

Diagnosis. Carapace almost square, width-to-length ratio 1.01–1.07, lateral margins gently sinuous, subparallel (Figs. 1A, D, 2A–D, 5A, C, F, 6A, D); dorsal surface with welldefined regions, anterior regions covered with small, rounded or flattened, squamate granules (Figs. 1A, C, E, F, 2A–D, 5A, C, E, 6A, D); front deflexed, with 2 broad subtruncate lobes, separated by shallow median concavity; postfrontal, protogastric lobe prominent, sharp-edged (Figs. 1A, C, D, 2A–D, 3A, 6C, F); external orbital tooth acutely triangular, outer margins curving anteriorly, tooth directed obliquely and laterally, clearly extending beyond lateral margin of carapace (Figs. 2A–D, 5A, C, E, 6A, D). Merus of third maxilliped ...


JONGKAR GRINANG, PAUL Y. C. NG and PETER K. L. NG. 2026. A New Species of Vampire Crab of the Genus Geosesarma De Man, 1892 (Crustacea: Brachyura: Sesarmidae) from A montane forest in southwestern Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 74; 457–464.

[Entomology • 2026] Kongobatha spinosistyla, K. serpens & K. rufilineaStriking, Slender, and Secretly Spinose: A Revision of the Snake Mantises of the Genus Kongobatha (Mantodea: Nanomantidae: Fulciniinae: Neomantini)


Kongobatha spinosistyla Connors, 

in Connors, Yeeles, Lach et  Rentz, 2026
 
Abstract
Kongobatha is one of the most commonly encountered of all Australian mantis genera, and yet despite this, very little is known about the taxonomy or biology of the genus. Described to include a single Australian species, K. diademata, the only subsequent work on the genus has been the description of a second species from New Guinea, K. papua. We here describe three additional speciesK. spinosistyla Connors sp. nov., K. serpens Connors sp. nov., and K. rufilinea Connors sp. nov., and redescribe K. diademata and K. papua in detail, the latter of which is recorded from Australia for the first time. We also describe for the first time the unusual, heavily spinose styli of male Kongobatha. These are apparently unique among Mantodea as a whole, but their function remains unknown. 

Mantodea, mantis, snake mantis, Australia, New Guinea, taxonomy, styli, citizen science

Male and female Kongobatha spinosistyla (Rainforest Snake Mantis), Kuranda, North Queensland.
photo: Maurice Allan


MATTHEW G. CONNORS, PETER YEELES, LORI LACH and DAVID C.F. RENTZ. 2026. Striking, Slender, and Secretly Spinose: A Revision of the Snake Mantises of the Genus Kongobatha (Mantodea: Nanomantidae: Fulciniinae: Neomantini).  Zootaxa. 5807(1); 45-84. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5807.1.2 [2026-05-08]

[Herpetology • 2026] Calotes thailandensis & C. maehongsonensis • Systematics of the Calotes irawadi complex (Squamata: Agamidae) with Two newly described Species from Thailand


Calotes thailandensis 
Prakobkarn, Zug, Tandavanitj & Ngamprasertwong, 2026
 
กิ้งก่ารั้ว, กิ้งก่าหัวแดง  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1281.175455 

Abstract
Two new species of Calotes lizards, Calotes thailandensis sp. nov. and C. maehongsonensis sp. nov., are diagnosed and described from Thailand. These new species are most closely related to C. irawadi and C. wangi, which are members of the C. irawadi complex, supported by phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial DNA data (ND2 and COI genes) coupled with morphometric and osteological data. Calotes thailandensis sp. nov. and C. maehongsonensis sp. nov. are distinguished from true C. irawadi by having a wider PelvW, but a smaller head size in adult males. In particular, adult males of C. thailandensis sp. nov. obviously differ from both C. irawadi and C. wangi by having a longer supratympanic spine, whereas C. maehongsonensis sp. nov. has a distinctly longer hindlimb than that of C. irawadi and C. wangi. As a result, two new species increase the list of known Calotes species in Thailand to four species; C. thailandensis sp. nov., C. maehongsonensis sp. nov., C. emma and C. goetzi.

Key words: Morphometric analysis, osteology, phylogenetic analysis, Southeast Asia, taxonomy

An uncollected male (A, B) on breeding season (March, 2025) and female (D) (CUMZ-R-2767) of Calotes thailandensis sp. nov. in rubber plantation (C) at Khlong Hoi Kong District, Songkhla Province, Thailand.

 Calotes thailandensis sp. nov. 
C. maehongsonensis sp. nov.


 Arpapan Prakobkarn, George R. Zug, Nontivich Tandavanitj and Thongchai Ngamprasertwong. 2026. Systematics of the Calotes irawadi complex (Squamata, Agamidae) with Two newly described Species from Thailand. ZooKeys. 1281: 69-104. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1281.175455 [03-06-2026]

Thursday, June 4, 2026

[Paleontology • 2026] Patagoniaemys aeschyli • A New meiolaniform Turtle from the Maastrichtian of Northern Patagonia, Argentina


Patagoniaemys aeschyli
Agnolin, Rolando, Sterli, Chimento, Novas & Muñoz, 2026


Meiolaniformes are a group of chelonians including the famous horned-turtles Niolamia argentina (Patagonia) and Meiolania platyceps (Australia). In South America, the Late Cretaceous meiolaniforms are represented by two named taxa: Patagoniaemys gasparinae coming from Campanian–Maastrichtian beds of the La Colonia Formation, Chubut province, and Trapalcochelys sulcata from the Campanian–Maastrichtian beds of the Allen Formation, Río Negro Province. The aim of the present contribution is to describe a new meiolaniform chelonian coming from the Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) Los Alamitos Formation, at Río Negro Province, Argentina. The material is represented by a partial basicranium, incomplete carapace and fragmentary postcranial bones (MPMIK 1839/P/33) belonging to a new species Patagoniaemys aeschyli. To this new species we refer all the material previously referred as indeterminate meiolaniid, meiolaniform and cf. Niolamia sp., coming from the same site and locality, and described by different authors since the 1980s. This new species differs from the type species P. gasparinae, particularly by the presence of longitudinal ridges in the nuchal bone. We also include brief comments about meiolaniform palaeobiogeography and the impact of K/Pg extinction event in Patagonian chelonians.

Key words: Testudinata, Meiolaniformes, Los Alamitos Formation, Maastrichtian, Cretaceous, Patagonia, Argentina.


Meiolaniform turtle Patagoniaemys aeschyli sp. nov. holotype (MPMIK 1839/P/33); Cerro Cuadrado locality, Argentina, Los Alamitos Formation Maastrichtian (Upper Cretaceous).
A. Carapace; anterior border in dorsal (A1, A2) and ventral (A3, A4) views, detail of the anterior margin in ventral view (A7, A8), showing the presence of longitudinal ridges that characterize the new species (light grey, nuchal bone; dark grey, broken surfaces).
B. Left hyoplastron fragment Scale bars 100 mm.

Testudinata Klein, 1760 
Meiolaniformes Sterli & de la Fuente, 2013 

Genus Patagoniaemys Sterli & de la Fuente, 2011a 
Type species: Patagoniaemys gasparinae Sterli & de la Fuente, 2011a;
Chubut Province, Argentina, Campanian–Maastrichtian. 

Patagoniaemys aeschyli sp. nov.

Diagnosis.—Large chelonian (maximum anterior carapace width about 60 cm, maximum inferred carapace length 80 cm). Referable to meiolaniforms by several features, namely the presence of small pits and grooves ornamenting carapace bones, anteriorly curved grooves among marginal scutes, opisthocoelous caudal vertebrae, and carapace-plastron connection through ligaments (Gaffney 1996; Hirayama et al. 2000; Sterli and de la Fuente 2013; Sterli et al. 2013). It is referred to Patagoniaemys by having a basioccipital with well-developed basal tubera with a concave surface between them, posteriorly flat occipital condyle, a shallowly notched anterior carapace margin, presence of a thickened bump on ...

Etymology: In reference to Aeschylus (525–455 BC), an ancient Greek writer often described as the father of tragedy. During a visit to the city of Gela (Italy), he was killed outside the city by a tortoise dropped by an eagle, which had mistaken his bald head for a rock suitable for shattering the shell.


the excavation work at the Los Alamitos Formation southwest of Cerro Cuadrado.  


Federico L. Agnolin, Mauro Aranciaga Rolando, Juliana Sterli, Nicolás R. Chimento, Fernando E. Novas, and Gonzalo L. Muñoz. 2026. A New meiolaniform Turtle from the Maastrichtian of Northern Patagonia, Argentina. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 71(1); 173-184. DOI: doi.org/10.4202/app.01268.2025 

DESCUBREN UNA TORTUGA GIGANTE DEL FIN DE LA ERA DE LOS DINOSAURIOS EN PATAGONIA

[Entomology • 2026] Varitrella sulu & V. alternata • New Species and Bioacoustics of Varitrella (Cantotrella) (Orthoptera: Ensifera: Oecanthidae: Podoscirtinae) from Sulu Archipelago and Borneo’s Sabah

 

Varitrella (Cantotrella) sulu Haibil, Nuñeza & Tan, 

in HaibilNuñeza, Damit, Japir, Chung et Tan, 2026.
 
Abstract
Two new species of Varitrella (Cantotrella) (Oecanthidae: Podoscirtinae) are described from Sulu Archipelago: Varitrella (Cantotrella) sulu Haibil, Nuñeza & Tan, sp. nov. and Varitrella (Cantotrella) alternata Haibil, Nuñeza & Tan, sp. nov. The calling songs of Varitrella (Cantotrella) sulu Haibil, Nuñeza & Tan, sp. nov. and Varitrella (Cantotrella) trusmadi Gorochov, 2014 are also described.

Orthoptera, Calling songs, East Malaysia, Philippines, Podoscirtini, Southeast Asia



Varitrella (Cantotrella) sulu Haibil, Nuñeza & Tan, sp. nov. 
Varitrella (Cantotrella) alternata Haibil, Nuñeza & Tan, sp. nov. 



HELEN H. HAIBIL, OLGA MACAS NUÑEZA, DAYANG FAZRINAH BINTI AWG DAMIT, RAZY JAPIR, ARTHUR Y.C. CHUNG and MING KAI TAN. 2026. New Species and Bioacoustics of Varitrella (Cantotrella) (Oecanthidae: Podoscirtinae) from Sulu Archipelago and Borneo’s Sabah.  Zootaxa. 5821(1); 61-77. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5821.1.4 [2026-05-28]

[Botany • 2026] Gentiana macneilliana (Gentianaceae) • A New Species Sikkim Himalaya (India) based on Morphological and Molecular Data


Gentiana macneilliana A.K.Halder & D.Maity, 

in Halder, Saha, Dwivedi, Banerjee, Jha, Pradhan, Maity et Pandey, 2026. 

Abstract
Gentiana macneilliana (Gentianaceae), a new species from North Sikkim, in the Eastern Himalayan region of India, is described, illustrated and discussed. It is morphologically similar to Gentiana lacinulata T.N.Ho of Gentiana sect. Chondrophyllae Bunge but differs markedly in having acute and usually mucronate leaf apex, ovate corolla lobes with acuminate apex, much longer plicae (1.5–2.6 mm), which are more than half as long as corolla lobes, and longer pedicel (up to 8 mm). This new species also resembles Gentiana muscicola C.Marquand (Gentiana sect. Chondrophyllae) but can easily be differentiated by its unique corolla lobe, shorter petiole, narrowly based leaf lamina, longer pedicel and shorter style. The affinity of the new species with Gentiana grata Harry Sm., a member of the same section, is also highlighted. A taxonomic description, images and illustrations of the new taxon are provided, along with a discussion of closely related taxa.

Keywords: Gentiana sect. Chondrophyllae, Eastern Himalaya, ITS, IUCN, trnL-F, new species

Gentiana macneilliana A.K.Halder & D.Maity, sp. nov.
A, Habitat; B and C, habit; D, open flower
Photographs: A. K. Halder (A–D) 

Gentiana macneilliana A.K.Halder & D.Maity, sp. nov.

Gentiana macneilliana is morphologically most similar to Gentiana lacinulata but differs from that species by its short petiole, 0.5–1.5 mm long (vs up to 3 mm); acute and usually mucronate leaf apex (vs obtuse leaf apex); narrowly revolute leaf margin (vs flat leaf margin); longer pedicel, up to 8 mm long (vs up to 3 mm long); ovate corolla lobes with acuminate apex (vs suborbicular with obtuse-rounded or rounded apex); much longer plicae, 1.5–2.6 mm long (vs 0.7–1 mm); and plicae more than 1/2 as long as corolla lobes (vs less than 1/3 as long as corolla lobes). It also resembles Gentiana muscicola but can be differentiated from that species by its unique ovate, acuminate corolla lobes with erose margin and distinctly contracted base (vs ovate–lanceolate or ovate–triangular, obtuse or subacute lobes with entire margin and widened base); short petiole, 0.5–1.5 mm long (vs up to 2.5 mm); narrowed leaf bases (vs rounded to cordate leaf bases); long pedicel, up to 8 mm (vs up to 3.1 mm); and short style, 1.5–1.9 mm (vs 3–4 mm). 

Etymology. The specific epithet ‘macneilliana’ is given in honour of Dr John McNeill, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (E), the legendary taxonomist and nomenclature specialist, who has given immense support with the nomenclature of Indian Gentiana.


A.K. Halder, S. Saha, M. D. Dwivedi, A. Banerjee, B. K. Jha, D. K. Pradhan, D. Maity and A. K. Pandey. 2026. Gentiana macneilliana (GENTIANACEAE), A New Species Sikkim Himalaya (India) based on Morphological and Molecular Data. Edinburgh Journal of Botany. 83; 1-21. DOI: doi.org/10.24823/ejb.2026.2089 [2026-05-18]


[Botany • 2026] Pseuduvaria sirindhorniana (Annonaceae) • Phylogenetic and Morphological Evidence supports the Recognition of A New Species from southern Thailand


Pseuduvaria sirindhorniana Yoosukkee, Damth. & Chaowasku, 

in Yoosukkee, Damthongdee, Aongyong, Baka, Sama-ae et Chaowasku, 2026. 
รุจิสิริน  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3767/blumea.2026.70.03.02  

Abstract
Based on the molecular phylogenetic analyses of six plastid DNA regions (matK and rbcL exons; trnL intron; atpB-rbcL, psbA-trnH and trnL-trnF intergenic spacers) and including 57 samples of Pseuduvaria, as well as thorough morphological studies, Pseuduvaria sirindhorniana (Annonaceae, Miliuseae) is described and illustrated here as a new species from Narathiwat, southern Thailand. The new species belongs to a major clade that also includes P. fragrans, P. gardneri, P. glossopetala, P. kwangtungensis, P. multiovulata and P. phuyensis. Pseuduvaria sirindhorniana is morphologically most similar to P. glossopetala, but differs by having basally connate (vs. free) sepals, larger petals, elliptic-ovate (vs. obovate) outer petals, inner petals that are only connivent at the apex (vs. connivent from the base to ± the midpoint and at the apex), with openings formed from the base (vs. openings formed from ± the midpoint). Pseuduvaria kwangtungensis turns out to be a putative sister of the new species, but the two are morphologically dissimilar in several traits, such as leaf base, inner petal appearance and glands on the inner side of the inner petals.

Keywords: Magnoliids; Malmeoideae; Miliuseae; Pseuduvaria; Systematics; Taxonomy; Thailand

Pseuduvaria sirindhorniana Yoosukkee, Damth. & Chaowasku.
 a. Inflorescences with flowers, from living material of Aongyong & Baka 55.
b. Infructescence with monocarps, from living material of Aongyong & Baka 56.
— Photographs by A. Baka.

 Holotype of Pseuduvaria sirindhorniana Yoosukkee, Damth. & Chaowasku (Aongyong & Baka 55, CMUB).

Pseuduvaria sirindhorniana Yoosukkee, Damth. & Chaowasku sp. nov. 

 Pseuduvaria sirindhorniana differs from the morphologically most similar species, P. glossopetala, by having basally connate (vs. free) sepals, larger petals, elliptic-ovate (vs. obovate) outer petals, inner petals that are only connivent at the apex (vs. connivent at the apex and from the base to ± the midpoint), with openings formed from the base (vs. openings formed from ± the midpoint). 

Etymology — The specific epithet honours H.R.H. Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn of Thailand, who has continuously supported the study of plant taxonomy in Thailand and worldwide, on the auspicious occasion of her 72nd (6th cycle) birthday anniversary (2 April 2027). She has also been instrumental in establishing the Plant Genetic Conservation Project under the Royal Initiative (RSPG), which aims to train personnel and develop plant genetic resources for the conservation of plant diversity, with benefits extending to farmers and related sectors of the country.
Vernacular name — Ruchi Sirin (รุจิสิริน).


  C. Yoosukkee, Anissara Damthongdee, Kithisak Aongyong Chanthamrong, Abdulromea Baka, I. Sama-ae and Tanawat Chaowasku. 2026. Molecular Phylogenetic and Morphological Evidence supports the Recognition of Pseuduvaria sirindhorniana (Annonaceae), A New Species from southern Thailand.   Blumea - Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of PlantsDOI: doi.org/10.3767/blumea.2026.70.03.02 [May 26, 2026]

[Botany • 2026] Psittacanthus job-kuijtii • Novelties in Psittacanthus (Loranthaceae) from Colombia: A New Species and four new records for the Andean and Amazon Regions

 

Psittacanthus job-kuijtii F.J.Roldán, Carmona & J.S.Murillo,

in Carmona-Gallego, Roldán-Palacio et Murillo-Serna, 2026. 
 
Abstract
Background and aims – Psittacanthus is the largest genus of neotropical mistletoes within Loranthaceae, comprising approximately 110 species. With 37 species recorded to date, Colombia stands as the most diverse country for this group of aerial hemiparasites. Despite this richness, a comprehensive national or regional taxonomic revision of these mistletoes is currently lacking. This study aims to update the knowledge of Colombian Psittacanthus diversity by describing a new species and reporting new records for the country.

Material and methods – This study is based on an extensive literature review and the examination of herbarium material of Psittacanthus. We examined herbarium specimens using both physical collections and high-resolution digital images. Morphological analyses were conducted using dried and rehydrated samples, following the standardized specialized terminology for neotropical mistletoes. Taxonomic descriptions and diagnoses were developed to establish and test taxonomic hypotheses, ensuring a rigorous comparison between focal taxa and previously described species.

Key results – A new species for the Colombian Andes is described, and four new records for the Amazonian and Andean–Amazonian Piedmont of Colombia are reported. Psittacanthus job-kuijtii sp. nov. is described and illustrated herein; this species inhabits the moist lowland forests of the Colombian inter-Andean valleys, which are areas containing exceptional biodiversity. Furthermore, P. amazonicus, P. lamprophyllus, P. pilanthus, and P. zonatus are recorded for the first time for Colombia. The description of this new species and the additional records increase the known diversity of Colombian Psittacanthus to 41 taxa and a total of 111 species for the genus.

Keywords: Andes, flora of Colombia, mistletoe, Psittacantheae, Santalales, taxonomy

Psittacanthus job-kuijtii.
 A. Habit. B. Flower, showing from bottom to top: the upper portion of the flower pedicel, cupule with bract followed by the ovary and calyculus, petals with their tips recurved at anthesis, and protruding stamens and pistil. C. Detail of vermicular projections on the margin of petal. D. Basal ligule in front view. E. Basal ligule in lateral view.
 Based on the holotype (David et al. 6371, HUA). Illustration by Diego Zapata (HUA).

Psittacanthus job-kuijtii.
 A. Triad of an inflorescence showing basal floral parts (flower pedicels and cupule with bract, ovary, calyculus, and proximal portion of petals). B. Flower buds. C. Flower at anthesis with recurved petals.
Photographs from the holotype (David et al. 6371, HUA) by Esteban Domínguez. 
Figure composition by Diego Zapata (HUA).

Psittacanthus job-kuijtii F.J.Roldán, Carmona & J.S.Murillo, sp nov.
 
Diagnosis. Psittacanthus job-kuijtii differs from the remaining species in the genus by the combination of the following characters: percurrent shoots; leaf blades ovate to broadly lanceolate, base truncate to rounded, margins revolute and adaxially extending toward the petiole, forming a V-shaped projection, apex attenuate to acuminate; inflorescences usually double triads, rarely triple triads, or a monad with two triads (all variations were observed in the holotype); flowers 4–5 cm long in pre-anthesis; petals red to orange in the proximal and medial portions and yellow distally with a deltoid, fleshy basal ligule bearing minute papillae, 1.8–2 mm long; stamens dimorphic, staminal hairs absent. Psittacanthus job-kuijtii is similar to P. peronopetalus, but differs from it by having usually double (rarely triple) triads (vs umbels of four triads), and flowers opening at anthesis with petals recurved for about 2 cm (vs flowers opening only at the apex, with petals recurved for no more than 2 mm).


Isabel Carmona-Gallego, Francisco J. Roldán-Palacio and Jhon S. Murillo-Serna. 2026. Novelties in Psittacanthus (Loranthaceae) from Colombia: A New Species and four new records for the Andean and Amazon Regions. Plant Ecology and Evolution. 159(2): 347-355.  DOI: doi.org/10.5091/plecevo.1886910 [2 Jun 2026]

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

[Entomology • 2026] Stygioides hecateA Golden Shadow in the Mountains: A New Stygioides Bruand, 1853 (Lepidoptera: Cossidae) from Turkey


 Stygioides hecate Japaridze & Junnilainen, 

in JaparidzeJunnilainen et Sihvonen, 2026.  
 
Abstract
A new species of the genus Stygioides Bruand, 1853 (Lepidoptera: Cossidae) is described from central Turkey. Stygioides hecate Japaridze & Junnilainen sp. nov. is based on material collected in the Sultan Daðlarý Mountains (Konya Province). The new species is characterised by its distinct wing coloration in females. Adults are diurnal, as in other members of the genus, and were collected by daytime netting. DNA barcode data (COI) are provided and compared with available sequences in the Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD Systems), supporting the distinctiveness of the new taxon. The discovery of this species increases the number of Stygioides species to 10 and those from Turkey to three, thus contributing to a better understanding of the diversity and distribution of the genus in the Palaearctic realm.

Lepidoptera, carpenter moths, DNA barcoding, Heteroneura, Middle East

Adults of Stygioides hecate Japaridze & Junnilainen sp. nov.
 A–B. Paratype male, dorsal and ventral view and associated labels.
C–D. Holotype female, dorsal and ventral view and associated labels.
Scale bar: 10 mm

Stygioides hecate Japaridze & Junnilainen sp. nov. 

Diagnosis: Males of S. hecate Japaridze & Junnilainen sp. nov. differ from S. nupponenorum by the presence of a distinct white tip of the male abdomen and white scales on the antennae, the absence of brown piliform scales on the abdomen, a narrower apex of the valvae, and a shorter saccus (Figs 1A–1B, 2 C; cf. Lingenhöle et al. 2016: fig. 6; Yakovlev 2011: fig. 35). Females are readily distinguished from all congeners by the presence of golden-yellow scales on the antennae, head, thorax and wings (Figs 1C–1D; cf. Lingenhöle et al. 2017: figs 1–3, 9; Japaridze et al. 2025b: fig. 22).

Etymology: The species name is derived from Hecate, the ancient Greek goddess associated with the night and commonly depicted carrying yellow or golden torches. This name alludes to the coloration of the holotype female, which is predominantly black with yellow-golden scales on the wings, thorax, head, and antennae.


LASHA-GIORGI JAPARIDZE, JARI JUNNILAINEN and PASI SIHVONEN. 2026. A Golden Shadow in the Mountains: A New Stygioides Bruand, 1853 (Lepidoptera: Cossidae) from Turkey.  Zootaxa. 5821(2); 274-280. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5821.2.8 [2026-05-29]