Thursday, March 5, 2026

[Botany • 2026] Nymphanthus vietnamensis (Phyllanthaceae) • A New Species from Central Vietnam

 

Nymphanthus vietnamensis T.A.Le, Tak.Yamam. & Tagane, 

in Vu, T. A. LE, NONG, DINH, V. H. LE, YAMAMOTO et TAGANE, 2026. 
 
Abstract
A new species of NymphanthusN. vietnamensis T.A.Le, Tak.Yamam. & Tagane is described from Quang Tri Province and Thua Thien Hue Province (currently Hue City), central Vietnam. It is similar to N. namkadingensis but distinguished by its branchlet with 14–30(–40) leaves (vs. 50–60 in N. namkadingensis), leaf blades with 3–6 pairs of secondary veins (vs. 8–12 pairs), pistillate pedicel of 8–9 mm long (vs. 10–16 mm long), disc of pistillate flowers with 4–6 free rectangular segments (vs. connate and annular), and subglobose capsules (vs. ellipsoid). A detailed description, photographs, and information on the distribution and ecology, vernacular name, phenology, and preliminary conservation status are provided for the species.

Flora of Vietnam, Dakrong, Phong Dien, Phyllantheae, taxonomy, Eudicots


Nymphanthus vietnamensis T.A.Le, Tak.Yamam. & Tagane sp. nov. 


TIEN CHINH VU, TUAN ANH LE, VAN DUY NONG, DIEN DINH, VAN HUONG LE, TAKENORI YAMAMOTO, SHUICHIRO TAGANE. 2026. Nymphanthus vietnamensis, A New Species of Phyllanthaceae from Central Vietnam.  Phytotaxa. 742(3); 237-242. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.742.3.6 [2026-02-24]


[Entomology • 2026] Staphylus neideae, S. ricardoi, ... • Integrative Taxonomic Revision of Capilla Grishin, 2023, Subgenus of Staphylus Godman & Salvin, 1896 (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae: Pyrginae), with Descriptions of Four New Species


[M–P] Staphylus (C.) nicoleae Lemes, sp. nov.; [Q, R] S. (C.) neivae sp. nov.
[S, T] S. (C.) ricardoi Lemes, sp. nov.; [U–X] S. (C.) neideae Lemes, sp. nov.

in Lemes, Siewert, Mielke, Casagrande et Warren, 2026. 

Abstract
The taxonomy of the subgenus Staphylus (Capilla) is reviewed, including redescriptions of known species, identification keys, and detailed distribution maps. The female genitalia of Staphylus (Capillaazteca (Scudder, 1872), S. (C.) caribbea (Williams & Bell, 1940), S. (C.) corumba (Williams & Bell, 1940), S. (C.) eryx Evans, 1953, S. (C.) tucumanus (Plötz, 1884) and S. (C.) tyro (Mabille, 1878) are described and illustrated for the first time. Four new species are described: Staphylus (Capillanicoleae Lemes sp. nov. from Colombia and Venezuela, S. (C.) ricardoi Lemes, sp. nov. from Peru, S. (C.) neideae Lemes sp. nov. and S. (C.) neivae sp. nov. from Brazil. Pholisora imperspicua Hayward, 1940 is a syn. nov. of Staphylus (C.) lizeri lizeri (Hayward, 1938) and Hesperia melangon epicaste Mabille, 1903 is a syn. nov. of Staphylus (C.) melangon melangon (Mabille, 1883). Neotypes are designated for Staphylus epicaste Mabille, 1903, Nisoniades tucumanus Plötz, 1884 and Staphylus fascia Hayward, 1933. Lectotypes are designated for Pholisora azteca Scudder, 1872, Bolla machuca Schaus, 1913, Helias tyro Mabille, 1878, Staphylus anginus Schaus, 1902, Hesperia melangon 1883, Hesperia musculus Burmeister, 1875 and Helias aurocapilla Staudinger, 1876.

Keywords: Butterflies, Cytochrome oxidase subunit 1, Neotropical, Skippers

Species of Staphylus (Capilla) in dorsal and ventral views.  
A–D S. (C.) ascalon: A, B male (Brazil, São Paulo, Teodoro Sampaio, Morro do Diabo, OM 17.996); C, D female (Brazil, Minas Gerais, Passa Quatro, DZ 46.813).
E, F S. (C.) buena: male (Bolivia, Santa Cruz, Buenavista, holotype, CMNH 7188).
G–J S. (C.) caribbea: G, H male (Costa Rica, Limón Province, La Bomba, MGCL 1112082); I, J female (Costa Rica, Limón Province, Germania, MGCL 1112078).
K–N S. (C.) eryx: K, L male (Brazil, Pará, Santarém, DZ 46.566); M, N female (Brazil, Pará, Santarém, MGCL 1112109).
O–R S. (C.) corumba: O, P male (Brazil, Pará, Santo Antônio do Tauá, Reserva Sonho Azul, DZ 45.033); Q, R female (Brazil, Pará, Santo Antônio do Tauá, Reserva Sonho Azul, DZ 45.005).
S, T S. (C.) lizeri album: male (Brazil, Minas Gerais, Carmo do Rio Claro, OM 2.788). U–X S. (C.) lizeri lizeri: U, V male (Peru, Madre de Dios, Tambopata Reserve, DZ 46.176); W, X female (Colombia, Meta, Villavencio, Bosque Bavaria, DZ 45.526).
 Scale bar = 1 cm.

Species of Staphylus (Capilla) in dorsal and ventral views.
A–D S. (C.) tucumanus: A, B male (Argentina, Salta, Pichanal, DZ 45.125); C, D female (Paraguay, Presidente Hayes, Estancia Victoria, Rio Norte Lindo, OM 37.963).
E–H S. (C.) azteca: E, F male (El Salvador, La Libertad, Santa Tecla, MGCL 1112133); G, H female (Mexico, Chiapas, San Jerónimo, DZ 45.085).
I–L S. (C.) tyro: I, J male (Venezuela, Aragua, Ocumare de la Costa, DZ 22.893); K, L female (Venezuela, Aragua, Ocumare de la Costa, DZ 46.608).

M–P Staphylus (C.) nicoleae sp. nov.: M, N male (Colombia, Cundinamarca, El Boqueron, holotype, DZ 45.163); O, P female (Colombia, no specific locality, paratype, NHMUK015052554);
Q, R S. (C.) neivae sp. nov.: male (Brazil, Paraíba, São José da Mata, Campina Grande, holotype, DZ 44.944).
S, T S. (C.) ricardoi sp. nov.: male (Peru, Tingo Maria, holotype, OM 41.643).
U–X S. (C.) neideae sp. nov.: U, V male (Brazil, Minas Gerais, Brumadinho, holotype, OM 55.562); W, X female (Brazil, Minas Gerais, Brumadinho, paratype, OM 55.476).
Scale bar = 1 cm.

M–P Staphylus (C.) nicoleae sp. nov.: M, N male (Colombia, Cundinamarca, El Boqueron, holotype, DZ 45.163); O, P female (Colombia, no specific locality, paratype, NHMUK015052554);
Q, R S. (C.) neivae sp. nov.: male (Brazil, Paraíba, São José da Mata, Campina Grande, holotype, DZ 44.944). 
S, T S. (C.) ricardoi sp. nov.: male (Peru, Tingo Maria, holotype, OM 41.643).
U–X S. (C.) neideae sp. nov.: U, V male (Brazil, Minas Gerais, Brumadinho, holotype, OM 55.562); W, X female (Brazil, Minas Gerais, Brumadinho, paratype, OM 55.476).
Scale bar = 1 cm.


Staphylus (Capillanicoleae Lemes sp. nov. from Colombia and Venezuela, 
S. (C.) ricardoi Lemes, sp. nov. from Peru, 
S. (C.) neideae Lemes sp. nov. and S. (C.) neivae sp. nov. from Brazil.  


 José Ricardo Assmann Lemes, Ricardo Russo Siewert, Olaf Hermann Hendrik Mielke, Mirna Martins Casagrande and Andrew David Warren. 2026. Integrative Taxonomic Revision of Capilla Grishin, 2023, Subgenus of Staphylus Godman & Salvin, 1896 (Lepidoptera, Hesperiidae, Pyrginae, Carcharodini), with Descriptions of Four New Species. Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny. 84: 123-173. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/asp.84.e179328 [24 Feb 2026]

[Herpetology • 2026] Luperosaurus alvarezi • A New Species of fringed Forest Gecko, Genus Luperosaurus (Squamata: Gekkonidae), from Sibuyan Island, Central Philippines


Luperosaurus alvarezi Meneses​ & Brown, 2026
Luperosaurus cumingii Gray, 1845


Abstract 
We describe a new species of Luperosaurus based on two specimens collected on Sibuyan Island, Romblon Province, central Philippines. The new species is phenotypically similar to L. cumingii (southern Luzon), L. angliit (northern Luzon), L. corfieldi (from Panay and Negros islands), and L. macgregori (the Babuyan and Batanes island groups), but differs from these closely related congeners and all other known Luperosaurus by a combination of discrete morphological characters. Extensive molecular divergence from all closely related species for which genetic data are available supports the new species as a distinct lineage. Its distribution is geographically isolated from congeners, restricted to a permanently isolated deep-water island. The new species’ extremely limited geographic range contributes to the recognition of the remaining forests of the central Philippine Romblon Island Group as a fundamental conservation priority for the archipelago.


Squamata Oppel, 1811
Gekkonidae Gray, 1825
Luperosaurus Gray, 1845

Photos in life of Luperosaurus alvarezi sp. nov. (holotype and paratype) and Luperosaurus cumingii.
Adult specimens of Luperosaurus alvarezi sp. nov. (left to right: holotype: PNM 9866: adult male; SVL 66.1 mm and paratype: UPLB-MNH-Z-NS 4622 (CGM 989); adult female; SVL 78.3 mm) from Mt. Guiting-Guiting Natural Park, Romblon Province, Sibuyan Island.
Adult female L . cumingii (TNHC 61910; SVL 75.2 mm) from Mt. Malinao, Albay Province, Bicol Peninsula, Luzon Island. Note differences: L. cumingii has prominent spinose ventrolateral tail tubercles and heterogeneous nuchal and body tubercles (bottom left image).
Photographs were taken by Camila G. Meneses and Rafe M. Brown.


Luperosaurus alvarezi sp. nov.

  Diagnosis. Luperosaurus alvarezi sp. nov. is diagnosed from congeners by possession of the following combination of characters: (1) bright yellow superciliaries and circumorbitals (Fig. 4); (2) light gray iris (Fig. 4); (3) precloacofemorals 22,22 (Fig. 5B; Fig. S1); (4) five scales contacting nostrils (Figs. 6A, 6B, 6D); (5) Head length/width 1.4,1.5; (6) presence of few, enlarged, flat to convex ornamental scales on margin of anterior forelimb expansion; (7) presence of elliptical, small, and oblique auricular opening; (8) dorsal body tubercles absent; (9) ventrolateral body tubercles absent; (10) presence of few, flat, and enlarged scales on caudal edges of tail whorls; (11) longitudinal midventrals 108, 110; (12) anterior hindlimbs expansions reduced to moderate folds. The condition of five scales contacting the nostrils, head length-to-width ratio, absence of dorsal and ventrolateral body tubercles, and presence of a few flat, enlarged scales on the caudal edges of tail whorls are shared among congeners but are diagnostic for Luperosaurus alvarezi sp. nov. in combination with other characters, distinguishing it from the morphologically similar L. corfieldi and L. cumingii, with which it shares certain intermediate external similarities. Table 1 presents a summary of the distribution of diagnostic character states among Philippine Luperosaurus.

Etymology: We are pleased to name the new species after our dear friend, frequent field companion and collaborator, the late James Alvarez (1991–2018), who lost his life while conducting bat research in the Philippines’ highest mountain, Mt. Apo, on December 8, 2018. We derived the specific epithet, a patronym, in the genitive singular, in recognition to Mr. Alvarez’s scientific contributions and demonstrated personal commitment to furthering knowledge of the natural history of Philippine chiropterans—in particular, the ecology and diversity of bats in Sibuyan Island.

Microhabitat of Luperosaurus alvarezi sp. nov. on Sibuyan Island, Philippines.
(A) Habitat characteristics of the type locality of Luperosaurus alvarezi sp. nov. at Mt. Guiting-Guiting Natural Park, Sibuyan Island, Philippines, and (B) Appearance of the microhabitat of the new species of Fringed Forest Gecko, Luperosaurus alvarezi sp. nov., on the Gaong River.
Photographs were taken by Camila G. Meneses.
 

Camila G. Meneses​ and Rafe M. Brown. 2026. A New Species of fringed Forest Gecko, Genus Luperosaurus (Squamata: Gekkonidae), from Sibuyan Island, Central Philippines. PeerJ. 14:e20504. DOI: doi.org/10.7717/peerj.20504 [March 4, 2026]

[Diplopoda • 2026] Rhopalomeris dulcia, R. lentiginosa, R. verhoeffi, ... • Five New Species of the Pill Millipede Genus Rhopalomeris Verhoeff, 1906 (Glomerida: Glomeridae) from Thailand


Rhopalomeris dulcia
R. verhoeffi  
Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn,

in Sapparojpattana, Jeratthitikul, Siriwut, Srisonchai, Wesener, Sutcharit et Likhitrakarn, 2026.  

Abstract
An integrative approach based on morphological characteristics and DNA data from the mitochondrial COI gene has revealed five new species of the pill millipede genus Rhopalomeris Verhoeff, 1906 from Thailand: Rhopalomeris muka Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov.R. lentiginosa Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov.R. dulcia Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov.R. punctata Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov., and R. verhoeffi Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov. The five new species are distinguishable from their congeners by distinctive color patterns and telopod structure. The interspecific genetic divergences between the new species and other Rhopalomeris species ranged from 7.86 to 13.71%. Intraspecific genetic divergences within these five species ranged from 0 to 4.53%, with the highest divergences found in R. carnifex and R. verhoeffi sp. nov. This is consistent with both the wide distribution range and the significant intraspecific morphological variations observed in these latter two species. Furthermore, the taxonomic scope of R. carnifex in Thailand is reviewed, and intraspecific morphological variations within R. carnifex and R. verhoeffi sp. nov. are discussed. A distribution map, morphological illustrations from SEM, and an updated key to all known Rhopalomeris species are also provided.

Keywords: DNA barcoding; Indochina; integrative taxonomy; phylogeny; systematics

Rhopalomeris dulcia sp. nov., (A, B) paratype (MUMNH-GLO188), habitus, live coloration (C–E) ♀ paratype (MUMNH-GLO188), alcohol preserved, in dorsal, ventral, and lateral views (A) unrolled in sublateral view (B) rolled in sublateral view.
(A, B) image not to scale (C–E) scale bars: 2 mm

Rhopalomeris verhoeffi sp. nov., (A, B) paratype (MUMNH-GLO201), habitus, live coloration of color morph 2 (C–E) ♀ paratype (MUMNH-GLO201), alcohol preserved specimen of color morph 2 in dorsal, ventral, and lateral views (A) unrolled in sublateral view (B) rolled in sublateral view.
(A, B) image not to scale (C–E) scale bars: 2 mm

 Rhopalomeris muka Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov.
R. lentiginosa Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov. 
 R. dulcia Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov. 
 R. punctata Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov. 
 R. verhoeffi Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, sp. nov. 

Distributions of currently known Rhopalomeris species in Thailand and Myanmar

(A) Bayesian inference tree focusing on the detailed topology of Rhopalomeris carnifex (Pocock, 1889) and R. verhoeffi sp. nov., with colored drawings illustrating the color variations within each species. All millipede drawings are not to scale.
(B, C) Maps of southern Thailand showing the distributions of color morphs for (B) R. carnifex and (C) R. verhoeffi sp. nov. The different shaded colors in each pie chart represent the proportion of the corresponding color morphs in that locality.


 Pichsinee Sapparojpattana, Ekgachai Jeratthitikul, Warut Siriwut, Ruttapon Srisonchai, Thomas Wesener, Chirasak Sutcharit, and Natdanai Likhitrakarn. 2026. Five New Species of the Pill Millipede Genus Rhopalomeris Verhoeff, 1906 (Diplopoda, Glomerida) from Thailand. Contributions to Zoology. 95(1); 52–102. DOI: doi.org/10.1163/18759866-bja10090 [20 Feb 2026]

***งานวิจัยใหม่: กิ้งกือกระสุนลูกกวาด 5 ชนิดใหม่ของโลกจากประเทศไทย
และการมีรูปแบบสีที่หลากหลายซึ่งพบในบางชนิด***
...
รายชื่อชนิดใหม่ดังนี้
.
1. 𝙍𝙝𝙤𝙥𝙖𝙡𝙤𝙢𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙨 𝙢𝙪𝙠𝙖 Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, 2026
กิ้งกือกระสุนลูกกวาดมหิดลกาญจน์
 ค้นพบที่ มหาวิทยาลัยมหิดล วิทยาเขตกาญจนบุรี อำเภอไทรโยค จังหวัดกาญจนบุรี

2. 𝙍𝙝𝙤𝙥𝙖𝙡𝙤𝙢𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙨 𝙡𝙚𝙣𝙩𝙞𝙜𝙞𝙣𝙤𝙨𝙖 Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, 2026
ค้นพบที่ ตำบลท่าขนุน อำเภอทองผาภูมิ จังหวัดกาญจนบุรี
3. 𝙍𝙝𝙤𝙥𝙖𝙡𝙤𝙢𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙨 𝙙𝙪𝙡𝙘𝙞𝙖 Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, 2026
ค้นพบที่ ตำบลบ้านนา อำเภอเมืองชุมพร จังหวัดชุมพร

4. 𝙍𝙝𝙤𝙥𝙖𝙡𝙤𝙢𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙨 𝙥𝙪𝙣𝙘𝙩𝙖𝙩𝙖 Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, 2026
ค้นพบที่ ตำบลไร่เก่า อำเภอสามร้อยยอด จังหวัดประจวบคีรีขันธ์
5. 𝙍𝙝𝙤𝙥𝙖𝙡𝙤𝙢𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙨 𝙫𝙚𝙧𝙝𝙤𝙚𝙛𝙛𝙞 Sapparojpattana & Likhitrakarn, 2026
ตั้งชื่อเป็นเกียรติแก่ Karl Wilhelm Verhoeff ผู้ตั้งสกุลกื้งกือกระสุนลูกกวาด 𝙍𝙝𝙤𝙥𝙖𝙡𝙤𝙢𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙨
ค้นพบครั้งแรกที่ น้ำตกกะทู้ อำเภอกะทู้ จังหวัดภูเก็ต และกระจายตัวหลายพื้นที่ในภาคใต้ของประเทศไทย 

[PaleoIchthyology • 2026] Eosteus chongqingensis • The Oldest articulated Bony Fish from the early Silurian period

 

 Eosteus chongqingensis
Y.-A. Zhu, Chen, Li, Zhao, Zhou, Jia, Y.-L. Yu, H.-X. Yu, Wei, Ahlberg, Lu & M. Zhu, 2026

Life reconstruction by NICE PaleoVislab, IVPP

Abstract
Osteichthyans, comprising sarcopterygians and actinopterygians, dominate modern vertebrate biodiversity, yet their pre-Devonian fossil record remains scarce and fragmentary. The oldest articulated sarcopterygian and stem osteichthyan date to the late Silurian, whereas undisputed actinopterygian fossils in articulation appear only in the Middle Devonian. Here we report an articulated, near-complete osteichthyan from the early Silurian Chongqing Lagerstätte (approximately 436 million years ago), representing the oldest osteichthyan occurrence including microfossils. This tiny fish exhibits a fusiform, generalized osteichthyan body outline, with plesiomorphic osteichthyan characters, including the lack of lepidotrichia and the presence of serial median dorsal plates, pectoral and dorsal fin spines and an anal fin spine reported previously exclusively in stem chondrichthyans and one placoderm. It also displays features, such as a single dorsal fin and caudal fulcra, seen commonly in actinopterygians. Bayesian inference and the 50% majority rule consensus of the maximum-parsimony analysis place the new fish on the osteichthyan stem, whereas the strict consensus leaves its position unresolved within osteichthyans. This discovery increases Silurian osteichthyan diversity and further populates the osteichthyan stem group. The morphological disparity among early osteichthyans implies a more extensive Silurian to Early Devonian radiation of bony fishes than previous lines of evidence suggested.

Morphological evolution of early jawed vertebrates, showing the position of Eosteus and Megamastax among stem bony fishes. 


Eosteus chongqingensis

Life reconstruction of the oldest osteichthyan Eosteus chongqingensis.
 Credit: NICE PaleoVislab, IVPP



Life reconstruction of the biggest Silurian vertebrate Megamastax amblyodus.
Credit: Image by NICE PaleoVislab, IVPP

 
You-An Zhu, Yang Chen, Qiang Li, Wen-Jin Zhao, Zheng-Da Zhou, Lian-Tao Jia, Yi-Lun Yu, Han-Xin Yu, Guang-Biao Wei, Per E. Ahlberg, Jing Lu and Min Zhu. 2026. The Oldest articulated Bony Fish from the early Silurian period. Nature. 651; 128–134. DOI: doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10125-2 [04 March 2026]

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

[PaleoEntomology • 2026] Hypoponera electrocacica • The Ant Genus Hypoponera (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in Dominican Amber

 

Hypoponera electrocacica 
Fiorentino, Bouju, Sosa, Navarro & Barden, 2026
 
 
Abstract
Hypoponera Santschi, 1938 is a genus of ponerine ants, well known for its simplified morphology, lacking any clear autopomorphy, and its cosmopolitan distribution. Here, we describe the first Hypoponera in Dominican amber. The discovery of Hypoponera electrocacica new species confirms the long-expected presence of the genus in the Caribbean Miocene. The modern diversity of Hypoponera in the Greater Antilles now stands at five species and two putative subspecies.

Systematic paleontology
Order Hymenoptera Linnaeus, Reference Linnaeus1758

Family Formicidae Latreille, Reference Latreille1802
Subfamily Ponerinae Lepeletier de Saint-Fargeau, Reference Lepeletier de Saint-Fargeau1835

Genus Hypoponera Santschi, Reference Santschi1938

Type species: Ponera abeillei André, 1881, 
now Hypoponera abeillei (André, Reference André1881).

 Photomicrographs and illustration of Hypoponera electrocacica n. sp., holotype specimen, MNHNSD FOS 18.126.
(1) Head in front face view. (2) Illustration of forewing venation. (3) Body in dorsal view. (4) Body in lateral view.
Scale bars = 0.5 mm.

Hypoponera electrocacica new species

Etymology: The specific epithet electrocacica (from the Latin electrum, meaning ‘amber,’ and the feminine form of the Taino word cacique, meaning ‘chief’) is a feminine singular adjective in the nominative case. It refers to the alate ant or queen trapped in amber.


Gianpiero Fiorentino, Valentine Bouju, Diyael Sosa, Santo Navarro  and Phillip Barden. 2026. The Ant Genus Hypoponera (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in Dominican Amber. Journal of Paleontology. First View. DOI: doi.org/10.1017/jpa.2025.10213 [05 February 2026]

[Botany • 2026] Grindelia mutabilis (Asteraceae: Astereae) • A New South American Species and a Link for synonymizing Notopappus


Grindelia mutabilis  Fern.Fern. & G.Heiden, 

in Fernandes, de Souza, Iganci, de Souza-Chies et Heiden, 2026. 
Illustration by João Iganci.
 photos by F. Fernandes, B. de Souza and M. Grings. 

Abstract
Grindelia mutabilis (Asteraceae, Astereae), a new species from Brazil endemic to the Espinal Ecoregion of the Río de La Plata Grasslands Bioregion and Pampa Province of the Chaco Biogeographical Domain, is proposed and illustrated. The new species is characterized by a combination of traits: small, rosette cespitose habit, linear to linear–oblanceolate leaves, light-yellow to pastel salmon ray florets, three-winged ray floret cypselae bearing a pappus of two to four elements and two-winged disc floret cypselae bearing a pappus of two elements. It has a highly restricted habitat and is known exclusively within Parque Estadual do Espinilho in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Preliminary conservation assessments classify the new species as Critically Endangered. We provide illustrations and photographs, as well as a distribution map with an identification key for the South American Grindelia species with winged cypselae. The intriguing morphology of this species combines characters traditionally regarded as diagnostic for Notopappus, a genus segregated from Haplopappus and Grindelia. Previously published phylogenetic studies of related taxa indicate that the recognition of Notopappus as monophyletic is not supported and render Grindelia as non-monophyletic too. Based on this combined morphological evidence and existing phylogenetic hypotheses, we reaffirm the non-monophyly of Notopappus and formally propose its synonymization under Grindelia s.l.

Keywords: Asteroideae; Compositae; endangered species; endemism; grassland; Machaerantherinae; savanna; taxonomy

 Grindelia mutabilis  (Asteraceae).
(A) Habitat on sandy, halophilous soils within the Espinal/Ñandubay savanna of Espinilho State Park, Barra do Quaraí, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. (B) Cespitose rosette habit with spreading branches. (C) Leaves. (D) Lateral view of the capitulum. (E) Capitulum with pastel-salmon ray florets. (F) Capitulum with light-yellow ray florets.
 Pictures by F. Fernandes (A), B. de Souza (B–D, F), and M. Grings (E).

Grindelia mutabilis (Asteraceae).
(A) Habitat. (B) Cespitose rosette habit with spreading branches; scale bar = 0.3 m. (C) Leaves and bracts, from left to right: leaf, bract distant from the capitulum, and bract closest to the capitulum; scale bar = 20 mm. (D) Phyllaries, from left to right: outer, middle, and inner phyllaries; scale bar = 4 mm. (E) Frontal view of the capitulum showing ray florets with pastel salmon-colored ligules; scale bar = 10 mm. (F) Lateral view of the capitulum showing ray florets with light-yellow ligules; scale bar = 10 mm. (G) Ray floret; scale bar = 5 mm. (H) Disc floret; scale bar = 2 mm. (I) Pappus; scale bar = 2 mm. (J) Cypselae, from left to right: cypsela of a disc floret and cypsela of a ray floret; scale bar = 1 mm.
Illustration by João Iganci.

Grindelia mutabilis Fern.Fern. & G.Heiden, sp. nov. 

 Diagnosis: Grindelia mutabilis differs from all other species in the genus by the unique combination of cespitose rosette habit 0.2–0.3 m tall; leaves linear to linear–oblanceolate; ray corollas light yellow to pastel salmon; three-winged ray floret cypselae bearing a pappus of two to four elements and two-winged disc floret cypselae bearing a pappus of two elements.

 Etymology: The specific epithet mutabilis (Latin for “changeable” or “variable”) refers to the ligules of the ray florets that change from light yellow to pastel salmon along the maturity.


 Fernando Fernandes, Bruno de Souza, João Iganci, Tatiana Teixeira de Souza-Chies and Gustavo Heiden. 2026. Grindelia mutabilis (Asteraceae: Astereae), a New South American Species and a Link for synonymizing NotopappusPlants. 15(5), 760. DOI: doi.org/10.3390/plants15050760   

[Arachnida • 2026] Planochelas jingdaBreaking the Afrotropical Boundary: Discovery of Planochelas (Araneae: Trachelidae) in Asia reveals Transcontinental Distribution, with A New bark-dwelling Species from China

 

Planochelas jingda Liu,

in Wang, Shi, Li, Jin, Luo et Liu, 2026. 
井大平蛛  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.14.e182804 

Abstract
Background: Arboreal microhabitats, such as tree bark, remain poorly studied in subtropical China. During exploratory surveys in Jiangxi, specimens of the trachelid spider genus Planochelas — previously known only from Africa — were collected, representing its first record in Asia. This finding disproves the genus’ assumed endemic status and underscores the value of surveying overlooked microhabitats for biogeographic discovery.

New information: The spider genus Planochelas Lyle & Haddad, 2009 is reported for the first time outside the Afrotropical Region, based on material collected in Ji’an City, Jiangxi Province, south-eastern China. A new species, Planochelas jingda Liu, sp. nov., is described and illustrated. Specimens were collected from beneath the bark of Platanus spp. (e.g. P. acerifolia, P. occidentalis and P. orientalis), confirming the arboreal and cryptic habits of the genus. This discovery significantly expands the known distribution of Planochelas and challenges its previous status as a strictly Afrotropical endemic. The finding underscores the importance of targeted microhabitat sampling for revealing overlooked spider diversity and contributes to the understanding of the biogeography of the family Trachelidae in the Oriental Region.

Keywords: Afrotropical Region, dark sac-spiders, Jiangxi Province, taxonomy

Planochelas jingda sp. nov., male holotype.
A habitus, dorsal view; B same, ventral view; C palp, prolatero-ventral view; D same, ventral view; E same, retrolateral view.
 Scale bars: 0.5 mm (A, B); 0.1 mm (C–E).

Planochelas jingda sp. nov., photos of living specimen
A–C male; D–F female.

Planochelas jingda Liu, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Males of the new species resemble those of Planochelas botulus Lyle & Haddad, 2009 (Lyle and Haddad (2009): 93, figs. 15−16) and P. brevis Khoza & Lyle, 2019 (Khoza and Lyle (2019): 150, figs. 9−10) in having an S-shaped sperm duct, the anterior tegulum with an arched ridge and the slightly curved embolus situated distally on tegulum, but can be distinguished (...

Etymology: The name is taken from Jinggangshan University, referring to the type locality; noun in apposition. Common Chinese name: 井大平蛛.

Distribution: Known only from Ji'an City, in Jiangxi Province, China (Fig. 5).

Ecology: The specimens were collected from under the bark (Fig. 4) of plane trees (e.g. P. acerifolia, P. occidentalis and P. orientalis) by hand.


Yujin Wang, Yingying Shi, Congzheng Li, Chi Jin, Liangkai Luo and Keke Liu. 2026. Breaking the Afrotropical boundary: Discovery of Planochelas in Asia reveals Transcontinental Distribution, with A New bark-dwelling Species from China (Araneae, Trachelidae). Biodiversity Data Journal. 14: e182804. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.14.e182804 [03 Mar 2026] 

[Entomology • 2026] Microvelia amphitrite • New Species and New Distributional Records of the Genus Microvelia Westwood (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Veliidae) from the Japanese Ogasawara Islands, with an Illustrated Key to Ogasawaran Species


Microvelia amphitrite  Matsushima & Watanabe, 

in Matsushima, Hisasue et Watanabe. 2026
 
Abstract
Microvelia (Pacificovelia) amphitrite new species is described from the Japanese Ogasawara Islands. In addition, some specimens identified as M. douglasi Scott, 1874 and previously reported by different authors from the Ogasawara Islands were examined and recognized as misidentifications actually belonging to M. yoshitomii Watanabe, 2023 and the new species herein described. These results indicate that M. douglasi is not distributed in the Ogasawara Islands. In addition, M. yoshitomii is herein reported for the first time from nine islands in the archipelago. An illustrated key to Ogasawaran Microveliinae species is provided. Field surveys revealed that two species of Microvelia in the Ogasawara Islands prey on arthropods across several taxa, more than half of which are alien species.

broad-shouldered water striders, Gerromorpha, Microveliinae, oceanic islands, semiaquatic bugs, small water striders, taxonomy

Habitus of Microvelia amphitrite new species paratypes.
 Apterous male and Apterous female.

Microvelia (Pacificovelia) amphitrite Matsushima and Watanabe, sp. nov. 

Etymology. The species epithet amphitrite derives from the Greek mythological queen of the sea, “Amphitrite”,who is said to have been crossed the sea on dolphins. This name reflects both the geographical background of thisnew species, which has established on the oceanic islands, and the dolphin-like shape of the male parameres. 

Predation events by Microvelia spp.
Predation by Microvelia amphitrite new species: 32, springtail (Entomobryidae). 33, Technomyrmex brunneus (Formicidae). 34, Apis mellifera (Apidae).
Predation by M. yoshitomii: 35, springtail (Sminthuridae). 36, Heteropsylla cubana (Psyllidae). 37, Pheidole parva s. l. (Formicidae).


RYOSUKE MATSUSHIMA, YU HISASUE and KOHEI WATANABE. 2026. New Species and New Distributional Records of the Genus Microvelia Westwood (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Veliidae) from the Japanese Ogasawara Islands, with an Illustrated Key to Ogasawaran Species. J. Int. Heteropterists’ Soc. 3(1); DOI: doi.org/10.11646/jihs.3.1.2 [2026-01-30] 

[Entomology • 2025] Neochlonocoris sepicus • A striking New apterous Mezirinae (Hemiptera: Aradidae) from Papua New Guinea

 

[1–3, 6, 8] Neochlonocoris sepicus n. sp. Heiss & Eckelt,
[4–5] Chlonocoris dolinorum Heiss, 2012,

in Heiss & Eckelt, 2025. 

Abstract
The fauna of Aradidae or flat bugs of New Guinea Island is still insufficiently explored and studied. The Mezirinae, the largest subfamily of tropical Aradidae, has 25 genera recorded to date from New Guinea Island, and only one species Artabanellus mcnamarai Kormilev, 1967 is apterous. Now a striking new specimen of apterous Mezirinae has come to light, its habitus resembling species of the Madagascan genus Chlonocoris. However, because it cannot be placed in any extant genus of Aradidae, Neochlonocoris sepicus new genus and new species are described.

 Heteroptera, Flat Bugs, Karawari, Lowland rainforest, new species, New Guinea

1–3. Neochlonocoris sepicus n. sp., holotype. 1, Dorsal habitus. 2, Ventral habitus. 3, Dorsal terminal segments.
4–5, Chlonocoris dolinorum, holotype. 4, Dorsal habitus. 5, Dorsal terminal segments. Scale 5 mm.

6, Neochlonocoris sepicus n. sp., holotype, head and pronotum, dorsal.
7, Chlonocoris dolinorum holotype, head and pronotum, dorsal.
8–10, Neochlonocoris sepicus n. sp., holotype. 8, Abdomen, ventral habitus. 9, Terminal segments VII–VII, ventral view. 10, Left metathoracic scent-gland opening, ventral view.

Neochlonocoris sepicus n. gen., n. sp.


ERNST HEISS and ANDREAS ECKELT. 2025. Neochlonocoris sepicus n. gen., n. sp., a Striking New Apterous Mezirinae (Hemiptera: Aradidae) from Papua New Guinea. J. Int. Heteropterists’ Soc. 2(2); 121-125. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/jihs.2.2.4 [2025-04-30]

[Herpetology • 2026] Achalinus mirabilis • Taxonomic Reassessment of Achalinus jinggangensis (Zong & Ma, 1983) (Serpentes: Xenodermidae), with Description of A New Species from Zhejiang Province, China


Achalinus mirabilis Xu, Hu, Qi, Zhang, Zhou, Xu, Wang & Peng,   

in Y. Xu, Hu, Qi, Ma, Chen, T. Zhang, Y. Zhang, Sun, Zhou, J. Xu, Wang et Peng. 2026. 
Kuocang Moutain odd-scaled snake | 括苍山脊蛇  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.183453 

Abstract
The taxonomy of Achalinus jinggangensis has long remained unclear due to limited sampling and the consequent lack of publicly available molecular and distributional data. Here, we re-evaluate the taxonomic status of A. jinggangensis using an integrative approach that combines molecular phylogenetic analyses, detailed morphological comparisons, and direct examination of type material, and provide a comprehensive redescription of this species. In addition, we describe an unexpected new species from Kuocang Mountain, Linhai City, Zhejiang Province, China, Achalinus mirabilis sp. nov. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that Achalinus mirabilis sp. nov. appears to be most closely related to A. jinggangensis, although this relationship is not statistically supported, and exhibits substantial genetic divergence, as indicated by uncorrected p-distances of 9.5%–10.9% in the CO1 gene fragment. Morphologically, the new species is readily distinguished from A. jinggangensis by its distinctly keeled outermost dorsal scale row, a higher number of ventral scales in both sexes, and conspicuous differences in coloration. Our results highlight previously underestimated species diversity within Achalinus and refine the current understanding of its taxonomy. This study increases the number of recognized species in the genus Achalinus to 30, and underscores the importance of integrative approaches in resolving cryptic diversity and taxonomic complexity within the genus.

Key Words: Achalinus mirabilis sp. nov., Kuocang Mountain, molecular phylogeny, morphological characters, taxonomy

Coloration of the holotype of Achalinus mirabilis sp. nov. in life (QHU R2025051, adult female).
A. Dorsolateral view; B. Ventral view of the body. Photographs by J.H. Hu.

Achalinus mirabilis Xu, Hu, Qi, Zhang, Zhou, Xu, Wang & Peng, sp. nov.

Diagnosis. The new species Achalinus mirabilis sp. nov. is distinguished from all of its congeners by a combination of the following morphological characters: (1) size medium, with a maximum SVL of 270 mm in males and 332 mm in females; (2) tail relatively short, TAL/TL ratio 0.22 in males and 0.17–0.18 in females; (3) loreal scale absent; (4) length of suture between internasals substantially longer than that between prefrontals, LSBI/LSBP ratio 1.60–3.35; (5) dorsal scales strongly keeled, arranged in 23 rows throughout the body, with the outermost row also strongly keeled and substantially enlarged; (6) infralabials 6, with the anterior three or four in contact with the first pair of chin shields; (7) two pairs of chin shields; (8) maxillary teeth 27 based on the only counted female specimen; (8) ventral scales 163–166 in males and 174–178 in females; (9) subcaudals 64–68 in males and 53–56 in females, not paired; (10) in life, the dorsum is brown to dark brown with a slight metallic sheen, and the venter is uniformly light brown.

Etymology. The specific epithet mirabilis represents a Latin adjective in nominative singular, meaning “marvelous” or “remarkable”, and is given in reference to the distinctive morphology of this species within the genus Achalinus. In addition, the discovery of a previously unrecorded new species in Taizhou City, Zhejiang Province, a highly urbanized and economically developed region, was also unexpected. Based on its known distribution, Kuocang Mountain (Kuocangshan) in Linhai City, Taizhou City, Zhejiang Province, China, we propose the Chinese common name “括苍山脊蛇” (Kuò Cāng Shān Jǐ Shé) and the English common name “Kuocang Moutain odd-scaled snake”.

Live or fresh specimens of paratypes of Achalinus mirabilis sp. nov.
A. SMNH 20250126, subadult male; B. QHU R2025053, adult male;
C. QHU R2025054, adult female; D. SYS r003125, adult female.
Photographs by J.H. Hu (A–C) and H.J. Chen (D).


 Yuhao Xu, Jiahao Hu, Shuo Qi, Shun Ma, Haojun Chen, Tierui Zhang, Yunfei Zhang, Fanyue Sun, Jiajun Zhou, Jinan Xu, Yingyong Wang, Lifang Peng. 2026. Taxonomic Reassessment of Achalinus jinggangensis (Zong & Ma, 1983) (Serpentes, Xenodermidae), with Description of A New Species from Zhejiang Province, China. Zoosystematics and Evolution. 102(2): 387-409. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.183453