Sunday, March 1, 2026

[Botany • 2026] Stigmatodactylus antennatus (Orchidaceae) • A New Species from West Papua Province, Indonesia, and the Rediscovery and Reinterpretation of S. gibbsiae


 Stigmatodactylus antennatus Schuit., Saputra & Wanma,

in Schuiteman, Saputra, Wanma et Heatubun, 2026. 

Abstract
Two species of Stigmatodactylus have recently been observed in the Arfak Mountains of West Papua Province, Indonesian New Guinea. One of these is clearly undescribed and is here described as Stigmatodactylus antennatus Schuit., Saputra & Wanma, a species uniquely characterised by the presence of a pair of antennae on the lip. The other is believed to be S. gibbsiae (Kores) Kores. This species was only known from the type material collected in the Arfak Mountains more than a century ago, in 1913. There are, however, significant discrepancies between the protologue and the material recently found. We interpret these discrepancies as misinterpretations of the poor type material of S. gibbsiae, and provide images based on fresh material. An identification key to the four species of Stigmatodactylus in New Guinea is included.

Keywords: Acianthus; Arfak mountains; identification key; taxonomy

  Stigmatodactylus antennatus
 (A) Plant habit; (B) flower; (C) dorsal sepal; (D) lateral sepal; (E) petal; (F) lip; (G) lip callus; (H) column. Drawn after the type material by André Schuiteman.


 Stigmatodactylus antennatus.
(a) In situ, Schuiteman et al. 23-277; (b) inflorescence, Schuiteman et al. 24-102; (c) flower detail showing callus with antennae, Schuiteman et al. 23-277. Photos: André Schuiteman.

  Stigmatodactylus antennatus Schuit., Saputra & Wanma, spec. nov. 



 André Schuiteman, Reza Saputra, Jimmy F. Wanma and Charlie D. Heatubun. 2026. A New Species of Stigmatodactylus (Orchidaceae) from West Papua Province, Indonesia, and the Rediscovery and Reinterpretation of S. gibbsiae. Plants. 15(4), 58. DOI: doi.org/10.3390/plants15040589 [13 February 2026]

[Botany • 2025] Axinaea filandiensis (Melastomataceae: Merianieae) • A New Species from Colombia, and Comments on the Circumscription of Axinaea and groups in Meriania


 Axinaea filandiensis Humberto Mend. & W. Vargas,  
  
 in Mendoza Cifuentes et Vargas, 2025.

Abstract
Background and Aims: Axinaea is a predominantly Andean genus, with one species found in the mountains of Costa Rica and Panama. It is similar to Meriania, and the only feature that separates them from each other is the shape of the dorsal connective of the anther. The discovery of a new species, described here, with anther connective characters intermediate between the two genera, raised the need to improve the circumscription of Axinaea and document variation within Meriania, aspects that are addressed in this paper.

Methods: A new species of Axinaea is described from collections deposited in the UDBC herbarium of the Distrital University of Bogotá. The degree of threat is evaluated and the need for conserving the species is described. In addition, various groups within Meriania, including Axinaea, are summarized, and a unique set of characters for Axinaea is proposed.

Key results: Axinaea filandiensis sp. nov. is characterized by its 4-merous flowers, isomorphous stamens with blue anthers and globose-ellipsoid dorsal connectives. It is known only from the type locality and its conservation status is proposed as Critically Endangered (CR). Seven groups are described in Meriania, including Axinaea, and a unique set of characters is proposed for the latter genus, considering non-nectariferous flowers, cucullate corolla, isomorphic or slightly dimorphic stamens, anthers with the vascular bundle of the connective tissue directed backwards, and inappendiculate and globose to globose-elliptic connective. According to this circumscription, one species described in Meriania (M. rubrifolia) establishes its position within Axinaea.

Conclusions: Axinaea filandiensis represents a critically endangered species that requires urgent conservation action. The unique set of characters established in this paper clarifies the separation between Axinaea and Meriania. It is proposed to maintain both genera separate, considering that Meriania is an artificial group that should be split into several genera.

Keywords: Andes, stamens, sub-Andean forest, taxonomy

Living plants of Axinaea filandiensis Humberto Mend. & W. Vargas.
A. flowering branch; B. detail of stem and inflorescence; C. floral buds; D. open flower.
Photos from Vargas 17591 (UDBC)
 

Humberto Mendoza Cifuentes and William G. Vargas. 2025. Axinaea filandiensis (Melastomataceae, Merianieae), A New Species from Colombia, and Comments on the Circumscription of Axinaea and groups in MerianiaActa Botanica Mexicana. (132); DOI: doi.org/10.21829/abm132.2025.2421 
 

[Ichthyology • 2026] Gitchak nakana • A miniature, subterranean, blind cobitid loach (Cypriniformes: Cobitidae) is the first groundwater-dwelling fish from Northeast India


Gitchak nakana
Britz, Marak, Velentina, Lokeshwor, Raghavan, Pinion & Rüber, 2026


Abstract
Subterranean animals are commonly met with considerable fascination, by both laymen and biologists. While most of these animals have been reported from caves, some species have adapted to other underground habitats. One special subterranean aquatic habitat are aquifers, which are home to a number of invertebrates and fishes. Of the more than 300 known subterranean fishes, fewer than 10% have been recovered from aquifers and are encountered only rarely and serendipitously. Here we report the discovery of a tiny, blind loach of the family Cobitidae from a dug-out well in Assam, India, which exhibits a number of characters commonly associated with subterranean life, so-called troglomorphies. This loach, described here as Gitchak nakana, represents a new genus and species, differing from all other genera of cobitids by a number of unique characters. The most unusual among these is the complete lack of a skull roof with the brain covered dorsally only by skin. Gitchak nakana is the first aquifer-dwelling (phreatobitic) fish from Northeast India, and marks the first discovery of a previously unknown subterranean fauna in this part of Asia.



Gitchak nakana. (a) ZSI FF11123, holotype, 20.8 mm SL, in life, sides reversed, showing overall appearance, note presence of large eggs in body cavity and numerous fat globules (reflective spheres) along dorsal midline and postanal ventral midline. (b) same specimen, after preservation. (c) same specimen, µCT-image to illustrate presence of eight large eggs arranged in a longitudinal series. (d) same specimen, in life, actively swimming in the water column; note large yellow eggs and blood red liver. (e) KUFOS2025.F.11.51, non-type, 16.4 mm SL, in life, close-up of lateral head and body; note swimbladder visible through body wall. (f) KUFOS:2025.FT.11.6, paratype, 20.0 mm SL, frontal view of head to illustrate crown of barbels; note large-calibre red blood vessels supplying rostral (rb), maxillary (mxb) and mandibular (mdb) barbels and small-calibre vessels supplying nasal (nb) and tiny mental barbels (marked by arrow).

Taxonomy 
Gitchak, new genus 

Diagnosis. Gitchak is a member of the family Cobitidae as evidenced by (i) the modification of lateral ethmoid into a bifurcated subocular spine, which articulates with the orbitosphenoid, (ii) the reduction of the endopterygoid into a rod-like element, (iii) the absence of contact between orbitosphenoid and pterosphenoid and (iv) the outer arm of the os suspensorium completely surrounding anterior swimbladder chamber.

Etymology. The genus name is derived from the Garo word gitchak, meaning red, alluding to the striking red life colour of this loach. Treated here as a noun in the feminine gender.

Gitchak nakana, new species.
 
Etymology. The specific name is derived from the Garo words na·tok, fish, and kana, blind, referring to the absence of eyes in this species, a noun in apposition.


 
Ralf Britz, Wimarithy K. Marak, Kangjam Velentina, Yumnam Lokeshwor, Rajeev Raghavan, Amanda K. Pinion and Lukas Rüber. 2026. A miniature, subterranean, blind cobitid loach, Gitchak nakana, new genus and species, is the first groundwater-dwelling fish from Northeast India. Scientific Reports. 16: 7746. DOI: doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-40425-6 [26 February 2026]

Saturday, February 28, 2026

[Herpetology • 2026] Dibamus irregularis • A New Species of Blind Skink (Squamata: Dibamidae: Dibamus) from Chu Yang Sin National Park, southern Vietnam, with the first description of a Dibamus clutch

 

Dibamus irregularis Kliukin, Poyarkov, Bragin, Krone & Nguyen, 

in Kliukin, Bragin, Nguyen, Vu, Le, Gorin, Krone & Poyarkov, 2026
Chu Yang Sin Blind Skink  |  DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5760.5.1  
Thằn lằn giun Chư Yang Sin  ||  Researchgate.net/publication/401227726  

Abstract
A new species of dibamid lizard, Dibamus irregularis sp. nov. is described based on molecular (three mitochondrial genes) and morphological (external and skeletal) characters of twelve specimens collected from the Chu Yang Sin National Park, Dak Lak Province, southern Vietnam. The new species can be distinguished from other congeners by the following combination of characters: medial rostral suture absent or incomplete, nasal sutures incomplete, labial sutures complete or incomplete; two to three postoculars; three to four scales on the posterior edge of infralabial; 22–24 midbody scale rows; 180–211 ventral scales; 39–46 subcaudal scales; and maximum snout-vent length 147 mm. Moreover, two eggs of a new species were collected in the same locality. The only known clutch of Dibamus was described more than 120 years ago based on a single egg of D. alfredi collected from Bukit Besar, Thailand. Herein, we provide the first description of a complete clutch of the genus Dibamus based on two eggs of Dibamus irregularis sp. nov. Our study brings the total number of species in the genus Dibamus to 30; Dibamus irregularis sp. nov. is the 10th species of Dibamus recorded from Vietnam, highlighting the importance of the country as a hot spot of reptilian diversity in Southeast Asia.

Reptilia, Dibamus irregularis sp. nov., Dak Lak Province, conservation, Southeast Asia, systematics, morphology, reproduction

 Dibamus irregularis sp. nov. in life.
(A) holotype ZMMu re-18313, male; (B) Paratype ZMMu re-18315, female.
Photographs by Andrey M. Bragin




Dibamus irregularis sp. nov.
Kliukin, Poyarkov, Bragin, Krone & Nguyen

Etymology. the new species epithet is a latin adjective in nominative singular, meaning “irregular,” andis given in reference to the high intraspecific variability of external morphological features in the new species,especially to the irregularity and asymmetry of the number of postocular scales (Fig. 6). Since Allen greer’s revision(greer 1985) and in all subsequent papers describing new species of Dibamus, the number of postocular scales wasconsidered as a relatively stable diagnostic character underlying diagnoses for new species of dibamids, which in partcould be explained by generally small sample sizes of Dibamus spp. available for examination. however, Dibamus irregularis sp. nov. demonstrates an unexpectedly irregular and asymmetrical number of postocular scales: fivespecimens have two postoculars, four specimens have three postoculars, and three specimens have two postocularson the left side and three on the right side of the head.

Suggested common names: Chu Yang Sin Blind Skink (English); Thằn lằn giun Chư Yang Sin (Vietnamese),Chuyangsinskaya cherveobraznaya yascheritsa (Чуянгсинская червеобразная ящерица, Russian).  



Nikita S. KLIUKIN, Andrey M. BRAGIN, Tan Van NGUYEN, Duy Dinh VU, Son Xuan LE, Vladislav A. GORIN, Isaac W. KRONE, Nikolay A. POYARKOV. 2026. A New Species of Blind Skink (Squamata: Dibamidae: Dibamus) from Chu Yang Sin National Park, southern Vietnam, with the first description of a Dibamus clutch.  Zootaxa. 5760(5); 501-528. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5760.5.1 [2026-02-26] 

[Botany • 2026] Nepenthes siamensis (Nepenthaceae) • A New Species of Section Montanae from Surat Thani Province, Peninsular Thailand

 

Nepenthes siamensis Nuanlaong 

in Nuanlaong, Yodthammarat, Chiwan, Laewan et Pohsap, 2026.
หม้อแกงสยาม  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.1007/s12225-025-10336-2
Drawn by Chayan Yodthammarat
 
Summary
Nepenthes siamensis, a new species from Khlong Phanom National Park in southern Thailand, is described. This species, closely related to others in section Montanae, stands out due to its distinct inflorescence characteristics, including bracts present on both male and female flowers, and unique pitcher morphology. It is found approximately 650 km north of the most similar species based on morphological comparison, N. sanguinea and N. thai, which are also both terrestrial and lower montane. It shares characters with them, such as a climbing habit and oblong to subspathulate leaves with 2 – 3 longitudinal nerves on each side of the midrib. This discovery significantly extends the known range of section Montanae.

 Key Words: Carnivorous plants, pitcher plant, taxonomy

Nepenthes siamensis.
A stem with leaves and upper pitchers; B lower pitcher; C male inflorescence; D female flowers; E male flowers; F lower surface of lid with upper part of peristome; G upper surface of lid; H – J nectar glands.
From live specimens. Drawn by Chayan Yodthammarat



Nepenthes siamensis Nuanlaong sp. nov. 
Type: Thailand, Surat Thani Province, Phanom Distr., Khlong Phanom National Park, ...

Recognition. This species differs from Nepenthes thai in leaf base margins clasping the stem for ½ of the circumference, not decurrent (vs clasping stem ¾ – ⅚ of circumference, bases decurrent down the stem for 3 – 12 mm in N. thai); lower pitcher cylindrical in lower ¾ of length, infundibular in upper ¼ (vs ovoid-cylindrical); spur filiform (vs branched); bracts present on all flowers at the bases of pedicels in the male inflorescence and on the lower half of the pedicel in the female inflorescence (vs bract absent).




  Sunya Nuanlaong, Chayan Yodthammarat, Purin Chiwan, Teerayut Laewan and Suphansiri Pohsap. 2026. Nepenthes siamensis (Nepenthaceae), A New Species of Section Montanae from Surat Thani Province, Peninsular Thailand. Kew Bulletin. DOI: doi.org/10.1007/s12225-025-10336-2 [27 February 2026]


[Botany • 2025] Zeuxine drukyulensis (Orchidaceae) • A New jewel orchid from Bhutan Himalaya

 

Zeuxine drukyulensis P.Gyeltshen, Rabgay & Kumar,

in Gyeltshen, Rabgay, Tobgay et Kumar, 2025. 
 
Abstract
An interesting new species of jewel orchid, Zeuxine drukyulensis is described and illustrated from warm broadleaved forests in western Bhutan. It is closely allied to Zeuxine nervosa and Zeuxine rolfeana, however, differs in various morphological characters, primarily the structure, size and colour of the flower. The new species is assessed as Data Deficient (DD) as per the IUCN Red List guidelines.

Conservation, Data Deficient, Drukyul, Orchidoideae, Rimchu, taxonomy, Monocots




Phub GYELTSHEN, Kinley RABGAY, Kezang TOBGAY and Pankaj KUMAR. 2025. Zeuxine drukyulensis (Orchidaceae), A New jewel orchid from Bhutan Himalaya.  Phytotaxa. 690(1); 123-129. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.690.1.11 [2025-02-26]
 facebook.com/PGyeltshen2022


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


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

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

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




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

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


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

Friday, February 27, 2026

[Paleontology • 2026] The ontogenetically youngest known pachycephalosaur (Dinosauria: Ornithischia) postcranium

 

juvenile Pachycephalosauria indet. (CMNFV 22039)
Life reconstruction in an environment typical of the upper Maastrichtian Frenchman Formation, Saskatchewan. 

in Moore, Evans, Ryan, Patterson et Mallon, 2026. 
Illustration by Kaitlin Lindblad. 
 
ABSTRACT
Pachycephalosaurian dinosaurs are represented in the fossil record primarily by their taphonomically resistant frontoparietal domes that developed fully only at maturity. Consequently, the postcranial record of Pachycephalosauria is poor, particularly for immature forms. Here, we describe the ontogenetically youngest known, and Canada’s second-most complete, pachycephalosaur postcranium, collected from the uppermost Maastrichtian Frenchman Formation, Saskatchewan. Despite its small size (estimated total length ∼90 cm), the skeleton shows several characters diagnostic of Pachycephalosauria, including a double ridge-and-groove articulation on the pre- and postzygapophyses of the dorsal neural arches, a medial flange on the postacetabular process of the ilium, and a highly reduced pubis that contributes only minimally to the acetabular margin. Histological sectioning of the crural bones shows an immature woven bone texture. The absence of cyclical or annual growth indicators suggests that this specimen was less than a year old at the time of death. Phylogenetic analysis recovers the specimen as a member of Pachycephalosaurinae, perhaps related to Prenocephale, but the lack of cranial data for our specimen and the complementary lack of postcranial data for other pachycephalosaurs make this determination tenuous. Spatiotemporal considerations suggest a possible but currently untestable affiliation with Sphaerotholus buchholtzae. The relatively long hindlimbs of the juvenile compared with those of adult pachycephalosaurs indicate probable negative ontogenetic allometry in the hindlimbs.

 Preserved elements (in red) of juvenile Pachycephalosauria indet. (CMNFV 22039).
 The preserved left ischium does not show in this view. Diagram illustrates preserved elements only and does not accurately reflect the proportions of CMNFV 22039.
Skeletal drawing modified after original illustrations of Pachycephalosaurus (postcranium) and “Dracorex” (cranium) by Gregory Paul. Used with permission.

Life reconstruction of CMNFV 22039 in an environment typical of the upper Maastrichtian Frenchman Formation. 
Illustration by Kaitlin Lindblad. Used with permission.
 

Bryan R. S. Moore, David C. Evans, Michael J. Ryan, R. Timothy Patterson and Jordan C. Mallon. 2026. The ontogenetically youngest known pachycephalosaur (Dinosauria: Ornithischia) postcranium. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. e2616325. DOI: 10.1080/02724634.2026.2616325 [26 Feb 2026]

[Botany • 2025] Microchirita baolamensis (Gesneriaceae) • A New Species from Vietnam

 

Microchirita baolamensis T.S. Hoang, W.G. Wang & H.C. Xi, 

in Hoang, Xi, Shen et Wang, 2025. 
 
Abstract 
Microchirita baolamensis T.S. Hoang, W.G. Wang & H.C. Xi (Gesneriaceae) is described and illustrated as a new species from Vietnam. It resembles M. involucrata and M. rupestris, but differs from them by its cristate inflorescence, purple corolla tube with yellow stripes and eglandular pubescence, and free anthers. It further differs from M. involucrata by a partly pubescent ovary and an eglandularly pubescent style. Based on IUCN categories and criteria, the species is assessed as Critically Endangered (CR).


Microchirita baolamensis T.S. Hoang, W.G. Wang & H.C. Xi sp. nov.
 

Son Thanh Hoang, Hou-Cheng Xi, Jian-Yong Shen and Wen-Guang Wang. 2025. Microchirita baolamensis (Gesneriaceae), a New Species from Vietnam. Annales Botanici Fennici. 62(1):135-138. DOI: doi.org/10.5735/085.062.0123  [9 May 2025]


Thursday, February 26, 2026

[Herpetology • 2026] Cyrtodactylus kiriromensis • A New Species of the Cyrtodactylus intermedius group (Squamata: Gekkonidae) continues to underscore the high degree of site-specific endemism in the Cardamom Region, Cambodia

 
Cyrtodactylus kiriromensis
Grismer, Neang, Samorn, Song & Stuart, 2026


Abstract
A new species of the Cyrtodactylus intermedius group, Cyrtodactylus kiriromensis sp. nov., from Kirirom National Park of Phnom Sruoch in the Cardamom Mountains of Cambodia is delimited based on a mitochondrial (ND2) phylogeny and statistically diagnosed using meristic, morphometric, and color pattern characters. Cyrtodacytylus kiriromensis sp. nov. is the sister species of C. septimontium of southern Vietnam and forms part of a clade with six other site-specific endemic species from the mountains and islands of southeastern Cambodia and southwestern Vietnam. The ongoing discoveries of localized endemic species in the Cardamom Mountains underscores their fragmented nature and the importance of this landscape as a source of speciation as well as its notable contribution to the herpetological diversity of Cambodia. As such, it should be given special consideration as a conservation priority.

Reptilia, Indochina, Southeast Asia, integrative taxonomy, gecko, endemism, conservation


 Cyrtodactylus kiriromensis sp. nov.



L. Lee GRISMER, Thy NEANG, Vireak SAMORN, Det SONG and Bryan L. STUART. 2026. A New Species of the Cyrtodactylus intermedius group (Squamata: Gekkonidae) continues to underscore the high degree of site-specific endemism in the Cardamom Region, Cambodia.  Zootaxa. 5741(3); 519-538. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5741.3.5 [2026-01-07]


[Botany • 2025] Peliosanthes chenmingsongii (Asparagaceae) • A New Species from Yunnan, Southwestern China

 

Peliosanthes chenmingsongii H.Z. Feng,

in Li, Pan, Sun, Yuan et Feng, 2025. 
 
Abstract
Peliosanthes chenmingsongii is described and illustrated as a new species from southwestern China. The new species is morphologically closest to P. cupuliformis, but differs in its erect, woody and hard rhizome, longer petioles and larger leaf blades, more widely expanded flowers with recurved perianth segments, non-revolute margins and a horizontally inward-growing annular appendage in the corona. Careful comparisons with other closely related species are also made.

pistil, corona, Liliaceae, Peliosanthes cupuliformis, taxonomy



Peliosanthes chenmingsongii H.Z. Feng, sp. nov.


Xiao Hong LI, Xiang Ru PAN, Yi Fei SUN, Juan Juan YUAN and Hui Zhe FENG. 2025. Peliosanthes chenmingsongii (Asparagaceae), A New Species from Yunnan, Southwestern China.  Phytotaxa. 732(3); 295-300. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.732.3.7 [2025-12-05] 

[Botany • 2024] Peliosanthes yangchunensis (Asparagaceae) • A New Species from Guangdong, China

 

Peliosanthes yangchunensis  F.Z. Feng & W.B Liao,
 
in Feng, Wu, Zeng, Fan et Liao, 2024. 
 
Abstract
A new species named Peliosanthes yangchunensis are described, which is endemic to Yangchun, western Guangdong, South China. The new species is closely related to P. macrostegia, but differs from the latter in that the flowers smaller, star-like and with strongly revolute, spreading and narrowly oblong tepals, style conical, ovary hexagonal in cross section, and fruit ovoid-globose, flower period September to October. Comparisons with other closely related species are also provided.

Asparagaceae, Peliosanthes, South China, western Guangdong, Monocots

Peliosanthes yangchunensis.
A. Habit; B & D. Inflorescence; C. Inflorescence & fruits; E & F. Flower, front view; G & H. Flower, views from side; I, J, K & L. Flower, longitudinally sectioned; L. Corona with three anthers; N. Corona, viewed from below; O. Basal portion of flower, with corona cross-sectioned; P. Basal portion of flower except corona and pistil; Q. Basal portion of flower, corona and ovary cross-sectioned; R. Flower, views from side and with corona removed. The the left photo in D and F were taken by Mr. Meng De Chang, and others photos, correction and design by H. Z. Feng.

Peliosanthes yangchunensis F.Z. Feng & W.B Liao, sp. nov.


Hui-Zhe FENG, Rang-Min WU, Qiu-Gen ZENG, Qiang FAN and Wen-Bo LIAO. 2024. Peliosanthes yangchunensis (Asparagaceae), A New Species from Guangdong, China.  Phytotaxa. 650(3); 262-268. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.650.3.6 [2024-05-29]