Saturday, April 11, 2026

[Ornithology • 2026] Phylloscopus tokaraensisDiscovering and Protecting Cryptic Biodiversity: A Case Study of A previously undescribed, Vulnerable Bird Species in Japan


Phylloscopus tokaraensis 
Saitoh, Shipilina, Xia, Zhang, Seki, Olsson & Alström, 2026
 
Tokara Leaf Warbler  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgag037 

Abstract
Despite the escalating biodiversity crisis, many species remain unknown to science and may even disappear unnoticed. This is particularly true for many island populations. We illustrate the problem of detecting overlooked species and its consequences by exploring a rare and geographically restricted migratory songbird. We find that this consists of two—hence even rarer—species: the Japanese endemic Ijima's Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus ijimae from the Izu Islands and the Tokara Leaf Warbler from the Tokara Islands. We describe the latter as a new cryptic species, ie one that is morphologically highly similar to, but genetically distinct from, a known species. The genetic divergence is revealed by analyses of nuclear genome-wide and mitochondrial DNA and supported by differences in vocalizations, while the morphological differences are minimal. We evaluate key conservation genomic indicators, showing that both species show low levels of genetic diversity and signs of a decrease of effective population size. Our genome-wide analysis revealed short runs of homozygosity and a low estimated deleterious load, suggesting limited recent inbreeding and possible purging of harmful alleles—indicators of genetic recovery after past demographic fluctuations. Ijima's Leaf Warbler is already classified as Vulnerable as well as a “Natural Monument” in Japan, and we propose that the Tokara Leaf Warbler should retain this status, with continued focused monitoring. Our study not only highlights the importance of integrating genomics with taxonomy for uncovering cryptic avian diversity but also provides a critical foundation for future conservation efforts.

Tokara Leaf Warbler Nakanoshima Phylloscopus tokaraensis (the same individual as in photo labeled A singing male Tokara Leaf Warbler).
photo: Per Alström, Uppsala University

Tokara Leaf Warbler Nakanoshima 11June2017-1 Per Alstrom. A singing male Tokara Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus tokaraensis on Nakanoshima, Tokara Islands, in June 2017. P.
photo: Per Alström, Uppsala University

One of the Tokara Leaf Warblers Phylloscopus tokaraensis caught on Nakanoshima, Tokara Islands, in June 2017.  


Cryptic populations of P. ijimae are geographically separated by more than 1,000 km and have distinct songs.
A) Global distribution of P. ijimae. Insets provide detailed maps of the Tokara Islands and northern Izu Islands (map source: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (2021). ALOS World 3D-30m DEM, V3.2, January 2021. Distributed by OpenTopography, doi.org/10.5069/G94M92HB. Accessed 2025 March 12). Island names in gray indicate locations where P. ijimae was not observed, while those in black indicate presence.
B, C) Adult male, holotype of Phylloscopus tokaraensis new species, Tokara Leaf Warbler (Yamashina Institute for Ornithology number YIO-76774), Nakanoshima, Tokara Islands, 2017 June 10 (photo: Per Alström; for additional photographs, see Table S18).

 Phylloscopus tokaraensis, sp. nov. 
Tokara Leaf Warbler

Diagnosis: Phylloscopus tokaraensis and P. ijimae are characterized by the uniformly greyish crown, lacking darker or paler stripes; mainly whitish underparts with contrastingly pale yellow undertail-coverts; narrow pale tips to the greater coverts, forming a thin, sometimes very indistinct, pale wing-bar; and pale orange lower mandible. Easily distinguishable from P. coronatus by the uniformly coloured crown; from P. borealis, P. examinandus and P. xanthodryas by the less distinct pale supercilium and narrower and less contrasting dark stripe on the ear-coverts behind the eye, whiter underparts with contrastingly pale yellow undertailcoverts, and pale orange lower mandible (usually prominent dark tip in P. borealis, P. examinandus and P. xanthodryas but rarely entirely orange); and from P. borealoides and P. tenellipes by the greener upperparts, paler crown which does not ...

Cryptic populations of P. ijimae are geographically separated by more than 1,000 km and have distinct songs. A) Global distribution of P. ijimae. Insets provide detailed maps of the Tokara Islands and northern Izu Islands (map source: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (2021). ALOS World 3D-30m DEM, V3.2, January 2021. Distributed by OpenTopography, doi.org/10.5069/G94M92HB. Accessed 2025 March 12). Island names in gray indicate locations where P. ijimae was not observed, while those in black indicate presence. B, C) Adult male, holotype of new species, Tokara Leaf Warbler (Yamashina Institute for Ornithology number YIO-76774), Nakanoshima, Tokara Islands, 2017 June 10 (photo: Per Alström; for additional photographs, see Table S18).
Examples of single song strophes of type I songs from Tokara (D–G) and Izu (I–L), with a plot of the two PCs from a PCA based on 12 variables (H). Examples of single strophes of type II songs from Tokara (M and N) and Izu (O and P) (recordings: D: ML647192043; E: ML647191975; F: ML647192039; G: ML 647191951; M: 647192011; N: 647191965; all by P.A.; I: by T. Kabaya; J: ML647192103, by T.S.; K: XC749104; L: XC749102; O: XC749102), K, L, O by Geoff Carey; P: ML647356514, by Haruo Kuroda.

 
Takema Saitoh, Daria Shipilina, Canwei Xia, Lijun Zhang, Shin-Ichi Seki, Urban Olsson and Per Alström. 2026. Discovering and Protecting Cryptic Biodiversity: A Case Study of A previously Undescribed, Vulnerable Bird Species in Japan. PNAS Nexus. 5(3); pgag037. DOI: doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgag037 [17 March 2026]

[Crustacea • 2026] Merapohra karsticola • On A New Genus and Species of Karst-dwelling Freshwater Crab (Brachyura: Potamidae) from Peninsular Malaysia

 

Merapohra karsticola  
Tan, Ooi & Ng, 2026
 

Abstract
Recent explorations of caves in Pahang, central Peninsular Malaysia yielded specimens of an unusual long-legged terrestrial, cave-dwelling crab. Morphological examinations of the specimens collected, in comparison with known species from the region suggests that they belong to a new genus and species, which are described herein. Merapohra karsticola gen. nov. et sp. nov., is differentiated from other potamids by characters of the carapace epigastric and postorbital cristae, ambulatory legs, male thoracic sternum, male pleon, and diagnostic structure of the male first gonopod. The discovery of this new genus and species of cave-dwelling crab highlights the importance and high diversity of karst systems in Peninsular Malaysia, which are imperilled in light of ongoing quarrying and mining activities.

Key words: Cave, karst, limestone, Potamiscinae, taxonomy

Merapohra karsticola gen. nov. et sp. nov., in life.
A. Holotype, male (37.2 × 26.7 mm) (ZRC 2024.0327);
B. Paratype, female (30.0 × 21.4 mm) (ZRC 2024.0328).
(Photo credit: Mr. Ang Yu Pin for the paratype).

Merapohra karsticola gen. nov. et sp. nov.


 Zhi Wan Tan, Qie Ooi, Peter K. L. Ng. 2026. On A New Genus and Species of Karst-dwelling Freshwater Crab (Crustacea, Brachyura, Potamidae) from Peninsular Malaysia. ZooKeys. 1277: 113-136.  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1277.181453 [9 Apr 2026]

[Botany • 2026] Taeniophyllum wrightmyoensis (Orchidaceae) • A Review of the Genus Taeniophyllum in Andaman and Nicobar Islands (India) with the Description of A New Species


Taeniophyllum wrightmyoensis Alappatt,  

in Alappatt, 2026. 

Abstract  
A new species, Taeniophyllum wrightmyoensis (Orchidaceae) is described from the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India. The new species resembles T. hasseltii and T. pusillum, but is distinct from both in having mostly terete free hanging roots (versus roots flat, appressed to the substratum), bracts lax (versus bracts close in T. pusillum), lip without any cushions (versus lip with convex cushions in T. hasseltii) and a conical spur (versus globose spur in T. pusillum). In addition, a review of other species of the genus Taeniophyllum reported from the Andaman and Nicobar Islands is provided with an identification key.

Keywords: Aeridinae; Orchidaceae; South Andaman; Taeniophyllum; new species

Taeniophyllum wrightmyoensis Alappatt sp. nov.
 a. Habit. b. Inflorescence. c. Flower bud with inflorescence rachis of previous year. d. Flower, lateral view. e. Flower close-up, front view. f. Bract. g. Dorsal sepal. h. Petals. i. Lateral sepals. j. Lip. k. Column with ovary. l. column with ovary and spur. m. Anther cap. n. Pollinia. o. Capsule. Photos: Alappatt.

Taeniophyllum wrightmyoensis Alappatt sp. nov.,
with Oberonia ensiformis (Sm.) Lindl. to the right.
Photo: Alappatt.

Taeniophyllum wrightmyoensis Alappatt, sp. nov.

This species is similar to Taeniophyllum hasseltii Rchb.f. and T. pusillum (Willd.) Seidenf. & Ormerod in having free sepals and petals, distichous bracts, fleshy lip and short anther-beak, but differs from them by its mostly free hanging terete roots and a few roots semi-terete when appressed to substratum (vs. roots flat, appressed to the substratum), bracts lax (vs. close in T. pusillum), comparatively smaller flowers (c. 3 mm across), not opening widely (vs. large flowers, 5–5.5 mm across, opening widely), lip blade without convex cushions (vs. with convex cushions in T. hasseltii), spur conical, being longer than broad (vs. globose, as long as broad in T. pusillum). 

Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the collections from Wrightmyo where the species was discovered.


 Alappatt, J.P. 2026. A Review of the Genus Taeniophyllum (Orchidaceae) in Andaman and Nicobar Islands (India) with the Description of A New Species, Taeniophyllum wrightmyoensis. Blumea - Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants. DOI: doi.org/10.3767/blumea.2026.70.02.06 

[Botany • 2022] Hoya longlingensis & H. sichuanensis (Apocynaceae: Asclepiadoideae) • Two New Species from Southwestern China


Hoya longlingensis E.F. Huang,
Hoya sichuanensis E.F. Huang, 

in E.-F. Huang, Tang, Z-F Zhang, J.-X. Huang, Ou et X.-C. Zhang, 2022. 

Abstract
Hoya longlingensis (E.F. Huang) and H. sichuanensis E.F. Huang are two new species of Apocynaceae from Southwestern China that are described in this study. Morphologically, the two species resemble H. tamdaoensis Rodda & T.B. Tran and H. lyi H. Lév., respectively. However, H. longlingensis differs from H. tamdaoensis by its elliptic leaves, mid-vein of leaf blades raised adaxially and depressed abaxially, lateral veins 2–4-paired, corolla yellow-green, outer angles of corona convex and spreading outside obviously. While H. sichuanensis differs from H. lyi by its obovate leaves, leaf apex rounded and base cuneate, petioles 1–3.5 cm long and ca. 3 mm in diameter, calyx lobes triangular, and corona whitish.  

Keywords: Apocynaceae; Asclepiodoideae; China; Hoya longlingensis; H. sichuanensis; Marsdenieae

 Hoya longlingensis E.F. Huang.
 (A) Habit; (B) Leaves; (C,D) Inflorescence; (E) Flower (top view); (F) Flower (bottom view); (G) Corona (top view); (H) Pollinarium; (I) Corona (side view); (J) Pedicel, calxy, and ovaries; (K,L) Ovaries.  

Hoya sichuanensis E.F. Huang.
 (A,B) Habit; (C) Leaves; (D,E) Inflorescence; (F) Flower (top view); (G) Flower (bottom view); (H) Pedicel, calxy, and ovaries; (I) Calyx lobe; (J) Corona (left: top view; right: side view); (K) Pollinarium; (L) Ovaries.


Er-Feng Huang, Li-Ming Tang, Zhi-Feng Zhang, Jiu-Xiang Huang, Zhen-Fei Ou and Xian-Chun Zhang. 2022. Hoya longlingensis and H. sichuanensis (Apocynaceae), Two New Species from Southwestern China. Taxonomy. 2(1); 99-106. DOI: 10.3390/taxonomy2010008 

 

[Arachnida • 2026] “The Cordyceps Spider”: Taczanowskia waska sp. nov. (Araneae: Araneidae), A New spider Species and A Novel Case of Mimicry of an Araneopathogenic Fungus (Cordycipitaceae: Gibellula)


Taczanowskia waska
Díaz-Guevara, Bentley & Dupérré, 2026 
 

Abstract 
Herein, we describe a new species of the rare spider genus Taczanowskia Keyserling, 1879 (Araneae: Araneidae), Taczanowskia waska sp. nov. (♀) from the Ecuadorian Amazon. Additionally, we discuss its unique fungal mimicry, comment on Taczanowskia ecology, and provide an updated taxonomic key for females of the genus. The importance of this discovery extends well beyond the description of a novel taxon, representing the first reported case of Arachnid mimicry of an araneopathogenic fungus. Finally, we discuss the application of citizen science to collecting ecological and biogeographical data on arachnids and its potential use for describing new taxa. 

Araneae, fungal-mimicry, arachnids, mycelium, Amazon, llanganates-Sangay Connectivity Corridor


Taczanowskia waska sp. nov., female holotype, alive.
 a, dorsal view. B, second dorsal view. C, posterior dorsalview. D, frontal view. e, posterior dorsal view with an ovisac. 

 Records of spiders with apparent fungal mimicry.
a, Taczanowskia waska sp. nov. from Pastaza, ecuador (© David R.Díaz-Guevara). B, unknown araneidae species from Huong National Park, vietnam, 2013 (© Paul Bertner).
C, D, an undescribed species of Acantharachne from uganda, 0.390, 33.113 (© Frank Deschandol).
E, Exechocentrus lancearius from Madagascar, -18.966, 48.592 (© Artur Tomaszek). F, Mastophora leucacantha from coastal Brazil, -23.959, -46.190 (© Thiago Gonçalves Coronado Antunes).


David R. DÍAZ-GUEVARA, Alexander Griffin BENTLEY and Nadine DUPÉRRÉ. 2026. “The Cordyceps Spider”: Taczanowskia waska sp. nov. (Araneae: Araneidae), A New spider Species and A Novel Case of Mimicry of an Araneopathogenic Fungus (Cordycipitaceae: Gibellula).  Zootaxa. 5760(5); 563-576. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5760.5.4 [2026-02-26]
 instagram.com/waska.amazonia
 instagram.com/bentley7_7 


Friday, April 10, 2026

[Botany • 2026] Saraca laotica (Malvaceae) • A New Species from Laos

  

Saraca laotica Tagane & Soulad.,

in Tagane, Phengmala, Kongxaisavath, Sengthong, Yamamoto, Phonepaseuth, Pham, Dang et Souladeth, 2026. 
ຄໍາລາວ  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.749.1.1 
 
Abstract
A new species of Saraca (Fabaceae-Detarioideae), S. laotica, is described and illustrated from Laos. It is characterized by leaflets with (9–)11–20 pairs of secondary veins, relatively larger, persistent and showy bracts of 1.4–3.3 × 0.6–0.9 cm, calyx tube of 27–36 mm, 4 stamens, anthers 1.9 mm long, by which combination, it is clearly distinguished from previously known species in the genus. Information on its habitat, phenology, vernacular name, and preliminary conservation assessment are also provided.

Detarioideae, endemic, Fabales, Leguminosae, limestones, plant taxonomy, Eudicots



Saraca laotica Tagane & Soulad.
A. Flowering branch; B & C. Portion of abaxial leaf surface; D. Hollowed twig inhabited by ants. E. Nest entrance on twig; F. Base of leaf showing petiole and petiolules; G. Young inflorescence; H & I. Bracts; J. portion of inflorescence, showing bracts and flower buds; K. Full-blooming inflorescence; L. Flowers, lateral view; M. Mouth of calyx tube showing ovary and filaments base; N. Bracteole (adaxial side); O. Anthers, adaxial (left) and abaxial (right) sides; P. Stigma; Q. Infructescence; R. Seeds.
Scale bars C, O & P = 1 mm, H = 5 mm, N = 2 mm, R = 1 cm. 
Photographed A & H from Tagane et al. Z1615, B, C, F, G, I–Q from Tagane et al. Z3281, D & E from Tagane et al. Z2639, R from Tagane et al. Z3281 (above three) and Z2639 (bottom), taken by S. Tagane.
  
Saraca laotica Tagane & Soulad., sp. nov.  
 
Diagnosis:—Similar to Saraca griffithiana and S. declinata in having persistent bracts and 4 stamens, but distinguished from the former by its midrib sunken adaxially (vs. prominent in S. griffithiana), longer bracts (1.4–3.3 cm long vs. shorter than 0.5 cm), and longer calyx tube (27–36 mm vs. 12–18 mm), and from the latter by more leaflets [5–9 pairs vs. 3–5(–7) pairs in S. declinata], more secondary veins [(9–)11–20 pairs vs. (6–)8–10(–12) pairs], larger bracts (1.4–3.3 × 0.6–0.9 cm vs. 0.3–1.2 × 0.1–0.7 cm), and longer anthers (1.9–2.2 mm vs. 0.75 mm long).

Etymology:—The specific epithet “laotica” refers to the country Laos, where the new species was discovered. 
Vernacular name:—ຄໍາລາວ (Kham Lao) (proposed here). In Lao, “Kham” means golden, referring to the color of the flowers, and “Lao” is the country name, indicating the locality where this species is found.



Shuichiro TAGANE, Kajonesuk PHENGMALA, Deuanta KONGXAISAVATH, Anousone SENGTHONG, Takenori YAMAMOTO, Phongphayboun PHONEPASEUTH, Quoc Trong PHAM, Van-Son DANG and Phetlasy SOULADETH. 2026. Saraca laotica (Fabaceae), A New Species from Laos. Phytotaxa. 749(1); 1-9. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.749.1.1 [2026-03-25]

[Arachnida • 2026] Mogrus shushka & M. pune • Two New Mogrus Species (Araneae: Salticidae) from India


[A–F] Mogrus shushka Tripathi, Kadam & Prajapati, 
Mogrus pune Tripathi, Kulkarni & Kadam, 

in Tripathi, Kadam, Asha, Kulkarni, Jangid, Prajapati et Sudhikumar, 2026. 

 Abstract
This study provides taxonomic contributions to the genus Mogrus Simon, 1882 from India, with the descriptions of two new species: Mogrus shushka Tripathi, Kadam & Prajapati sp. nov. and Mogrus pune Tripathi, Kulkarni & Kadam sp. nov. Furthermore, the male of Mogrus rajasthanensis Caleb, Chatterjee, Tyagi, Kundu & Kumar, 2017 is described for the first time, while Mogrus larisae Logunov, 1995 is newly reported from India. We provide detailed morphological descriptions and images, as well as discuss variations in female genitalia within the genus.

Keywords: jumping spiders, genitalia variation, semi-arid ecosystems, species record, taxonomy

Field photographs of Mogrus shushka Tripathi, Kadam & Prajapati, 2026 sp. nov.
A–D. Holotype, ♂ (NRC-AA-0640). E–F. Paratype, ♀ (NRC-AA-0641).

Field photographs of Mogrus pune Tripathi, Kulkarni & Kadam sp. nov.
A–B.Holotype, ♂  (NRC-AA-0645). C–D.Paratype, ♀ (NRC-AA-0646).

Mogrus shushka Tripathi, Kadam & Prajapati sp. nov. 
Mogrus pune Tripathi, Kulkarni & Kadam sp. nov.  


Rishikesh Tripathi, Gautam Kadam, Theresa Joy Asha, Atharva Kulkarni, Ashish Kumar Jangid, Dhruv A. Prajapati, Ambalaparambil Vasu Sudhikumar. 2026. Discoveries of Two New Mogrus Species (Araneae: Salticidae) and notable records from India. European Journal of Taxonomy. 1048(1); 223–244. DOI: doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2026.1048.3249 

[Botany • 2026] Asplenium paucipinnatum (Aspleniaceae) • A New fern Species from southern Thailand, based on morphological and molecular data


Asplenium paucipinnatum  K.W.Xu, Li Bing Zhang & Pollawatn, 

in Xu, Pollawatn, L. Zhang, Zhou et L.-B. Zhang, 2026.   

Abstract
Asplenium paucipinnatum, a new fern species from Nakhon Si Thammarat, Thailand, is described. Morphologically, it closely resembles A. micantifrons in having short-creeping and radial rhizome steles, 1-pinnate laminae, deeply incised pinnae on the basiscopic margin, and sori arranged in two rows close to the costae. However, A. paucipinnatum is readily distinguished by having fewer lateral pinnae (< 14 pairs), obliquely rhombic pinnae with acute apices and obtuse marginal teeth, contrasting the more numerous pinnae (> 15 pairs), lanceolate pinnae with acuminate apices, and acute teeth in A. micantifrons. Phylogenetic analyses based on multiple plastid DNA regions (atpB, rbcL, rps4, rps4-trnS, trnL, and trnL-F) support A. paucipinnatum as a distinct lineage, forming a sister relationship with a clade containing A. lepturus and A. contiguum. The combination of morphological and molecular evidence supports the recognition of this new taxon. Ecological notes, geographic distribution, and a comparison with related species are also provided.

Key words: Asplenium aethiopicum clade, fern phylogeny, Southeast Asian fern flora, taxonomy

Asplenium paucipinnatum. A. Habit; B. Abaxial view of lamina; C. Abaxial view of pinnae showing the venation on the pinnae; D. Showing the lamina apices deeply pinnatifid and becoming gradually decrescent upwards; E. Adaxial view of Pinnae at middle portion of the laminae; F. Short-creeping rhizome; G. Rhizome scales.
(Voucher specimen: Li Bing Zhang, Liang Zhang, R. Pollawatn & X. M. Zhou 10976).

Asplenium paucipinnatum K.W.Xu, Li Bing Zhang & Pollawatn, sp. nov.
 
Description. Asplenium paucipinnatum resembles A. micantifrons (Tuyama) Tuyama ex H.Ohba by its short creeping and radial rhizomes, 1-pinnate laminae, pinnae deeply incised at basiscopic side of margin, and sori borne in 2 rows closely set along to the costa, but the former has lateral pinnae fewer than 14 pairs, pinnae oblique rhombic, pinna apex acute, and marginal teeth obtuse. In contrast, A. micantifrons has lateral pinnae more than 15 pairs, pinnae lanceolate, pinna apex acuminate, and marginal teeth acute.


Ke-Wang Xu, Rossarin Pollawatn, Liang Zhang, Xin-Mao Zhou and Li-Bing Zhang. 2026. Asplenium paucipinnatum (Aspleniaceae), A New fern Species from southern Thailand, based on morphological and molecular data. PhytoKeys. 272: 159-167. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.272.173645 [02 Apr 2026]

[Herpetology • 2026] Phyllodytes gravataAnother Piece in the Puzzle: A New Species of Phyllodytes Wagler, 1830 (Anura: Hylidae) from the Atlantic Forest of southern Bahia, northeastern Brazil


 Phyllodytes gravata 
Santos, Rodrigues & Dias, 2026
 

Abstract
We describe Phyllodytes gravata sp. nov., a new species of bromeligenous treefrog from the Atlantic Forest of southern Bahia, Brazil. The new species is characterised by its small body size (males 19.5–22.0 mm snout-vent length; female 23.5 mm), a rounded snout with an apical tubercle, an inconspicuous row of tubercles along the tarsus, with a single prominent tubercle at the tibiotarsal articulation, a dorsolateral brown stripe, and an advertisement call composed of long series of pulsed notes (22–34 notes/call; call duration 5.2–7.3 s; dominant frequency 2.75–3.83 kHz). The species is currently known from only two nearby localities within the Central Corridor of the Atlantic Forest (CCAF), in the municipality of Porto Seguro, district of Trancoso, Bahia, a major tourist destination, where it inhabits bromeliads in sandy-soil ecosystems known as mussunungas. Its apparently microendemic distribution and strict association with bromeliads render it vulnerable to several anthropogenic threats, such as bromeliad harvesting, increasing tourism, urbanisation, and agriculture. This discovery underscores the persistent hidden diversity of the CCAF and reinforces the urgent need to protect its highly special microhabitats.

Keywords: Taxonomy, Amphibia, Bioacoustic, Bromeliad, Conservation


In-life photographs of Phyllodytes gravata sp. nov.
  
A.  Paratype, ♂  (MZUESC 23915). B. Paratype, ♂  (MZUESC 23885).
C.  Paratype, ♂  (MZUESC 23884) Dorsal view. D.  Paratype, ♂  (MZUESC 23884) ventral view.
E. Aechmea lamarchei Mez; F. Mussununga, the natural habitat at the type locality.

A. Map showing thedistribution of Phyllodytes gravata sp. nov. and its sister species, P. amadoi and Phyllodytes sp. 7. in southern Bahia, northeastern Brazil. 
B. Phyllodytes gravata sp. nov., paratype, ♂ (MZUESC 23915). C. Phyllodytes amadoi, ♂ (MZUESC 24030 – photograph by  Tadeu T.  Medeiros). D. Phyllodytes sp. 7, ♂.

Phyllodytes gravata sp. nov.


Laisa Souza dos Santos, Miguel Trefaut  Rodrigues and Iuri Ribeiro Dias. 2026. Another Piece in the Puzzle: A New Species of Phyllodytes Wagler, 1830 (Anura, Hylidae) from the Atlantic Forest of southern Bahia, northeastern Brazil. European Journal of Taxonomy. 1048(1); 62–83. DOI: doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2026.1048.3235 [2026-03-27]

[Cnidaria • 2026] Chrysogorgia pugnioides, Iridogorgia acutisclerita, I. levisquama • Systematics and Biogeography of Chrysogorgiidae (Anthozoa: Octocorallia) from the Indian Ocean: discovery of New Species on Deep-sea Ridges


Iridogorgia acutisclerita Ge, Zhang & Xu,

in Ge, N. Xu, Hu, Tian, Li, Y. Xu, Wang, Zhang et Q. Xu, 2026. 

Abstract
Species of the family Chrysogorgiidae are distributed worldwide in deep-sea environments. However, most recorded species of this family were from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, with only a few reports from the Indian Ocean, particularly from ridge regions. This study describes three new species and reports two known species from Indian Ocean ridges, integrating morphological and molecular analyses (mtMutS and 28S rDNA). Chrysogorgia pugnioides Ge, Hu & Xu, sp. nov. is characterized by fist-like polyps; warty spindles in tentacles; flat and irregular spindles and elongate scales in the polyp body wall; and slender and smooth scales with toothed to irregular edges in the coenenchyme. Iridogorgia acutisclerita Ge, Zhang & Xu, sp. nov. resembles I. splendens but differs by possessing needles and pointed elongate scales in the polyp body wall. Iridogorgia levisquama Ge, Zhang & Xu, sp. nov. is differentiated from the congeneric I. squarrosa by slender and smooth scales with sharp ends in the polyp body wall and needles with fine wartiness in the tentacles. Parachrysogorgia chryseis and Metallogorgia melanotrichos are reported as new records for the Indian Ocean ridges. These findings expand the known biodiversity and biogeographic range of Chrysogorgiidae in the Indian Ocean ridges.

Key Words: Carlsberg Ridge, Chrysogorgiidae, Ninetyeast Ridge, phylogeny, taxonomy

Chrysogorgia pugnioides Ge, Hu & Xu, sp. nov.  

Iridogorgia acutisclerita Ge, Zhang & Xu, sp. nov. 
Iridogorgia levisquama Ge, Zhang & Xu, sp. nov.

The external morphology of Iridogorgia acutisclerita Ge, Zhang & Xu, sp. nov.
 A. Holotype FIO-IND72-JLBEN22309 in situ; B. Paratype FIO-IND72-JLBEN22402 in situ; C–E. Holotype FIO-IND72-JLBEN22309, paratype FIO-IND72-JLBEN22402, and FIO-IND72-JLBEN225511 after collection;
F. Single polyp under a light microscope; G. Single polyp under SEM; H. A part of the tentacle under SEM; I. A part of the branch under a light microscope; J. A part of the branch with epidermal tissue removed under SEM; K. A part of the branch with epidermal tissue under SEM.
Scale bars: 20 cm (C–E); 1 mm (F, I); 500 μm (G, K); 250 μm (H, J).


 Meiling Ge, Ningxia Xu, Xuying Hu, Xin Tian, Xinlong Li, Yu Xu, Zongling Wang, Xuelei Zhang and Qingzeng Xu. 2026. Systematics and Biogeography of Chrysogorgiidae from the Indian Ocean: discovery of New Species on Deep-sea Ridges. Zoosystematics and Evolution. 102(2): 621-647.  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.182492 [07 Apr 2026]

[Invertebrate • 2025] Alloscopus sago & A. jantapasoae • Two New Species of the Genus Alloscopus Börner, 1906 (Collembola: Orchesellidae: Heteromurinae) from southern Thailand


Alloscopus sago Jantarit & Manee, sp. nov.  
   A. jantapasoae Jantarit, Nilsai & Manee, sp. nov.

in Jantarit, Manee, Nilsai, Mitpuangchon et Pimsai, 2025.

Abstract 
Two new species of Alloscopus Börner (Orchesellidae: Heteromurinae) are discovered and described from southern Thailand. The first species, Alloscopus sago Jantarit & Manee, sp. nov. was found in a sago palm forest (Metroxylon sagu Rottb.), a true sago palm species native to Southeast Asia and typically located in lowland freshwater swamps in Phatthalung Province. The second species, A. jantapasoae Jantarit, Nilsai & Manee, sp. nov. was sampled from a dark zone within a cave environment in Trang Province. Both species are characterized by the absence of eyes and mucronal spines, the presence of a PAO, two rows of smooth chaetae on the manubrium, and dental spines. However, they differ in several morphological features, including the number of macrochaetae on the ‘A’ series of the head, Th. II and Abd. IV; labial basis chaetotaxy; the presence of smooth chaetae on tibiotarsi; the number of chaetae on both the anterior and posterior ventral tube; and the number of the inter-teeth on the claw. The discovery of these two new species increases the total number of Alloscopus species recorded in Thailand to six species with a total of 17 recognized species globally. An updated key to the world species of Alloscopus is also provided.   

Key words: Cave, chaetotaxy, Entomobryoidea, sago palm, taxonomy


Alloscopus sago Jantarit & Manee, sp. nov.   
 A. jantapasoae Jantarit, Nilsai & Manee, sp. nov.



 Sopark Jantarit, Nongnapat Manee, Areeruk Nilsai, Natrada Mitpuangchon and Awatsaya Pimsai. 2025. Two New Species of the Genus Alloscopus Börner, 1906 (Collembola, Orchesellidae, Heteromurinae) from southern Thailand. ZooKeys. 1245: 357-381. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1245.148100 
 
 

[Botany • 2021] Dionysia jamzadiae (Primulaceae) • A New Species from the Fars Province of Iran


Dionysia jamzadiae Lidén, M.Irvine, Alvén & Mehregan, 

in Lidén, Irvine, Alvén et Mehregan, 2021. 

ABSTRACT
Dionysia jamzadiae Lidén, M.Irvine, Alvén & Mehregan, from the east Zagros Mountains, Fars, Iran, is described as new to science. It belongs in section Dionysiopsis and is similar to D. oreodoxa Bornm. but differs in, for example, its sparsely glandular hairy or almost glabrous corolla with emarginated lobes (densely non-glandular pubescent with entire lobes in D. oreodoxa). Dionysia jamzadiae is known from two places and is quite abundant at the type locality.

Keywords: New species, Fars, Iran, Dionysia

Dionysia jamzadiae Lidén, M.Irvine, Alvén & Mehregan, sp. nov.
Brevistylous (A) and longistylous (B) plants in the type locality.
 Photograph: M. Lidén.

 
Dionysia jamzadiae Lidén, M.Irvine, Alvén & Mehregan, sp. nov.

Differs from Dionysia oreodoxa Bornm., to which it is most similar, in its sparsely glandular hairy or almost glabrous corolla with emarginate lobes (versus densely non-glandular pubescent with entire lobes).
 


 
M. Lidén, M. Irvine, A. Alvén and I. Mehregan. 2021. Dionysia jamzadiae (Primulaceae), A New Species from the Fars Province of Iran. Edinburgh Journal of Botany. 78; DOI: doi.org/10.24823/EJB.2021.396 [2021-12-02]

[Herpetology • 2026] Nymphargus dajomesaeA Secret from A Hidden World: A New Glassfrog of the Genus Nymphargus (Anura: Centrolenidae) from Cordillera del Cóndor, Ecuador

 
 Nymphargus dajomesae  
Masache-Sarango, Cisneros-Heredia & Ron, 2026

 Dajomes Glassfrog | Rana de cristal de Dajomes ||  DOI: doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0345097 

Abstract
The genus Nymphargus is the most speciose of the family Centrolenidae with 44 species. In this study, we describe a new species of Nymphargus and present an updated phylogeny. The new species is sister to an undescribed species, also from SW Ecuador, and both belong to a clade that includes N. buenaventura, N. cariticommatus, N. griffithsi, N. lasgralarias, N. sucre, and N. wileyi. The new species likely originated during the Pliocene (~4.5 Mya) and is characterized by a uniformly green dorsum lacking spots, shagreened dorsal skin, and white peritonea covering the esophagus and stomach. Our phylogeny provides, for the first time, the phylogenetic position of N. buenaventura. The new species was discovered at Reserva Biológica El Quimi, during expeditions by the QCAZ Museum in 2017 and 2018. Most amphibian species found at that location were undescribed, indicating that some regions of Cordillera del Cóndor host amphibian communities that have remained as “hidden worlds” for biological exploration.

Live holotype of Nymphargus dajomesae sp. nov. QCAZ-A 68586.
(A) dorsal view, (B) ventral view, (C) Frontal view and (D) lateral view.
Photos by BIOWEB-Museo QCAZ-A archive.

Nymphargus dajomesae sp. nov.
Proposed Spanish common name: Rana de cristal de Dajomes
Proposed English common name: Dajomes Glassfrog

Definition: Nymphargus dajomesae differs from all other Centrolenidae by the following combination of characters: (1) dentigerous process of vomer and vomerine teeth absent; (2) snout truncated in dorsal and lateral views; loreal region slightly concave; (3) tympanic annulus, lower ¾ visible, upper border covered by supratympanic fold; tympanic membrane colored as surrounding skin; (4) dorsal skin shagreen with microspicules; (5) ventral skin granular; pericloacal area granular, enameled; pair of sub-cloacal warts present; (6) parietal peritoneum white, iridophores covering almost entirely (condition P4); peritonea covering heart, esophagus, stomach and kidneys covered by iridophores (V2); all other peritonea clear; (7) liver lobed and hepatic peritoneum clear (condition H0); (8) humeral spines absent in adult males; (9) webbing absent between fingers I and II, basal between fingers II and III; reduced between outer fingers, webbing formula III (3– –21/2) IV; (10) foot webbing formula: ...

Etymology: The specific epithet is a noun in the genitive case honoring Neisi Dajomes, the first Ecuadorian woman to win a gold medal at the Olympic Games (Tokyo 2020, women’s 76 kg weightlifting). In addition, she has won gold medals at the World and Pan American Weightlifting Championships, and the Pan American, Bolivarian and South American games.

Habitat at the type locality, Reserva Biológica El Quimi.
(A) Slow-flowing blackwater stream rich in tannins.
(B) Surrounding vegetation composed by dense shrubs, bromeliads, and mosses.
 

Mylena V. Masache-Sarango, Diego F. Cisneros-Heredia and Santiago R. Ron. 2026. A Secret from A Hidden World: A New Glassfrog of the Genus Nymphargus (Anura: Centrolenidae) from Cordillera del Cóndor, Ecuador. PLoS One. 21(4): e0345097. DOI: doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0345097 [April 8, 2026]