Tuesday, January 6, 2026

[Botany • 2025] Sarawakia khoonmengiana (Araceae) • A New rheophytic Species from southwest Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo [Schismatoglottideae of Borneo LXXIX]


Sarawakia khoonmengiana S.Y.Wong & P.C.Boyce,
 
in Wong & Boyce, 2025. 
 Sandakania. 27;
Photos: Boyce P.C.

Sarawakia khoonmengiana is described and illustrated as a new species from Lanjak Entimau Wildlife Sanctuary, southwest Sarawak, where it is restricted to exposed shale riverbanks.

Sarawakia khoonmengiana S.Y.Wong & P.C.Boyce.
A. Plants in habitat on vertical silt-covered shales. B. Detail of leaf blade venation, abaxial surface. C. Bloom at pistillate anthesis shown in natural position. D, E. Bloom at staminate anthesis with spathe limb characteristically degrading. Note damage to the appendix in D, and the perpetrators, chrysomelid beetles. F. Bloom at late pistillate antheses with nearside spathe artificially removed, note the expanded interstice staminodes.
Photos: Boyce P.C.

Comparison of spadix morphology of five Sarawakia species.
A. Sarawakia clausula. B. Sarawakia khoonmengiana. C. Sarawakia larynx. D. Sarawakia petradoxa. E. Sarawakia rejangica. Spadix of each with spathe partially or completely removed. Photos: Boyce P.C.


Wong Sin Yeng & Peter C. Boyce. 2025. Schismatoglottideae of Borneo LXXIX: Sarawakia khoonmengiana, A New rheophytic Species from southwest Sarawak, with a conspectus of plant names dedicated to Wong Khoon Meng. Sandakania. 27; 277-284.


[Herpetology • 2026] Brachytarsophrys wuiMorphological and Molecular Data reveal one New Species of the Genus Brachytarsophrys Tian & Hu, 1983 (Anura: Megophryidae) from Guizhou, China


Brachytarsophrys wui Lyu, Zhou & Long,

in Lyu, Zhou, Zhang, Fang, Ran, Dai, Jiang, Long et Yuan, 2026.
Wu’s Short-Legged Toad | 伍氏短腿蟾  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.161437   

Abstract
We describe a new species of megophryid frog from Mt. Foding National Nature Reserve in Guizhou Province, China. The new species is morphologically distinguished from its congeners by a combination of the following characters: medium body size (SVL 88.1–93.2 mm in five adult males and 108.7–111.2 mm in two adult females); head wider than long; tympanum hidden; dorsal skin slightly rough with irregularly shaped dark blotches and stripes; chin, ventral surface of throat rough with brown, irregularly shaped dark markings, two large longitudinal black-brown stripes on lateral throat; ventral surface brown-black with small brown granular spots; occipital region slightly uplifted; upper eyelid with tubercles, one of which is prominent, bluntly conical horn; margin of tongue shallow notched behind; toes webbing formular: I (1½)-(2) II (1½)-(3) III (2½)-(4) IV (4)-(2) V, webbing extending as a wide fringe along either side of each toe; large single subgular vocal sac located laterally on floor of mouth in males; tadpoles with a transverse white stripe on ventral surface and two longitudinal white stripes along sides of the body. In addition, phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA and COI fragment confirms its distinct identity, which clusters the new species closest to B. orientalis, with uncorrected p-distances of COI at least 3.77%. At present, the new species is known only from small streams in Mt. Foding National Nature Reserve at about 740–1000 m elevation. Its natural history and conservation status is discussed.

Key Words: Brachytarsophrys, Guizhou Province, Mt. Foding National Nature Reserve, new species, phylogeny, taxonomy

Brachytarsophrys wui sp. nov. in life.
A. Dorsolateral view of the adult male holotype GIB1972747; B. Dorsolateral view of the adult female paratype GIB1972725;
C. Ventral view of the holotype GIB1972747; D. Ventral view of the paratype GIB1972725.
Photos by Jing-Cai Lyu.   

Holotype of Brachytarsophrys wui sp. nov. GIB1972747. in life.
 A. Dorsal view; B. Tympanum view; C. Upper eyelid with tubercles;
D. Throat view; E. Lateral view; F. Left hand in dorsal view;
G. Hand in ventral view; H. Pectoral gland area view; I. Cloacal area view.
Photos by Jing-Cai Lyu.

Brachytarsophrys wui sp. nov. GIB1972748 in habitat.
Photos by Sheng-Lun Zhou (A) and Jing-Cai Lyu (B).

 Brachytarsophrys wui Lyu, Zhou & Long, sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis. Brachytarsophrys wui sp. nov. can be distinguished from its congeners by the following combination of morphological characters: (1) medium body size (SVL 88.1–93.2 mm in five adult males and 108.7–111.2 mm in two adult females); (2) head very large, wider than long, and nearly one-half as broad as the SVL; (3) tympanum hidden; (4) pupils black, iris brownish red; (5) upper eyelid with tubercles, one of which is enlarged and becoming a prominent, bluntly conical horn; (6) dorsal skin slightly rough with irregularly shaped dark blotches and stripes; (7) belly, chest, and limbs smooth with irregular off-white spots; (8) chin, ventral surface of throat rough with dark brown, irregularly shaped markings, two large longitudinal black-brown stripes on lateral throat; (9) single subgular vocal sac openings slit-like, located posterolateral on floor of mouth in male; (10) indistinct brown nuptial pad on the dorsal surface of the first and second fingers base, with dense, tiny, black nuptial spines in adult male during breeding season; (11) forelimb short and thick, webbing absent, One third as broad as distal toe phalanx; (12) relative length of fingers I<II<IV<III; (13) toes about I (1½)-(2) II (1½)-(3) III (2½)-(4) IV (4)-(2) V webbed in male; (14) tadpoles with a transverse white stripe, white speckles on posterior ventral surface, and two longitudinal white stripes along the sides of body; (15) oral disk with lips expanded vertically forming dorsally oriented funnel.


Etymology. The specific epithet ‘‘wui’’ is in honor of late professor and zoologist Lyu Wu (1915–1983), vice president (1969–1975) of Guizhou Academy of Sciences (Guizhou Province, China), in recognition of his efforts on biodiversity surveys and research in Guizhou Province in the 1960s and 70s. For the common name, we recommend “Wu’s Short-Legged Toad” (English) and “Wu Shi Duan Tui Chan” (伍氏短腿蟾) (Chinese).


 Jing-Cai Lyu, Sheng-Lun Zhou, Ting-Bi Zhang, Yang Fang, Si-Yu Ran, Liang-Liang Dai, Xuan-Kong Jiang, Han-Wu Long and Guo Yuan. 2026. Morphological and Molecular Data reveal one New Species of the Genus Brachytarsophrys Tian & Hu, 1983 (Anura, Megophryidae) from Guizhou, China. Zoosystematics and Evolution. 102(1): 71-85. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.161437 [05 Jan 2026] 


[Entomology • 2025] Pulchricranae mirabilis • A New fascinating Genus of Subfamily Hemiacridinae (Orthoptera: Acrididae) from Thailand


Pulchricranae mirabilis 
 Dawwrueng, Storozhenko, Waengsothorn & Suwannapoom, 2025


Abstract 
A new genus Pulchricranae gen. nov. (type species: P. mirabilis sp. nov.) is described from grassland in Sakaerat Environmental Research Station in Nakhon Ratchasima Province, Thailand. This genus is similar to the genera Binaluacris Willemse and Bacuita Strand from Philippines by the presence of outer apical spines on hind tibiae; by tegmina abbreviated; by prosternal spine flattened; by lophi of epiphallus large, trapezium with rounded apex; and by basal and apical penis valves separated, without any sclerotized flexure. However, Pulchricranae gen. nov. differs from Binaluacris by fastigium of vertex with rounded margins; by tegmina shorter and slightly broader; by prosternal spine in male with broadly rounded apex, in female apex with rounded triangular notch in median part; by mesosternal lobe broader than long; by male cerci conical, much narrower near apical part. New genus also differed from Bacuita (known by females only) by female fastigium of vertex strongly short and broad; tegmen broader, with apex rounded; hind femur surpassing the apex of abdomen; subgenital plate with apex nearly truncate. The previously ungrouped genera of the subfamily Catantopinae, Binaluacris and Bacuita, are transferred to the tribe Cranaeini of the subfamily Hemiacridinae based on external morphology and male genitalia. The composition of the tribe Cranaeini is briefly discussed. 

Orthoptera, Caelifera, grasshoppers, Hemiacridinae, Catantopinae, new taxa, Southeast Asia


 Pulchricranae mirabilis 


Pattarawich DAWWRUENG, Sergey YU. STOROZHENKO, Surachit WAENGSOTHORN and Chatmongkon SUWANNAPOOM. 2025. A New fascinating Genus of Subfamily Hemiacridinae (Orthoptera: Acrididae) from Thailand.  Zootaxa. 5737(4); 565-572. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5737.4.6 [2025-12-29]

[PaleoMammalogy • 2025] Circamustela bhapralensis, Vishnuictis plectilodous, ... • Rare Carnivorous Mammals from A diverse Fossil Assemblage from the Middle Siwaliks of Haritalyangar area, Himachal Pradesh, North India


Circamustela bhapralensis
Sankhyan, Abbas, Jasinski, Khan & Mahmood, 2025
 
Artwork by Sergey Krasovskiy

Abstract
Newly collected fossil carnivoran material from the Haritalyangar and Nurpur Middle Siwalik sequences of Himachal Pradesh (India) include at least five taxa and two new species including Mustelidae (‘Martes’ lydekkeri, Circamustela bhapralensis sp. nov., Mustelidae indet.), Viverridae (Vishnuictis plectilodous sp. nov.), and Felidae (indeterminate basal Felinae). These findings include the first upper jaw material of ‘Marteslydekkeri, a rare mustelid known only from lower jaw specimens, suggesting potentially closer relationships with European mustelids. Additionally, we report the first identification of Circamustela from the Siwaliks of the Indian subcontinent, despite nearly two centuries of fossil collection in the region. This material represents a new species Circamustela bhapralensis sp. nov. Circamustela, originating in Europe, eventually migrated to the Indian subcontinent before its extinction, and the smaller body size of the new species may suggest a trend toward decreasing body size in this taxon. Fossil viverrid material also represents a new species, Vishnuictis plectilodous sp. nov., the youngest species yet known for the genus. This new material implies an increase in morphological complexity in the m1 of these viverrids, potentially also suggesting an increase in dietary diversity within this lineage. The new viverrid species may also represent the largest viverrid yet known. Mandibular material of a feline is also described, providing further information on the biodiversity of the fossil carnivorans in the region. These new specimens add important information to our knowledge of the ancient biodiversity of the region, the evolutionary history of several carnivoran mammals, and the carnivoran guild of southern Asia.

Keywords: Carnivora, Felidae, Haritalyangar, India, Mustelidae, Neogene, Siwaliks, Viverridae


Circamustela bhapralensis sp. nov.

Vishnuictis fossil comparisons.
a–c. Holotype m1 of Vishnuictis plectilodous sp. nov. (HTA-68), complete right m1 in occlusal (a), medial (lingual) (b), and lateral (labial) (c) views. d. Terminology for various features of the m1 of V. plectilodous sp. nov. (HTA-68).
e–g. Holotype right mandibular ramus containing p4 and m1 of V. hasnoti comb. nov. (HTA-135), modified from Pilgrim (1932: pl. II, figs. 18, 18a, 18b) in occlusal (e), medial (lingual) (f), and lateral (labial) (g) views. Scale bars equal 1 cm


Vishnuictis plectilodous sp. nov.


 
Anek Ram Sankhyan, Sayyed Ghyour Abbas, Steven E. Jasinski, Muhammad Akbar Khan and Khalid Mahmood. 2025. Rare Carnivorous Mammals from A diverse Fossil Assemblage from the Middle Siwaliks of Haritalyangar area, Himachal Pradesh, North India. Journal of Mammalian Evolution. 32; 14. DOI: doi.org/10.1007/s10914-025-09749-4 [22 March 2025]

Study on New Fossil Carnivorous Mammals from Himalayan Foothills 

[Arachnida • 2025] Zoica medogensis, Z. thailandica, ... • Four Species of Zoica Simon, 1898 (Araneae: Lycosidae) from Asia


A, B. Zoica medogensis sp. nov.;
C, D. Zoica thailandica sp. nov.
Lu, Marusik, Zhang & Wang, 2025;

E, F. Zoica oculata Buchar, 1997 

(Photographed by Qian-Le Lu & Lu-Yu Wang).

Abstract
Three new species of the wolf spider genus Zoica Simon, 1898 are described from eastern and southeastern parts of Asia: Zoica dulong Lu, Zhang & Wang, sp. nov. (Yunnan, ♂♀) and Z. medogensis Lu, Zhang & Wang, sp. nov. (Xizang, ♂♀) from China and Z. thailandica Lu, Zhang & Wang, sp. nov. (Ratchaburi, ♂♀) from Thailand. The male of Z. oculata Buchar, 1997 (Xizang) is described here for the first time, and the first record of the species from China is reported. Descriptions and photographs of all the species are provided. 

Key words: Bhutan, China, new record, taxonomy, Thailand, webs, wolf spider, Zoicinae
 
Photos of living Zoica spp.
A, B. Zoica medogensis sp. nov.; C, D. Zoica thailandica sp. nov.; E, F. Zoica oculata Buchar, 1997 (female, A, B, E, F. Photographed by Qian-Le Lu; C, D. Photographed by Lu-Yu Wang).


Jin-Zhen Lu, Yuri M. Marusik, Zhi-Sheng Zhang and Lu-Yu Wang. 2025. Four Species of Zoica Simon, 1898 from Asia (Araneae, Lycosidae). ZooKeys. 1249: 371-385. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1249.152933

[Mammalogy • 2025] Mustela mopbie • Phylogenomics of the Genus Mustela (Carnivora: Mustelidae) with Description of A New Species from China


Mustela mopbie  

in Wei, Cao, He, Abramov, Wang, J. Fu, Li, Yang, L.-Q. Fu, Huang, Zhou, Wen et Ge, 2025.

Abstract
Weasels represent the most widely distributed and diverse lineage within the family Mustelidae. They have experienced adaptive radiation and have long been the subject of significant taxonomic debates. This study undertakes a comprehensive study of this group, employing morphological measurements, mitochondrial genomes, nuclear genes, and single copy orthologs extracted from whole genome data. Based on the outcomes of phylogenetic tree construction using orthologous genes, it is ultimately verified that the genera Mustela and Neogale are independent genera, thereby resolving the controversy regarding the species they encompass. Through molecular systematics and morphological studies, a putative Mustela species collected from Mabian Dafengding National Nature Reserve in Sichuan is confirmed as a new species, designated Mustela mopbie sp. nov. This new species exhibits molecular phylogenetic affinity with M. altaica and M. nivalis, yet shares morphological similarities with M. kathiah, M. nivalis and M. aistoodonnivalis. Notably, it is considerably smaller than these species and possesses distinctive body coloration and tail morphology. This study provides a detailed description of this new species and demonstrates that larger datasets yield more robust phylogenetic signal. Furthermore, we observed substantial incongruence between mitochondrial and nuclear gene trees, suggesting potential genomic introgression between this new species and its closely related congeners (M. altaica and M. nivalis).

Keywords: cytonuclear discordance, genetic distance, morphological differentiation, Mustela, systematic classification



Mustela mopbie sp. nov.



Qiu-Jin Wei, Lei Cao, Xing-Cheng He, Alexei Abramov, Jin Wang, Jie Fu, Rui Li, Qi-Sen Yang, Li-Qiang Fu, Yao-Hua Huang, Cai-Quan Zhou, Zhi-Xin Wen and De-Yan Ge. 2025. Phylogenomics of the Genus Mustela with Description of A New Species from China. Journal of Systematics and Evolution. DOI: doi.org/10.1111/jse.70029 [14 November 2025]

[Herpetology • 2025] Boulenophrys youran • A New Species of the Genus Boulenophrys (Anura: Megophryidae) from Nanshan National Park, Hunan Province, China


Boulenophrys youran  Xiao, Shi & Mo,

 in Xiao, Zhu, Lu Wang, H. Li, Maimaiti, S. Li, Zhang, Liu, Fei, Liao, Tang, Shi et Mo, 2026.
Youran Horned Toad | 悠然角蟾  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.175092

Abstract
A new species of Asian horned toad, Boulenophrys youran sp. nov., is described from Nanshan National Park in southwestern Hunan Province, China. Phylogenetic analyses based on mitochondrial 16S rRNA and COI genes place it within the Boulenophrys omeimontis species group as a distinct lineage. The new species can be diagnosed by the following combination of morphological characters: (1) Body size relatively large, SVL 45.3–51.1 mm in nine adult males, 55.6–58.2 mm in two adult females; (2) head wider than long, males HDL/HDW 0.69–0.83; (3) margin of tongue feebly notched posteriorly; (4) subarticular tubercles present on fingers I, relative finger lengths II < I < IV < III; (5) relative toe lengths: I < V < II < III < IV; (6) vomerine ridges present, vomerine teeth absent; (7) hindlimbs slender, heels overlapping when hindlimbs folded; (8) tibiotarsal articulation exceeding snout tip when leg stretched forward; (9) toes with weak webbing, formula: I1⅓ − 2II1⅓ − 2½III2 − 3½IV3½ − 2V, lateral fringes on toes wide; (10) dense moderate black conical nuptial spines on inner two fingers in breeding males.

Key Words: Boulenophrys youran, diversity, morphology, phylogeny, taxonomy

Holotype of Boulenophrys youran sp. nov. in life (HUNL XB25061601).
A. Lateral view; B. Ventral view; C. Dorsal view; D. Plantar view of right foot; E. Volar view of right hand; F. Dorsal view of left hand.
 Photos by Leqiang Zhu.

 Boulenophrys youran Xiao, Shi & Mo, sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis. This species can be distinguished from its congeners by the following combination of morphological characters: (1) Body size relatively large, SVL 45.3–51.1 mm in nine adult males, 55.6–58.2 mm in two adult females; (2) head wider than long, males HDL/HDW 0.69–0.83; (3) margin of tongue feebly notched posteriorly; (4) subarticular tubercles present on fingers I, relative finger lengths II < I < IV < III; (5) relative toe lengths: I < V < II < III < IV; (6) vomerine ridges present, vomerine teeth absent; (7) hindlimbs slender, heels overlapping when hindlimbs folded; (8) tibiotarsal articulation exceeding snout tip when leg stretched forward; (9) toes with weak webbing, formula: I1⅓ − 2II1⅓ − 2½III2 − 3½IV3½ − 2V, lateral fringes on toes wide; (10) dense moderate black conical nuptial spines on inner two fingers in breeding adult males.

Etymology. The specific epithet youran is a noun in apposition derived from the Chinese word “悠然” (yōu rán), meaning tranquil or composed. It references the verse “采菊东篱下,悠然见南山” from the classical poem Drinking Wine No. 5 by Tao Yuanming (365–427 CE), which depicts a state of serene harmony with nature. The name thus alludes to the species type locality, Nanshan (南山), and evokes the pristine, undisturbed montane streams it inhabits. The English vernacular name “Youran Horned Toad” is here proposed, with the corresponding Chinese name “悠然角蟾” (Yōu Rán Jiǎo Chán).


 Bei Xiao, Leqiang Zhu, Lu Wang, Hui Li, Ayinuer Maimaiti, Shize Li, Guoai Zhang, Wuzhou Liu, Dongbo Fei, Changle Liao, Xiaoquan Tang, Shengchao Shi and Xiaoyang Mo. 2026. A New Species of the Genus Boulenophrys (Anura, Megophryidae) from Nanshan National Park, Hunan Province, China. Zoosystematics and Evolution. 102(1): 53-70. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.175092 [05 Jan 2026]

[Ichthyology • 2026] Glyptothorax pulcher • A New Species (Siluriformes: Sisoridae) from the upper Pearl River of Yunnan and Guangxi, southwest China

 

Glyptothorax pulcher  Zeng, Lin, Jiang & Chen, 

in Zeng, Lin, Yang, Pu, Jiang et Chen, 2026.
美丽纹胸鮡  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.167142 

Abstract
A new species of the genus Glyptothorax, Glyptothorax pulcher sp. nov. is described from the Tuoniang River, the Pearl River Basin, in south-eastern Yunnan Province and western Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. This new species most closely resembles G. quadriocellatus in overall morphology, including similar outline appearance, skin tubercles and colour pattern. It can be distinguished from its congeners that are found in east of the Red River in China by the following combination of characteristics: distinctive colour pattern, skin with sparse soft tubercules, dorsal surface of head smooth, thoracic adhesive apparatus (TAA) broad (length of 1–1.2 times its width, width of TAA 12.0–14.3% SL), adipose-fin base short (11.7–15.4% SL), caudal peduncle deep and short (13.7–17.5% SL in length, 10.3–12.3% SL in depth). Its validity is further confirmed by molecular phylogenetic analysis, based on mitochondrial COI and Cyt b gene sequences, indicating it forms a sister group with G. pallozonum. The estimated K2P genetic distances between the new species and G. pallozonum range from 5.7% to 6.0%. In addition, phylogenetic evidence also suggests that G. zhujiangensis not be a valid species, but rather a junior synonym of G. pallozonum in this study.

Key Words: COI, Cyt b, morphological differentiation, phylogeny, Tuoniang River

Living view of Glyptothorax pulcher sp. nov., holotype. KIZ2025000024, 83.5 mm SL.
 
 Glyptothorax pulcher Zeng, Lin, Jiang & Chen, sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis. Glyptothorax pulcher can be distinguished from its congeners distributed in the adjacent water systems of the Pearl River by the following combination of characteristics: distinctive colour pattern, skin with sparse tubercules, soft and similar in texture to skin, dorsal surface of head smooth, TAA broad (length of 1–1.2 times its width, width of TAA12.0–14.3% SL), adipose-fin base short (11.7–15.4% SL), caudal peduncle deep and short (13.7–17.5% SL in length, 10.3–12.3% SL in depth).

Etymology. The epithet name “pulcher” consists of the Latin “pulcher”, meaning beautiful, referring to the species’ attractive colour pattern. Suggested common name in Chinese is 美丽纹胸鮡 (Chinese Pinyin: mei li wen xiong zhao).


 Yu-Yang Zeng, Feng Lin, Hong-Fu Yang, Xin-Rui Pu, Wan-Sheng Jiang, Xiao-Yong Chen. 2026. Glyptothorax pulcher (Siluriformes, Sisoridae), A New Species from the upper Pearl River of Yunnan and Guangxi, southwest China. Zoosystematics and Evolution. 102(1): 17-26.  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zse.102.167142 

Monday, January 5, 2026

[Ichthyology • 2025] Niwaella tigrina • A New Species of Spined Loach (Cobitidae) from the Poyang Lake System of Jiangxi Province, East China

 

Niwaella tigrina
H.-X. Zhang, Y.-P. Zhang, W.-J. Chen & E. Zhang, 2025

 
Abstract
A new species of the spiny loach genus Niwaella is described herein from the Xiu-Shui river, an affluent of Lake Poyang in Jiangxi Province, China. This species is distinguished from all other congeneric species in China due to having a unique body coloration, comprising 20-25 transverse black bars on the dorsum and upper part of the flank. Other characteristics, though not exclusive to this species, include an indistinct blackish mid-dorsal stripe from the nape to the caudal-fin base, a lower jaw fully covered by the lower lip; 17-20 black vertical bars on the lower part of flank, a short suborbital spine with a shorter processus latero-caudalis that is less than one-fifth the length of the processus medio-caudalis, and seven branched dorsal-fin rays. The validity of the new species is corroborated by its monophyly, as evidenced by phylogenetic analysis based on the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene.

Pisces, Taxonomy, Cobitidae, new taxon, middle Chang-Jiang basin




HAI-XIN ZHANG, YAN-PING ZHANG, WEN-JING CHEN and E. ZHANG. 2025. Niwaella tigrina, A New Species of Spined Loach from the Poyang Lake System of Jiangxi Province, East China.  Zootaxa. 5583(1); 101-112. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5583.1.5 [2025-01-31]

[Herpetology • 2026] Calamaria mizoramensis • A New Species of the Genus Calamaria (Squamata: Calamariidae) from Mizoram State, India

 

Calamaria mizoramensis 
Lalremsanga, Malsawmdawngliana, Bal, Vabeiryureilai, Hruaia, Korolev, Vogel, Poyarkov & Nguyen, 2026

 
Abstract
We describe a new species of the genus Calamaria from Mizoram State, Northeast India, based on a combination of morphological and molecular evidence. Calamaria mizoramensis sp. nov. is distinguished from its congeners by a unique combination of morphological characters, including: 8–11 enlarged maxillary teeth; rostral higher than wide; prefrontal shorter than frontal and contacting the first two supralabials; mental not in contact with anterior chin shields; dorsal scales in 13–13–13 rows, smooth throughout; a single preocular and postocular; four supralabials, with the 2nd and 3rd ones contacting the eye; five infralabials; six scales surrounding the paraparietal; 147–175 ventrals; 13–27 paired subcaudals; a relatively short tail (10.3–13.1% in males, 4.7–6.5% of total length), thick and nearly cylindrical, terminating in an obtuse tip; dark brown to blackish-brown, with three to six longitudinal rows of slightly paler or dark-edged scales forming indistinct stripes of variable clarity along the body and a faint pale nuchal ring; a yellow ventral surface with dark outer corners on the ventral scales; and a broad, distinct median black stripe on the ventral surface of the tail. Phylogenetic analysis of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene suggests that the new species represents a deeply divergent lineage within the genus Calamaria, with sister relationships to a clade that includes the remaining species from Indochina and East Asia. The genetic divergence of the new species from all its congeners for which the homologous sequences are available is also very high (minimal uncorrected p-distance of 15.3%). The new species is currently known from montane evergreen forests of Mizoram State, India (from elevations of 670–1,295 m asl.). This discovery adds to the growing number of herpetological findings in the Indo-Burma biodiversity hotspot and reinforces the need to reassess the complex taxonomy of the genus Calamaria. In addition, we provide the first comprehensive and updated checklist of the herpetofauna of Mizoram State, documenting 169 species, including 52 amphibians and 117 reptiles.

Reptilia, Calamaria mizoramensis sp. nov., morphology, mtDNA, taxonomy, Indo-Burma Region


Calamaria mizoramensis sp. nov., adult male holotype (MZMu 3744) before preservation:


Photographs in life and in situ of Calamaria mizoramensis sp. nov. from Mizoram, India.
(A) Sawleng, Saitual (MZMU 865); (B) North Hlimen, kolasib (MZMU 915);
(C) Chanmari West, Aizawl (MZMU 867); (D) Sihphir, Aizawl(MZMU 2411);
(E) kawrthah, Mamit (MZMU 866); (F) Tlangpui, Mamit (uncollected).
Photographs by H.T. Lalremsanga (A,E), J.C. Alfred Van Sanglura (B), Vanlal Hrima (C), Lalzarzoa (D), and Lal Muansanga (F). 



Calamaria mizoramensis sp. nov.  


Hmar Tlawmte LALREMSANGA, Fanai MALSAWMDAWNGLIANA, Amit Kumar BAL, Mathipi VABEIRYUREILAI, Vanlal HRUAIA, Alexey M. KOROLEV, Gernot VOGEL, Nikolay A. POYARKOV and Tan Van NGUYEN. 2026. A New Species of the Genus Calamaria H. Boie in F. Boie, 1827 (Squamata: Calamariidae) from Mizoram State, India.  Zootaxa. 5741(1); 49-86. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5741.1.2 [2026-01-05]


[Botany • 2026] Allium littoricola (Amaryllidaceae) • A New Species from Zhejiang, East China

 

Allium littoricola  Z.H. Chen, Y.L. Xu & P. Li,

in Zhang, Xie, Zhou, X.-P. Li, Yang, Xu, Wang, Chen et P. Li, 2026. 

Abstract
A new species of Allium L. (Amaryllidaceae) from Zhejiang, eastern China, namely A. littoricola, was described and illustrated. Morphological analysis indicates this new species is similar to A. longistylum Baker, but differs in having ovoid bulb, tunic white, light-purple, membranous, leaf blades ascending, scape lateral, hollow in cross section or solid at base, perianth segments 5–6 × 2–3 mm, inner filaments base 1-toothed at each side; low altitude and coastal hillside habitat. Molecular phylogenetic analyses also support it as a new species and suggest that it is closely related to A. longistylum Baker.

Keyword: Allium chinense, Allium longistylum, Allium sacculiferum, Allium thunbergii, phylogeny

Morphology of Allium littoricola.
A. Plant; B. Bulb (showing different colors of the tunic); C. Cross section of leaf blade; D. Cross section of scape; E. bracteole; F. Inflorescence; G. Flower; H. Anatomy of a flower; I. Infructescence; J. Seed.

Ink line diagram of Allium littoricola.
 A. Whole plant; B. Flower; C. Tepals and filament; D. Pistil; E. Crosssection of leaf blade; F. Crosssection of scape; G. Capsule; H. Seed.


Allium littoricola Z.H. Chen, Y.L. Xu & P. Li, sp. nov. 
滨海葱

Diagnosis: This new species is similar to A. longistylum Baker, but differs in having bulb ovoid (vs. cylindrically ovoid), tunic white, light purplish, membranous (vs. brown, papery), leave blades ascending (vs. curved), scape lateral, hollow in cross section, or solid at base (vs. central, solid in cross section), perianth segments 5‒6 × 2‒3 mm (vs. 3.5–4.5 × 1.8–2.3 mm), filament 6.4–8.2 mm long, outer ones entire, inner ones with 1-toothed on each side (vs. 8.0–9.5 mm long, margin entire or inner ones with 1-toothed on each side), below ...

Etymology: The specific epithet ‘littoricola’ refers to the habitat of the new species. 

 Habitat and habit of Allium littoricola.
A. Habitat; B. Population (a. early spring; b. flowering period; c. fruiting period); C. Plants.


Xiao-Wei Zhang, Wen-Yuan Xie, Xin Zhou, Xiu-Peng Li, Zi-Feng Yang, Yue-Liang Xu, Mei-Zhen Wang, Zheng-Hai Chen and Pan Li. 2026. Allium littoricola, A New Species from Zhejiang, East China. Taiwania. 71(1); 1-10. DOI: 10.6165/tai.2026.71.1 [01 January 2026]  https://taiwania.ntu.edu.tw/abstract/2138  


[Paleontology • 2024] Sphenoecium marjumensis & Tarnagraptus cupidus • Benthic pterobranchs from the Cambrian (Drumian) Marjum Konservat-Lagerstätte of Utah, USA


Sphenoecium marjumensis  &
 Tarnagraptus cupidus 
Lerosey-Aubril, Maletz, Coleman, Mouro, Gaines, Skabelund & Ortega-Hernández, 2024
 

Abstract
Pterobranchs are rare in Cambrian strata of North America despite discoveries of more than 30 exceptionally preserved fossil biotas. Miaolingian pterobranchs from this continent typically form low-diversity and low-abundance assemblages. Here we describe an abundant pterobranch material from the Drumian Marjum Formation recently collected at the Gray Marjum Quarry in the House Range of Utah, USA. The faunule is composed of two new speciesSphenoecium marjumensis, an encrusting representative forming compact bushy colonies of more than 80 tubes with poorly developed rhizomes, and Tarnagraptus cupidus, an erect growing taxon characterized by intertwining stems and a monopodial colonial growth. Known in extant rhabdopleurids, this mode of colonial growth had hitherto never been observed in fossil pterobranchs. Its documentation in a c. 500-myr-old taxon attests to its deep origin in the evolutionary history of the group. Although the new species almost exclusively occur in the Marjum strata, this pterobranch faunule is broadly similar to those recovered from other Miaolingian Burgess Shale-type deposits of North America in terms of genus-level composition, species richness, and ecological structure. This may indicate that pterobranchs were poorly diverse components of animal communities at that time, or that they mostly thrived in more proximal shelf environments where conditions conducive to their preservation rarely developed. The common co-occurrence of taxa with fundamentally different ecomorphotypes in the Miaolingian Series of North America strongly suggests an earlier phase of morphological diversification of benthic pterobranchs during the early Cambrian, which remains insufficiently documented by fossils.

Keywords: Pterobranchia, Graptolithina, Marjum Formation, Konservat-Lagerstätten, Miaolingian, Drumian






 
Rudy Lerosey-Aubril, Jörg Maletz, Robert Coleman, Lucas Del Mouro, Robert R. Gaines, Jacob Skabelund and Javier Ortega-Hernández. 2024. Benthic pterobranchs from the Cambrian (Drumian) Marjum Konservat-Lagerstätte of Utah. Papers in Palaeontology. DOI: doi.org/10.1002/spp2.1555  ortega-hernandezlab.oeb.harvard.edu/news/back-back-publications-cambrian-ordovician-lagerstätte