Friday, April 3, 2026

[Herpetology • 2026] Gekko asahi • A New coastal Rock-dwelling Gekko (Subgenus Japonigekko) (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from western Kyushu, Japan

 

Gekko asahi    
Matsukoji, Cao, Poyarkov, Okamiya, Xu & Yuan, 2026 
 
West Japanese Gecko | ニシヤモリ  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.186960

Abstract
remarkable new species of the subgenus Japonigekko from the islands of Gotō Nada and offshore islands of Kagoshima Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan, inhabiting rocky coastal habitats, is described based on morphological characters and molecular evidence. Morphologically, Gekko (Japonigekkoasahi sp. nov. can be distinguished from its congeners by its moderate body size; interorbital scales between anterior corners of eyes 34–44; dorsal tubercles large, strongly elevated, and arranged in 12–16 rows at midbody; 127–158 midbody scale rows; 32–45 ventral scale rows; 158–189 ventral scales between the mental and the cloacal slit; subdigital lamellae 8–11 on finger I, 9–14 on finger IV, 9–12 on toe I, and 10–18 on toe IV; webbing absent; 6–9 precloacal pores in males, and absent in females; one postcloacal tubercle on each side, with the midpoint of the tubercle distinctly concave in some male individuals; and its distinctive dorsal coloration. Phylogenetically, the new species represents a distinct clade within the subgenus Japonigekko, forming a sister group with G. kaiyai from Henan Province of China, and together they cluster with G. hokouensis. It differs from its congeners by uncorrected p-distances of at least 15.1% in ND2 and 7.6% in 16S. Currently, the new species is known only from low-elevation coastal rocky shores and building walls on island of Gotō Nada and Nishisonogi Peninsula, Nagasaki Prefecture and offshore islands of Kagoshima and Satsuma Peninsula, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan. The discovery of this new species increases the total number of species in the subgenus Japonigekko to 40, of which seven species are distributed in Japan.

Key Words: Gekko asahi sp. nov., geographical isolation, Gotō Nada, morphology, molecular phylogeny, systematics

Coloration of Gekko asahi sp. nov. in life.
A. Specimen TMR-208, adult female; B. Specimen TMR-96, adult female; C. Specimen SPMN-HP 003816, adult female, paratype; D. Specimen TMR-86, adult male; E. Specimen SPMN-HP 003813, adult male, paratype. Photographs by T. Matsukoji.

Gekko asahi Matsukoji, Cao, Poyarkov, Okamiya, Xu & Yuan, sp. nov.

Diagnosis. Gekko asahi sp. nov. can be diagnosed from other Japonigekko species by the following unique combination of characters: (1) a moderate body size (SVL reaches up to 73.85 mm in males and 73.96 mm in females); (2) 6–9 supralabials and 6–8 infralabials; (3) internasal scales absent; (4) two postmentals; (5) 14–18 preorbitals; (6) 34–44 interorbital scales; (7) 158–189 ventral scales between the mental and the cloacal slit; (8) 127–158 midbody scale rows; (9) 32–45 ventral scale rows; (10) prominent dorsal tubercles present from the posterior head through the neck to the anterior portion of the tail, arranged in 12–16 rows at midbody and numbering 17–23 tubercles along a longitudinal line on the dorsum between the limb insertions; (11) subdigital lamellae 8–11 on finger I, 9–14 on finger IV, 9–12 on toe I, and 10–18 on toe IV; (12) webbing absent; (13) 6–9 precloacal pores in males, absent in females; (14) one postcloacal tubercle on each side, with the midpoint of the tubercle distinctly concave in some male individuals; (15) in life, the dorsum is predominantly yellowish-gray, with 8–9 indistinct pale yellowish-brown rounded patterns, and venter is pale golden-yellow in color.

Etymology. The specific epithet “asahi” is treated as an indeclinable noun in apposition. It is derived from the Japanese word “朝日” (あさひ, asahi), meaning “morning sun” or “rising sun”. The name refers to the slightly faint yellow to light orange-red coloration present on the body and limbs, as well as the bright reddish yellow to pale golden-yellow coloration of the ventral surface of the new species, which resembles the warm hue of the early morning sunlight. 
For the common names, we suggest “West Japanese Gecko” in English, “ニシヤモリ”(Nishi-yamori) in Japanese, “晨曦壁虎” (chén xī bì hǔ) in Chinese, and “Западнояпонский геккон” (Zapadnoyaponskiy gekkon) in Russian.

Habitat and field observations of Gekko asahi sp. nov. 
A. Macrohabitat of the new species in Nakadori Island, Shinkamigoto Town, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan; B. Microhabitat of the new species. Photographs by M. Tsujita.


Tomoya Matsukoji, Jing Cao, Nikolay A. Poyarkov, Hisanori Okamiya, Yuhao Xu and Zhiyong Yuan. 2026. A New coastal Rock-dwelling Gecko of the Subgenus Japonigekko (Squamata, Gekkonidae, Gekko) from western Kyushu, Japan. Zoosystematics and Evolution. 102(2): 557-574. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.186960 [03 Apr 2026]

[Botany • 2026] Illicium nymphiiflorum (Schisandraceae) • A New cauliflorous Species from Yunnan, China

 

Illicium nymphiiflorum Q. Lin & Y.M. Shui,  

in Chen, Lin, Li, Zhang et Shui, 2026. Illicium 
 
 Abstract  
Illicium nymphiiflorum Q. Lin & Y.M. Shui sp. nova (Schisandraceae) is described from China. It especially resembles I. viridiflorum from South Vietnam in being cauliflorous and in having similar greenish-white flowers and single-seriate stamens. It differs, e.g., in leaf shape (obovate vs. elliptic), apex of the innermost petals (acute vs. obtuse), arrangement of stamens (vertical vs. horizontal) and number of follicles (12–14 vs. 4–8). It also resembles I. stapfii, from which it differs in several floral characters. According to IUCN categories and criteria, I. nymphiiflorum is assessed as Critically Endangered (CR).

General morphology of Illicium nymphiiflorum
 A: Trunk and flowers. — B: Close-up of the flowers. — C: Open flower and its visitor, a species of hoverfly. — D: Flowers on a young shoot. — E: Pseudowhorled or subopposite leaves. — F and G: Adaxial leaf surface. — H and I: Abaxial leaf surface.
Prepared by Chong Yang, from the holotype. All except G and I photographed in Maguan County, Yunnan, China, on 17 October 2022.

Reproductive morphology of Illicium nymphiiflorum.
 A: Flowers on the trunk. — B: Buds and lateral view of the flowers. — C: Back view of a flower. — D: Lateral view of a flower. — E: Front view of a flower. — F: Outermost petals. — G: Intermediate and innermost petals. — H: Stamens. — I: Flower and dry fruit.
Prepared by Chong Yang, from the holotype. A–E photographed in Maguan County, Yunnan, China, on 17 October 2022.

Illicium nymphiiflorum Q. Lin & Y.M. Shui, sp. nova 
 
Etymology. The specific epithet nymphiiflorum refers to the flowers, which resemble those of Nymphaea.


Wen-Hong Chen, Qi Lin, Guo-Yun Li, Jin-Guo Zhang and Yu-Min Shui. 2026. Illicium nymphiiflorum (Schisandraceae), a New Cauliflorous Species from Yunnan, China. Annales Botanici Fennici. 62(1); 43-47. DOI: doi.org/10.5735/085.063.0107 (13 March 2026)

[Herpetology • 2026] Odorrana yangi • A New Species of the Genus Odorrana (Anura: Ranidae) from southeastern Yunnan, China

 

Odorrana yangi   
Liu, Bu, Feng, Hou, Rao & Li, 2026

杨氏臭蛙  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1275.186067

Abstract
A new species of the genus Odorrana is described based on specimens collected from Wenshan Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China. The new species can be distinguished from other species of the genus by a combination of the following characteristics: snout–vent length 43.5–46.9 mm in males, females approximately two times size of males, head length greater than head width, nostril closer to tip of snout than to eye, tibiotarsal articulation reaching tip of snout when hindlimb stretched forward, relative lengths of fingers III > IV > I > II, dorsolateral fold absent, anterior dorsum green with evenly distributed small irregular shaped black blotches and posterior dorsum greyish brown with evenly distributed, large, irregular-shaped, black blotches, external vocal sacs present in adult males. In addition, the new species differs from its congeners by a genetic distance of 3.6%–14.2% in the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene.

Key words: 16S rRNA, morphology, phylogeny, taxonomy, Wenshan Prefecture

The holotype (KIZ2025143) of Odorrana yangi sp. nov. in life.
A. Dorsal view; B. Ventral view; C. Left view; D. Right view.

Odorrana yangi sp. nov.

Diagnosis. Body size small in males (SVL 43.5–46.9 mm), females approximately two times size of males; head length greater than head width; nostril closer to tip of snout than to eye; tympanum relatively large in males (TD/ED 0.53–0.63); heels overlap when hindlimbs flexed at right angles to axis of body, tibiotarsal articulation reaching tip of snout when hindlimb stretched forward; relative lengths of fingers III > IV > I > II; dorsal surface relatively smooth, skin on dorsum shagreened, with some indistinct flat tubercles; dorsolateral fold absent; anterior dorsum green with evenly distributed, small, irregular-shaped, black blotches, posterior dorsum greyish brown with evenly distributed, large, irregular-shaped, black blotches; ventral surface white without distinct spots or patches; external vocal sacs and nuptial pads present in adult males.

The paratypes of Odorrana yangi sp. nov. in life.
male (KIZ2025144) A. Dorsal view; B. Lateral view; C. Ventral view;
female (KIZ2025123) D. Dorsal view; E. Lateral view; F. Ventral view.


 Shuo Liu, Chao Bu, Yanfei Feng, Mian Hou, Dingqi Rao and Song Li. 2026. A New Species of the Genus Odorrana Fei, Ye & Huang, 1990 (Anura, Ranidae) from southeastern Yunnan, China. ZooKeys. 1275: 43-61. doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1275.186067 [26 Mar 2026]


[Botany • 2026] Amorphophallus khanhhoaensis (Araceae: Aroidea: Thomsonieae) • A New Species from the coastal area of Central Vietnam

 
Amorphophallus khanhhoaensis  

in Tien, Nguyen, Dinh, Le et Hetterscheid, 2026. 

Abstract
Amorphophallus khanhhoaensis is described as a new species from central Vietnam. This species is morphologically similar to and therefore compared with A. cicatricifer (eastern Thailand and Myanmar), A. umbrinus (Vietnam), and A. ferruginosus (Laos). An updated key to the Vietnamese species of Amorphophallus is provided.

 Araceae, Carnose spathe, Central Vietnam, Dien Khanh, Khanh Hoa, nomenclature, phylogeny, pollen, taxonomy, Monocots
 


Amorphophallus khanhhoaensis 


TRAN VAN TIEN, VAN DU NGUYEN, QUANG DIEP DINH, CHI TOAN LE and WILBERT HETTERSCHEID. 2026. A New Species of the Genus Amorphophallus (Thomsonieae, Aroidea, Araceae) from the coastal area of Central Vietnam. Phytotaxa. 750(1); 51-57. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.750.1.5 [2026-03-31]

[Entomology • 2026] Ancyroleon, Melanobaliga, Orientaleon gen. n., ... • UCE Phylogenomics improves the Classification of the cosmopolitan Pit-building Antlion tribe Myrmeleontini (Neuroptera: Myrmeleontidae: Myrmeleontinae)

 

Banyaleon Zheng & Liu nom. n.Ancyroleon Zheng & Liu gen. n., 
Baligaptes 
Zheng & Liu gen. n. Melanobaliga Zheng & Liu gen. n., 
Orientaleon 
Zheng & Liu gen. n., Sinobaliga Zheng & Liu gen. n., ...

in Zheng, Badano, Machado, Tu, U. Aspöck, H. Aspöck, Nel, Winterton et Liu, 2026. 

Abstract
Myrmeleontini is a widespread antlion tribe within the lacewing family Myrmeleontidae, well known for its larvae building cone-shaped pits in sandy soil to trap prey. The monophyly of the tribe is well supported, but the monophyly of many genera within the tribe as well as the definition of the genus Myrmeleon Linnaeus has long been questioned. Here, we present a phylogenomic analysis of Myrmeleontini with emphasis on the Eurasian fauna, using ultraconserved elements (UCE) data. Our results recovered Myrmeleon as a diverse grade, with Baliga Navás, Callistoleon Banks, Euroleon Esben-Petersen, Hagenomyia Banks and Megistoleon Navás deeply nested within it. Based on our sampling of type species of many genera (including those synonymized with Myrmeleon) and detailed morphological comparisons, we provide a new phylogeny-based classification of Myrmeleontini. Accordingly, Myrmeleon s. str. only refers to the formerly recognized M. formicarius group from Palaearctic region. The status of 12 genera that were previously considered as junior synonyms of Myrmeleon is restored (i.e., Banyaleon Zheng & Liu nom. n.Bordus Navás stat. rev.Callistoleon Banks stat. rev.Cocius Navás stat. rev.Enza Navás stat. rev.Macroleon Banks stat. rev.Moreyus Navás stat. rev.Morter Navás stat. rev.Neleon Navás stat. rev.Neseurus Navás stat. rev.Myrmeleodes Navás stat. rev. and Tafanerus Navás stat rev.), while Neohornius stat. rev., previously treated as a subgenus of Myrmeleon, is herein elevated to genus. Additionally, based on comprehensive sampling from the Oriental region, five new genera from this region are described, that is, Ancyroleon Zheng & Liu gen. n., Baligaptes Zheng & Liu gen. n. Melanobaliga Zheng & Liu gen. n., Orientaleon Zheng & Liu gen. n. and Sinobaliga Zheng & Liu gen. n.

Keywords: biogeography, classification, lacewing, phylogeny, systematics


Banyaleon Zheng & Liu nom. n.
Bordus Navás stat. rev.
Callistoleon Banks stat. rev.
Cocius Navás stat. rev.
Enza Navás stat. rev.
Macroleon Banks stat. rev.
Moreyus Navás stat. rev.
Morter Navás stat. rev.
Neleon Navás stat. rev.
Neseurus Navás stat. rev.
Myrmeleodes Navás stat. rev. 
Tafanerus Navás stat rev.
Neohornius stat. rev.
 five new genera:
 Ancyroleon Zheng & Liu gen. n., 
Baligaptes Zheng & Liu gen. n. 
Melanobaliga Zheng & Liu gen. n., 
Orientaleon Zheng & Liu gen. n. 
Sinobaliga Zheng & Liu gen. n.

 
Yuchen Zheng, Davide Badano, Renato Jose Pires Machado, Yuezheng Tu, Ulrike Aspöck, Horst Aspöck, André Nel, Shaun W. Winterton and Xingyue Liu. 2026. UCE Phylogenomics improves the Classification of the cosmopolitan Pit-building Antlion tribe Myrmeleontini (Neuroptera: Myrmeleontidae: Myrmeleontinae). Systematic Entomology. DOI: doi.org/10.1111/syen.70040 [27 March 2026]
 

[Cnidaria • 2026] Rhytisma acoronatum, R. calyaceum, R. karibu, ... • Phylogenomics-guided Revision of the Genus Rhytisma Alderslade, 2000 (Octocorallia: Malacalcyonacea: Lemnaliidae), with Descriptions of Six New Sspecies

 

(a, b) Rhytisma karibu sp. nov.
(c, d) R. acoronatum sp. nov. 
(e, f) R. oblongum sp. nov.
 (c) R. inaequale sp. nov., with expanded polyps 
(d) R. calyaceum sp. nov., with partially expanded polyps 
(e) R. sperkolae sp. nov.polyps partly expanded

Samimi-Namin, Benayahu, Durkin, Ekins, Quattrini & McFadden, 2026
Photographs by Y. Benayahu, and M. Ekins.
 
The genus Rhytisma Alderslade, 2000 (Octocorallia: Malacalcyonacea: Lemnaliidae), formerly comprising four nominal species (R. fulvum, R. fuscum, R. monticulum and R. rubiginosum), is revised using an integrative approach. We combine morphological and phylogenomic data for newly collected and historical specimens. A neotype is designated for R. fulvum and a lectotype for R. fuscum to stabilise the application of these names. Six new species are described from the Indo-Pacific: R. acoronatum sp. nov., R. calyaceum sp. nov., R. oblongum sp. nov., R. inaequale sp. nov., R. karibu sp. nov. and R. sperkolae sp. nov. Species delimitation is supported by discrete combinations of morphological characters – particularly those of the tentacle and polyp sclerites – as well as multi-locus DNA barcoding and phylogenomic analyses of conserved elements (UCE and exon loci). Our findings highlight the diagnostic value of tentacle sclerites and reveal extensive species-level diversity that was previously obscured by insufficient morphological examination. The revised genus currently comprises 10 valid species, many of which display restricted geographic distributions, reflecting patterns of regional endemism in Indo-Pacific octocoral assemblages. These results underscore the importance of integrative taxonomy in uncovering hidden biodiversity.
 
Keywords: biogeography, DNA barcoding, endemism, Indo-Pacific, integrative taxonomy, neotype, soft corals, species delimitation, taxonomic revision, ultraconserved elements

Underwater images of Rhytisma species in their respective type localities.
(a, b) Rhytisma fulvum yellow colour and grey colour morphs, polyps partly expanded
(c) R. inaequale sp. nov., with expanded polyps (d) R. calyaceum sp. nov., with partially expanded polyps
(e) R. sperkolae sp. nov., mat morphology reflects underlying irregular reef substrate, polyps partly expanded. (f) R. monticulum with expanded polyps.
Photographs by (a–c, e) Y. Benayahu, (d, f) M. Ekins.

Underwater images of Rhytisma species in their respective type localities.
(a, b) Rhytisma karibu sp. nov., growing on seagrass blades and reef substrate (c, d) R. acoronatum sp. nov. (e, f) R. oblongum sp. nov. 
Photographs by (a, b, e, f) Y. Benayahu, and (c, d) M. Ekins.

Rhytisma acoronatum sp. nov., R. calyaceum sp. nov., 
R. oblongum sp. nov., R. inaequale sp. nov., 
R. karibu sp. nov. and R. sperkolae sp. nov. 


Kaveh Samimi-Namin, Yehuda Benayahu, Kathleen M. Durkin, Merrick Ekins, Andrea M. Quattrini and Catherine S. McFadden. 2026. Phylogenomics-guided Revision of the Genus Rhytisma Alderslade, 2000 (Octocorallia: Malacalcyonacea: Lemnaliidae), with Descriptions of Six New Sspecies. Invertebr Syst. 40(3); IS25068. DOI: doi.org/10.1071/IS25068   [30 March 2026]

[Herpetology • 2026] Oreolalax wumengmontis • A New Species of Oreolalax Myers & Leviton, 1962 (Anura:, Megophryidae) from Northeast Yunnan, China


Oreolalax wumengmontis 
X. Li, Z. Li, Jiahan, Liu, Y. Zhang, P. Li, W. Zhang, F. Li, Huang, X. Li & Yuan. 2026
  

Abstract
Based on molecular phylogenetic analyses and morphological features, a new species of the genus Oreolalax Myers & Leviton, 1962 (Anura: Megophryidae) is described from Yunnan Province, China. Molecular phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial 16S rRNA and COI gene sequences indicate that the new species forms an independent clade closely related to Oreolalax omeimontis. The genetic distance between these two taxa was 11.25% based on 16S gene, and 17.61% based on COI. The new species can be distinguished from all other congeneric species by a combination of the following characteristics: (1) moderate body size (SVL of male 49.5–53.0 mm, n=2; female 46.6 mm, n=1); (2) tympanums hidden or slightly visible; (3) absence of vocal sac; (4) rudimentary interdigital toe webbing; (5) narrow lateral fringes; (6) tibiotarsal articulation reaching between the eye and nostril when leg stretched; (7) heel only contact when limbs held at right angles to body; (8) femoral glands large and distinct; (9) abdomen with distinct cloudy spots; (10) male dorsum covered in large and small tubercles, and (11) a dark triangular marking between the eyes.

Keywords: new species, taxonomy, Wumeng Mountain, molecular phylogenetic analyses 

The adult male holotype of Oreolalax wumengmontis sp. nov. (SWU 0005760) in life:
(A) Dorsal view, (B) ventral view, (C) side view, (D) cloacal area, (E) dorsal and ventral view of left hand, and (F) ventral and dorsal of right foot.
Photos by Xianqi Li.
 
Habitats of Oreolalax wumengmontis sp. nov. in the Wumeng Mountain National Nature Reserve.
(A) landscape of subtropical evergreen broadleaved forests habitat, (B) breeding habitat,
(C) O. wumengmontis sp. nov. in the wild SWU 0007062, (D) egg clusters adhere to the bottom of the rock.
Photos by Xiaolong Liu (A, C) and Zengxin Li (B, D).

Oreolalax wumengmontis sp. nov.
 

Xianqi Li, Zengxin Li, Bizula Jiahan, Xiaolong Liu, Yinpeng Zhang, Pengying Li, Wei Zhang, Feiqiao Li, Junkai Huang, Xu Li and Zhiyong Yuan. 2026. A New Species of Oreolalax Myers & Leviton, 1962 (Anura, Megophryidae) from Northeast Yunnan, China. Asian Herpetological Research. DOI: doi.org/10.3724/ahr.2095-0357.2026.0014 [Mar 18, 2026]

Thursday, April 2, 2026

[Herpetology • 2026] Nyctibatrachus kaliHiding in plain sight: A New Species of Nyctibatrachus (Anura: Nyctibatrachidae) from the central Western Ghats, India


Nyctibatrachus kali 
Aravind, Ramesh, Naik, Gururaja & Priti, 2026


Abstract 
Frogs belonging to the genus Nyctibatrachus are endemic to the Western Ghats biodiversity hotspot. They are the second most speciose frogs in the Western Ghats, with 70% of the species having narrow distribution ranges. They are also highly cryptic in nature. In this study, we describe a new species of Nyctibatrachus frog from the central Western Ghats of India. Nyctibatrachus kali sp. nov. is described from the Kali River basin of North Karnataka. The new species is distinguishable from all 34 currently recognised Nyctibatrachus species by a combination of morphological, acoustic and phylogenetic analyses. Molecular phylogeny based on two mitochondrial genes (16S rRNA and ND1) reveals that it belongs to the N. sanctipalustris clade. Based on the analysis of 16S rRNA, Nyctibatrachus kali sp. nov. shows genetic divergence >5% with its congeners, and based on the analysis of ND1, Nyctibatrachus kali sp. nov. shows genetic divergence >10% with its congeners. The bioacoustics analyses indicated that the new species differed from their closest congeners based on the dominant frequency of the advertisement calls and the number of notes in each call. For the first time, we observed two distinct advertisement call categories–call notes with low and high dominant frequency in Nyctibatrachus kali sp. nov. and its congeners. Our study adds to the rich diversity of frogs from the Western Ghats of India.

Keywords: Bioacoustics, Biodiversity, Cryptic species, Endemic frogs, Freshwater ecosystem, Night frogs

Habitus of holotype (BNHS 6831) of Nyctibatrachus kali sp. nov.
 (A) Live individual of holotype; (B) Slow flowing stream habitat of the holotype with female and a clutch of eggs; (C) Dorsal view; (D) Ventral view; (E): Lateral profile of head and trunk; (F): Ventral view of hand; (G): Ventral view of foot; (H): third finger disc without dorso-terminal groove; (I): fourth toe disc with dorso-terminal groove cover notched distally; (J): Schematic view of webbing in hindlimb (black lines represents toes, curved black lines represents webbing, blue circles represents subarticular tubercle and orange circles represents toe discs.).

 Nyctibatrachus kali sp. nov. 

Diagnosis: Based on molecular phylogenetic analysis, Nyctibatrachus kali sp. nov. belongs to the N. sanctipalustris clade (Fig. 4) and is a sister lineage to N. dattatreyaensis. Hence, we compared Nyctibatrachus kali sp. nov. (both ♂ and ♀ individuals of type specimens) with all the species belonging to the N. sanctipalustris clade (both ♂ and ♀ individuals of type specimens), i.e., N. dattatreyaensis; N. karnatakaensis; N. kumbara; N. sanctipalustris; N. shiradi, N. tunga and N. vrijeuni.
...



Etymology: We name the species as Kali, the river at which the type locality of the species located. The specific epithet is an invariable noun in apposition.

 
C. K. Aravind, Badiger Ramesh, Chandrakanth Rukkappa Naik, K. V. Gururaja and Hebbar Priti. 2026. Hiding in plain sight: Description of A New Species of Nyctibatrachus (Amphibia, Anura, Nyctibatrachidae) from the central Western Ghats, India. PeerJ. 14:e20895 . DOI: doi.org/10.7717/peerj.20895 [2026-03-27]

[Herpetology • 2026] Scincella ngati • A New Skink of the Genus Scincella Mittleman, 1950 (Squamata: Scincidae) from Dak Lak Province, Vietnam

 

Scincella ngati
A. V. Pham, Do, T. Q. Nguyen, Hoang, M. H. T. Nguyen, M. Le, M. D. Le, Ziegler & C. T. Pham, 2026 


Abstract
A new species of the genus Scincella Mittleman, 1950 is described from south-central Vietnam based on morphological and molecular evidence. Scincella ngati sp. nov. is characterized by a combination of the following characters: size medium (SVL up to 48.3 mm); primary temporals two; external ear opening without lobules; loreals two; supralabials seven (rarely 8); infralabials six; enlarged nuchals, 0–2; midbody scales in 32–34 rows; dorsal scales smooth, in eight rows across the back; paravertebral scales 68–70, not widened; ventral scales in 64–68 rows; 10 or 11 smooth lamellae beneath finger IV and 16 or 17 beneath toe IV; toes not reaching the fingers when limbs adpressed along body; dorsal surface of body and tail bronze brown with a discontinuous black vertebral stripe, one scale wide, from middle of neck to tail base; a black stripe, two scales wide, interrupted by small pale spots, from nostril to eye and extending from posterior margin of eye along upper part of flank and tail base. In the phylogenetic analyses, the new species is recovered as an independent lineage with no clear sister taxon and shows at least 11.2% genetic divergence from other species in the genus based on a fragment of the mitochondrial COI gene.

Key words: COI, Krong Trai Nature Reserve, molecular phylogeny, morphology, taxonomy

Holotype of Scincella ngati sp. nov. (IB R.6445) in life, adult male.

Paratypes of Scincella ngati sp. nov. in life.
 A. Dorsolateral view (IB R. 6447, male) B. Dorsolateral view (IB R. 6452, female).

Scincella ngati sp. nov.

Diagnosis. The new species can be distinguished from other species of Scincella by a combination of the following characteristics: size medium (SVL ≤ 48.3 mm); primary temporals two; external ear opening without lobules; loreals two; supralabials seven (rarely eight); infralabials six; enlarged nuchals 0–2 on each side; midbody scales in 32–34 rows; dorsal scales smooth, in eight rows across the back; paravertebral scales 68–70, not widened; ventral scales in 64–68 rows; 10 or 11 smooth lamellae beneath finger IV and 16 or 17 beneath toe IV; toes not reaching the fingers when limbs adpressed along body; dorsal surface of body and tail bronze brown with a discontinuous black vertebral stripe, one scale wide, from middle of neck to tail base; a black stripe, two scales wide, interrupted by small pale spots, running from nostril to eye and extending from posterior margin of eye along upper part of flank and tail base.


 Anh Van Pham, Dang Trong Do, Truong Quang Nguyen, Chung Van Hoang, Mai Hong Thi Nguyen, Minh Le, Minh Duc Le, Thomas Ziegler and Cuong The Pham. 2026. A New skink of the Genus Scincella Mittleman, 1950 (Squamata, Scincidae) from Dak Lak Province, Vietnam. ZooKeys. 1275: 275-298. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1275.178070 [31 Mar. 2026]

[Arachnida • 2026] Urophonius andinus • First total evidence dated Phylogeny of the Scorpion Genus Urophonius (Scorpiones: Bothriuridae), with New Insights into the Transition to Winter Activity, and the Description of the First highland Andean Species of the Genus


Urophonius andinus 
Ojanguren-Affilastro, Santibáñez-López, Alfaro, Ramírez, Iuri, Mattoni & Pizarro-Araya, 2026. 
  

Abstract 
This study presents the first total evidence dated phylogenetic analysis of the scorpion genus Urophonius, integrating 115 morphological characters and five molecular markers (28S, 18S, H3, 16S, COI). Our comprehensive phylogenetic framework provides novel insights into the genus' diversification timeline and evolutionary processes. Additionally, we described Urophonius andinus n. sp. from the central Chilean Andes, a high-altitude species found at 2400 m.s.a.l., representing the highest elevational record for the genus. This new species is placed within the granulatus species group, characterized by a spring–summer activity period.

Keywords: Andes, new species, highland, Scorpiones, total evidence dated phylogeny, Urophonius, winter activity


Urophonius andinus n. sp. 


Andrés A. Ojanguren-Affilastro, Carlos Eduardo Santibáñez-López, Fermín M. Alfaro, Martín J. Ramírez, Hernán A. Iuri, Camilo I. Mattoni and Jaime Pizarro-Araya. 2026. First total evidence dated Phylogeny of the Scorpion Genus Urophonius (Bothriuridae), with New Insights into the Transition to Winter Activity, and the Description of the First highland Andean Species of the Genus. Systematic Entomology. DOI: doi.org/10.1111/syen.70032 [17 March 2026]
 

[Paleontology • 2026] Megachelicerax cousteaui • A Chelicera-bearing Arthropod reveals the Cambrian Origin of Chelicerates


Megachelicerax cousteaui
Lerosey-Aubril & Ortega-Hernández, 2026

Artistic reconstruction by Masato Hattori 

Abstract
Chelicerata is a megadiverse (over 120,000 species) arthropod clade that includes familiar taxa of profound ecological and economic importance, such as scorpions, spiders and mites. Extant chelicerates share a unique anatomical character, the chelicerae—feeding first appendages terminated by a simple pincer-like chela. The fossil record of these primarily predatory animals spans almost 500 million years, suggesting a likely yet undocumented origin during the Cambrian Explosion. Artiopods4,5,6, megacheirans, habeliids and mollisoniids have been considered Cambrian stem- or crown-group chelicerates, but they all lack unequivocal chelicerae, leaving the emergence of chelicerae-bearing arthropods unclear. Here we describe Megachelicerax cousteaui gen. et sp. nov., a large soft-bodied arthropod from the middle Cambrian of Utah featuring massive three-segmented chelicerae, along with five pairs of pseudobiramous prosomal limbs with non-foliaceous exopodal rami, and plate-like lamellae-bearing opisthosomal appendages. Bayesian and parsimony phylogenetic analyses resolve Megachelicerax as a stem-group chelicerate bridging Cambrian habeliids and post-Cambrian chelicerae-bearing synziphosurines. This finding provides unequivocal evidence of large predatory chelicerates in the Cambrian, illuminates their body plan’s origin, and confirms habeliids, mollisoniids and probably megacheirans as members of total-group Chelicerata.


 

Megachelicerax cousteaui gen. et sp. nov.

Megachelicerax cousteaui
 Artistic reconstruction by Masato Hattori (© Harvard University).


Rudy Lerosey-Aubril and Javier Ortega-Hernández. 2026. A Chelicera-bearing Arthropod reveals the Cambrian Origin of Chelicerates. Nature.  DOI: doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10284-2  [01 April 2026]

[Botany • 2026] Petrocodon dahuaensis (Gesneriaceae) • A New Species from the Limestone Area of Guangxi, China


Petrocodon dahuaensis  M.L.Mo, Chen Feng & Z.C.Lu,

in Mo, Chang, Wu, Zhang, Lu et Feng, 2026.
 大化石山苣苔  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.272.181552

Abstract
Petrocodon dahuaensis, a new species from a limestone area of Guangxi, China, is described and illustrated. The new species is similar to P. asterostriatus but differs in its leaf blade, cordate to subrounded, margin crenate to serrate; bracts, bracteoles, and calyx smaller; corolla purple, base straight to slightly inflated; filaments purple; and style densely glandular-puberulent. Molecular evidence also supports its close relationship with P. asterostriatus. According to the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria, the provisional conservation status of P. dahuaensis is assessed as Data Deficient (DD).

Key words: Morphology, new taxon, Petrocodon asterostriatus, taxonomy

Petrocodon dahuaensis sp. nov. 
A. Habit; B. Flowering plant; C. Cyme and bracts; D. Opened corolla; E. Lateral view of flower; F. Back view of flower; G. Pistils and calyces; H. Frontal view of flower; I. Stamens; J. Adaxial view of leaf blade; K. Abaxial view of leaf blade; L. Capsules.

Petrocodon dahuaensis M.L.Mo, Chen Feng & Z.C.Lu, sp. nov. 
Chinese name. dà huà shí shān jù tái (大化石山苣苔). 

Diagnostic. The new species is similar to Petrocodon asterostriatus F.Wen, Y.G.Wei & W.C.Chou, but differs by its leaf blades cordate to subrounded, margin crenate or serrate (vs. broadly ovate to subcordate, margin entire), bracts 4–9 mm long (vs. 10–25 mm long), bracteoles ca. 2 mm long (vs. 9–18 mm long), calyx 5–7 mm long (vs. 8–16 mm long), corolla purple (vs. pale purplish-maroon), base straight to slightly inflated (vs. near spherical), filaments purple (vs. white), and style densely glandular-puberulent (vs. densely puberulent).


Ming-Lin Mo, Shi-Li Chang, You-Dong Wu, Yi Zhang, Zhao-Cen Lu and Chen Feng. 2026. Petrocodon dahuaensis (Gesneriaceae), A New Species from the Limestone Area of Guangxi, China. PhytoKeys. 272: 121-132. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.272.181552 [31 Mar 2026]

[Botany • 2026] Sida conduplicata (Malvaceae) • A New Species from Java, Indonesia

 

Sida conduplicata H.Sant. & Felayati,

in Santoso, Putra et Felayati, 2026.

 Abstract  
Sida conduplicata H.Sant. & Felayati (Malvaceae) is described as a new species from East Java, Indonesia. It is similar to S. rhombifolia var. maderensis in having a single awn on the mericarp, but differs from it by a set of diagnostic morphological characters such as habit, leaf apex and surface of the mericarp. We provide an identification key to the species of Sida known from Java.
 
Sida conduplicata. — A: Habit. — B: Flowering twig. — C: Leaf (lower surface on the left, upper on the right). — D: Pedicel with calyx. — E: Flower, front view. — F: Schizocarp. — G: Mericarp.
A, B and F photographed at the type locality on 21 January 2025; C–E and G from the holotype.

Sida conduplicata H.Sant. & Felayati, sp. nova  

Etymology. The specific epithet conduplicata refers to the leaves, which are folded up along the midrib.


Heri Santoso, Ferdiansyah Rizky Putra and Themas Felayati. 2026. Sida conduplicata (Malvaceae), a New Species from Java, Indonesia. Annales Botanici Fennici. 62(1); 37-41. DOI: doi.org/10.5735/085.063.0106  (13 March 2026) 

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

[Funga • 2025] Hydnellum hangzhouense (Agaricomycetes: Thelephorales) • Morphology and Molecular Phylogeny reveal One New Species from Eastern China

 

Hydnellum hangzhouense X.P. Fan, Y.F. Sun & B.K. Cui, 

in Fan, Song, Xu, Sun et Cui, 2025. 

Abstract
As ectomycorrhizal fungi, the species in Hydnellum can form a mutualistic symbiosis with plant roots to promote the restoration of forest vegetation and the stability of forest ecosystems. Some Hydnellum fungi also have edible and medicinal values generating considerable economic benefits. In this study, a new species of Hydnellum collected from Hangzhou, eastern China, was described by utilizing morphological and phylogenetic analyses. Morphologically, Hydnellum hangzhouense was characterized by its light-colored and relatively thick pileus, simple septated generative hyphae, and subglobose to ellipsoid basidiospores. The phylogenetic analysis was conducted based on the combined sequences dataset (ITS + nLSU + nSSU + rpb2). The results indicated that H. hangzhouense formed an independent lineage which is closely related to H. crassipileatum and H. chocolatum. The detailed description, illustrations and phylogenetic tree for demonstrating the taxonomic positions of H. hangzhouense were provided.

Key words: macrofungi, multi-gene phylogeny, novel species, stipitate hydnoids, taxonomy, Fungi

Basidiomata of Hydnellum hangzhouense (Holotype, Wu 1679).
 Scale bars: 2 cm.

Microscopic structures of Hydnellum hangzhouense (Holotype, Wu 1679).
 A) Basidiospores. B) Hyphae from context. C) Basidia and basidioles. D) Hyphae from spines. E) Hyphae from the inner layer of stipe. F) Hyphae from the surface layer of stipe.

Hydnellum hangzhouense X.P. Fan, Y.F. Sun & B.K. Cui sp. nov.
 

XIANG-PING FAN, CHANG-GE SONG, YI-HUA XU, YI-FEI SUN and BAO-KAI CUI. 2025. Morphology and Molecular Phylogeny reveal One New Species of Hydnellum (Thelephorales) from Eastern China.  Phytotaxa. 711(1); 43-60. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.711.1.3 [2025-07-22]