Monday, March 23, 2026

[Herpetology • 2025] Quasipaa yunkaiensis • A New Species of the Genus Quasipaa (Anura: Dicroglossidae) from Guangdong, China


Quasipaa yunkaiensis  
Qi, Lyu,  Song, Wang, Z. Li, Y. Li & Wang, 2025

云开棘蛙  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3724/ahr.2095-0357.2025.0031 

Abstract
We herein describe a new species of spiny frog, Quasipaa yunkaiensis sp. nov. from Yunkaishan National Nature Reserve, Xinyi City, Guangdong Province, China. Morphological examination combined with mitochondrial (810 bp Cyt b) and nuclear (1 852 bp concatenated Rag2, Tyr, and Rhod) genetic data was used to test its distinctiveness within Quasipaa. Morphologically, the new species differs from other congeners by the following diagnostic characteristics: relatively large body size within Quasipaa; dorsal skin relatively smooth, having sparse tubercles; lacking spiny tubercles on the ventrolateral sides of the body; lacking keratinized spines in the ventral surface of the body, only present on prepollex, fingers I and II, in breeding males. Both mitochondrial and nuclear phylogenetic results indicate that Quasipaa yunkaiensis sp. nov. constitutes a highly supported, deeply divergent lineage, but its precise phylogenetic placement within the genus Quasipaa remains unresolved. In view of the pronounced discordance between mitochondrial and nuclear datasets within Quasipaa, we encourage future studies to use genome-wide data to improve phylogenetic resolution and to estimate species diversity more accurately.

 Keywords: mito-nuclear discordance, Paini, Quasipaa yunkaiensis sp. nov., spiny frog, taxonomy

Quasipaa yunkaiensis sp. nov. in situ.
(A) holotype, SYS a008351, (B) paratype, SYS a008350.
Photos by Jian WANG.

The male holotype of Quasipaa yunkaiensis sp. nov. (SYS a008351) in life:
 (A) dorsolateral view, (B) dorsal view, (C) ventral view.
Photos by Shuo QI.

Quasipaa yunkaiensis sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Quasipaa yunkaiensis sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other congeners by the combination of the following morphological characters: (1) body size large, SVL 89.1–113.8 mm in adult males (n = 2) and 95.7 mm in adult female (n = 1); (2) dorsal skin relatively smooth, with sparse tubercles; (3) without spiny tubercles on ventrolateral sides of body; (4) tympanum indistinct, margin blurred; (5) absence of dorsolateral folds; (6) hindlimbs rather long and stout, tibio-tarsal articulation reaching to tip of snout when leg stretched alongside body, heels overlapping when thighs flexed at right angles to body axis; (7) toes nearly entirely webbed, webbing formula: I 0 – 0 II 0 –0–III 0– – 1–IV 1– – 0 V, webbing incurved between tips of toes; (8) tarsal fold present; (9) vomerine teeth distinct, arranged between internal nares; (10) internal vocal sac present in males; (11) no keratinized spines on body ventral surface of breeding males, only present on prepollex, fingers I and II, forelimbs strongly hypertrophied; (12) colour in life: dorsal surface yellowish brown with large dark brown blotches, back of head with a dark brown transverse band, edges of the upper and lower lips with some brown blotches; some individuals with a pale yellow vertebral stripe.

Etymology: The specific epithet yunkaiensis refers to the type locality of this species, the Yunkaishan National Nature Reserve, Guangdong, China.

Suggested common name: “Yunkai Spiny Frog” in English and “云开棘蛙 (yún kāi jí wā)” in Chinese.
 

Habitat of Quasipaa yunkaiensis sp. nov. in the Yunkaishan National Nature Reserve.
Photo by Shuo QI.

  
Shuo QI, Zhitong LYU, Hanming SONG, Haotian WANG, Zhuoyu LI, Youyu LI and Yingyong WANG. 2025. A New Species of the Genus Quasipaa (Anura: Dicroglossidae) from Guangdong, China. Asian Herpetological Research. 16(4); 319-330. DOI: doi.org/10.3724/ahr.2095-0357.2025.0031 [Nov 21, 2025]
  
 
The Yunkai Spiny Frog (Quasipaa yunkaiensis) is a newly described species discovered from the Yunkaishan Nature Reserve, Xinyi City, Guangdong Province, China. This species inhabits montane stream environments within evergreen secondary forest at elevations between 1 200–1 550 m. It is currently only known from its type locality. Although mito-nuclear discordance has been reported in several species of the genus Quasipaa, both mitochondrial and nuclear gene fragments consistently recover Q. yunkaiensis as a distinct evolutionary lineage. This new species was reported by Shuo QI et al. in this issue. This frog was drawn by Hanwen KANG and Timan YANG.

[Botany • 2026] Breynia phuongiana (Phyllanthaceae) • A New Species from the Central Highlands of Vietnam


Breynia phuongiana N.K.T. Tram, Vuong, Aver. & V.C. Nguyen, 

in V. C. Nguyen, Tran, Truong, Averyanov, T. H. Nguyen, Phan-Thi et Tram, 2026. 
 
Abstract
A new species, Breynia phuongiana (Phyllanthaceae subgen. Sauropus), is described and illustrated from the Central Highlands of Vietnam. It is morphologically similar to B. beillei, B. bonii, and B. thorelii, but differs in having oblong-elliptic leaves, sepals marked with reddish striations, an androphore exceeding 1 mm in length, and distinctly hexagonal, starfish-shaped fruits with erect and persistent stigmas. A detailed morphological comparison with related species is provided. A preliminary conservation assessment categorizes it as ‘Data Deficient' (DD) based on IUCN Red List criteria.

Keywords: Breynia, Flora of Vietnam, plant diversity, plant endemism, taxonomy

Breynia phuongiana N.K.T. Tram, Vuong, Aver. & V.C. Nguyen
(A) A plant with inflorescences and infructescences, (B) stipules, (C) leaf from different views: adaxial (upper), abaxial (lower), (D) staminate flower from different views, (E) pistillate flower from different views, (F) inflorescences and infructescences, (G) fruit, (H) open fruit and seeds.
Drawing from type specimens by Thanh Nha Phan-Thi.

Breynia phuongiana N.K.T. Tram, Vuong, Aver. & V.C. Nguyen
(A) Flowering plant in its habitat, (B) inflorescence, (C–D) a staminate flower, (E) flowers from different views; a pistillate flower (left) and a staminate flower (right), (F) fruit with erect stigmas.
All photos from holotype specimen AL2456 by Van Canh Nguyen, correction and design by Ba Vuong Truong.

Breynia phuongiana N.K.T. Tram, Vuong, Aver. & V.C. Nguyen
(A) Leaves and branches, (B) inflorescences, (C) stipules, (D) portion of inflorescence, (E) staminate flower from different views: (1–4) adaxial surface, (5) abaxial surface, (F) pistillate flower from different views, (G) longitudinal section through the pistil and pedicel.
All from holotype specimen AL2456 by Van Canh Nguyen, correction and design by Ba Vuong Truong.

Breynia phuongiana N.K.T. Tram, Vuong, Aver. & V.C. Nguyen sp. nov.  

Diagnosis: The species is characterized by a combination of the following features: cauliflorous inflorescences and infructescences arising near the ground, sepals with reddish striations, an androphore more than 1 mm long, and distinctly hexagonal, starfish-shaped fruits with erect and persistent stigmas.

Etymology: The species name honours Ms. Ha Thi Phuong (Hà Thị Phương), who first discovered the species.

 
Van Canh Nguyen, Thi Thuy Nhan Tran, Ba Vuong Truong, Leonid V. Averyanov, Thi Hoa Nguyen, Thanh Nha Phan-Thi and Nguyen-Khanh-Trinh Tram. 2026. Breynia phuongiana (Phyllanthaceae), A New Species from the Central Highlands of Vietnam. Nordic Journal of Botany. DOI: doi.org/10.1002/njb.05025 [21 March 2026]

[Botany • 2026] Ophiorrhiza jomyi (Rubiaceae) • A New Species from the Vagamon Hills, southern Western Ghats, India

 

Ophiorrhiza jomyi Ebin, Sreehari & Joby,  

in Ebin, Sreehari et Joby, 2026. 

Abstract
A new species of Ophiorrhiza (Rubiaceae)is identified and described from the Vagamon hills of Kerala, Western Ghats, India. The new species is similar to Ophiorrhiza eriantha Wight and Ophiorrhiza meenachilarensis Robi and Balan, but differs in having densely hirsute hairs on young stem, petiole and peduncle; patent hirsute hairs on, above and beneath the leaf; 14.0–15.0 mm long flower; linear to falcate bracts and bracteoles; sparsely hirsute cupuliform hypanthium; triangular calyx lobes; 9.5–12.0 mm long corolla tube; stamens inserted at the middle of the corolla tube; and oblong and papillate stigma. A detailed description, colour photographs, comparison, phenology, distribution, conservation status and key to the allied taxa of the new species are provided.

Keywords: Kottayam, new species, Ophiorrhiza jomyi, Western Ghats

Ophiorrhiza jomyi Ebin, Sreehari & Joby sp. nov.
 (A) Habit, (B) stipule, (C–D) inflorescence, (E) bract, (F) bracteole, (G–H) adaxial and abaxial side of leaf, (I) indumentum on the upper surface of lamina, (J) indumentum on the lower surface of lamina, (K) flower bud, (L) single flower, (M) flower L.S., (N) indumentum on the stem, (O) indumentum on the peduncle, (O) indumentum on the petiole, (Q) hypanthium cup, (R) stamen, (S) gynoecium, (T) fruit, (U) seed.

Ophiorrhiza jomyi Ebin, Sreehari & Joby sp. nov.  

Diagnosis: This species shows close morphological resemblance with O. eriantha Wight, but differs in having densely ascending hirsute indumentum on stem (versus pubescent or glabrous stem), patent hirsute hairs on both sides of leaves (versus glabrous above, puberulous on the nerves beneath), densely hirsute petiole (versus glabrous or puberulous petiole), stipule acuminate to attenuate at apex (versus stipule bifid at apex), 14.0–15.0 mm long flower (versus 19.0–27.0 mm long flower), cupuliform hypanthium (versus obovoid hypanthium), triangular calyx lobes (versus subulate calyx lobes), densely puberulous hairs and with a villose ring at the middle of the corolla tube inside (versus glabrous inside without a ring of villose hairs), 2.5–3.0 mm long corolla lobes (versus 5.0–7.0 mm long corolla lobes), 1.75–2.0 mm long anthers (versus 3.0–3.5 mm long anthers), oblong stigma, obtuse at apex with papillate hairs (versus lanceolate stigma, acute at apex and glabrous), 0.4 × 0.5 mm, irregularly angled seeds (versus 0.6 × 0.5 mm, 4–6 angular seeds).

Etymology: The specific epithet is in honour of retired Professor, Dr Jomy Augustine, Department of Botany, St Thomas College, Pala, Kottayam, Kerala, for his guidance and support in the field of taxonomy to the authors. Dr Jomy Augustine has significantly contributed to the documentation and conservation of plant diversity in the Western Ghats through his extensive field explorations, research and publications.

 
Ebin Padiyara Joy, Sreehari Sivan Nair, Joby Paul. 2026. Ophiorrhiza jomyi (Rubiaceae) sp. nov. from the Vagamon Hills, southern Western Ghats, India. Nordic Journal of Botany. DOI: doi.org/10.1002/njb.05085 [21 March 2026]
 

[Paleontology • 2026] Balticolasma wunderlichi • 3D analyses of the First ortholasmatine Harvestmen (Opiliones: Nemastomatidae) from European Eocene Ambers

 

Balticolasma wunderlichi 
Bartel, Mitov, Dunlop & Hammel, 2026

Artistic reconstruction by Joshua Knüppe  x.com/JoschuaKnuppe




The first fossil representatives of the harvestman subfamily Ortholasmatinae (Opiliones, Dyspnoi, Nemastomatidae) are described as Balticolasma wunderlichi gen. et sp. nov. One male is preserved in Eocene Baltic amber and a presumably conspecific female in Eocene Rovno amber (northwest Ukraine). Ortholasmatines are typically highly ornate arachnids, and for the first time with an amber harvestman we applied computed tomography using synchrotron radiation to investigate its three-dimensional morphology and surface structure in considerable detail. Some of its morphological characters, appear to be closer to extant Asian genera. In a wider biogeographic context, our amber record is a significant find for the Paleogene of Europe given that (i) it is another species apparently found in both Baltic and Rovno amber and (ii) all modern ortholasmatines are restricted to East Asia and North and Central America.

Key words: Nemastomatidae, Ortholasmatinae, Baltic amber, Rovno amber, micro-CT, Priabonian, Eocene

Ortholasmatine harvestman Balticolasma wunderlichi gen. et sp. nov. paratype (female) MB.A.4455 from Rovno amber, 33.90–37.71 Ma, Priabonian.
A1, dorsal view of the body A2, close-up of the ocular process in dorsal view, eye lenses arrowed.
Abbreviations: cp, carapace process; ey, eye lens; oc, ocular process; legs numbered I–IV. Scale bars 1 mm (A1) and 0.5 mm (A2).

Artistic reconstruction of the Eocene ortholasmatine harvestman Balticolasma wunderlichi gen. et sp. nov. (male) by Joshua Knüppe (Ibbenbüren, Germany).

Systematic palaeontology 
Order Opiliones Sundevall, 1833 
Suborder Dyspnoi Hansen & Sørensen, 1904 
Family Nemastomatidae Simon, 1872 
Subfamily Ortholasmatinae Shear & Gruber, 1983 
Genus Balticolasma nov.

Balticolasma wunderlichi gen. et sp. nov. 

Etymology: From the Baltic region where the amber hosting one of the specimens originates from and the suffix lasma applied to a few possibly closely related modern ortholasmatine genera.



Christian Bartel, Plamen G. Mitov, Jason A. Dunlop, and Jörg U. Hammel. 2026. 3D analyses of the First ortholasmatine Harvestmen from European Eocene Ambers. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 71(1): 95-107. DOI: doi.org/10.4202/app.01283.2025

[Botany • 2026] Gentiana daofuensis (Gentianaceae) • A New Species from Sichuan, China

 
Gentiana daofuensis  Y.M.Yuan & P.C.Fu, 

in Sun, Guo, Zhang, Yi, Xu et Fu, 2026.
道孚小龙胆  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.272.183828

Abstract
Gentiana daofuensis, a new species of the family Gentianaceae, is described and illustrated here. Currently, this species is known only from Daofu County, Sichuan Province, China. Phylogenetic analyses based on chloroplast genome data indicate that it belongs to G. section Chondrophyllae s.l. Morphologically and genetically, it is closely related to G. crassuloides but can be clearly distinguished from the latter by its shorter calyx and pale blue-purple corolla with numerous dark blue short stripes or spots.

Key words: Chloroplast genome, Gentiana, Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, section Chondrophyllae

Morphological characteristics of Gentiana daofuensis sp. nov.
A. Habit; B. Whole plants; C. Stem with flower at anthesis; D. Stem with mature flower bud; E. Leaf pair (front view); F. Leaf pair (reverse view); G. Calyx; H. Flower (front view); I. Fruit (front view); J. Seed; K. Fruit (side view); L. Pistil; M. Dissected flower; N. Flower.
Photographs by Peng-Cheng Fu (B–N) and Yong-Ming Yuan (A).

Gentiana daofuensis Y.M.Yuan & P.C.Fu, sp. nov.

Diagnosis. Gentiana daofuensis is distinguishable from all other similar species of the genus by the combination of the reniform leaves on the upper stem and the pale blue-purple corolla with numerous dark blue short stripes or spots.

Etymology. The specific epithet “daofuensis” is derived from the type locality of the new species, Daofu County, and the Latin suffix -ensis, indicating the place of origin or growth.

Vernacular name. Chinese mandarin: dao fu xiao long dan (道孚小龙胆).


Shan-Shan Sun, Yuan-Meng Guo, Xin-Yue Zhang, Wen-Jie Yi, Shu-Han Xu and Peng-Cheng Fu. 2026. Gentiana daofuensis (Gentianaceae), A New Species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys. 272: 1-10.  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.272.183828  [18 Mar. 2026] 

Sunday, March 22, 2026

[Ichthyology • 2026] Crossorhombus pescadores • A New lefteye Flounder of the Genus Crossorhombus (Teleostei: Bothidae) from Penghu Islands, western Taiwan


Crossorhombus pescadores 
 Amaoka, Su & Ho, 2026


Abstract
A new lefteye flounder, Crossorhombus pescadores sp. nov., is described based on five specimens collected from Penghu Islands. This new species differs from the other four congeners by having a pair of small black spots on the caudal fin, a horizontal triangular bluish-black marking on the blind side of body in male, the front wings of the marking reaching the base of dorsal and anal fins, and a combination of morphometric characters, including a larger head, deeper body, smaller eyes, fewer dorsal- and anal-fin rays and lateral-line scales, and other characters. A key to all five nominal species of Crossorhombus is provided.

Key words: Biodiversity, ichthyology, identification key, sexual dimorphism, taxonomy, western Pacific

Crossorhombus pescadores sp. nov., NMMB-P 42260, holotype, male, 99.8 mm SL, preserved.
A. Ocular side; B. Blind side.

Paratypes of Crossorhombus pescadores sp. nov., showing ocular sides (odd numbers) and blind sides (even numbers).
A. HUMZ 237066, immature male, 74.8 mm SL; B. NMMB-P 42263, female, 92.4 mm SL; C. NMMB-P 42262, immature female, 58.0 mm SL.

 Crossorhombus pescadores sp. nov

Diagnosis. A species of Crossorhombus differing from its congeners in having: caudal fin with light-gray band along posterior sub-margin; a pair of small black spots on band at upper and lower fourth rays, respectively; a bluish-black, horizontal triangular marking on blind side of body in male; a series of dark blotches along dorsal and ventral margins of body; combination of some meristic and proportional characters: large head; small upper and lower eyes; slightly longer pectoral-fin on ocular side; fewer dorsal- and anal- fin rays and fewer scales in lateral line and others.

Etymology. The specific name “pescadores” is the old name of the type locality, meaning “fishermen” in Portuguese. It is treated as a noun in apposition.


 Kunio Amaoka, Yo Su and Hsuan-Ching Ho. 2026. A New lefteye Flounder of the Genus Crossorhombus (Teleostei, Bothidae) from Penghu Islands, western Taiwan. ZooKeys. 1273: 15-25. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1273.167628 [13 Mar. 2026]


Friday, March 20, 2026

[Paleontology • 2026] Indosinosuchus peninsularensis • A new teleosaurid (Crocodylomorpha: Thalattosuchia) from the Sibumasu Terrane of Southeast Asia and A Taxonomic Reassessment of Indosinosuchus

 

Indosinosuchus peninsularensis 
Lauprasert, Nilpanapan, Martin, Claude, Kamonlak Wongko, Kantanat Trakunweerayut, Dobutr, Manitkoon, Bhuttarach & Nonsrirach, 2026


Abstract 
We describe teleosaurid remains from the Middle to Upper Jurassic Khlong Min Formation at Ban Nam Pun in southern Thailand and define Indosinosuchus peninsularensis sp. nov. This new species is diagnosed by a unique combination of cranial and postcranial features, including the nasal reaching anteriorly at the level of the 18th maxillary alveolus, absence of an incisive foramen, oval-shaped external nares, and broad ornamented osteoderms. Phylogenetic analysis positions I. peninsularensis within a polytomy alongside Mystriosaurus laurillardi and other Asian teleosaurids, supporting a monophyletic Teleosauroidea. In addition, the revision of Indosinosuchus kalasinensis as a junior synonym of I. potamosiamensis also strengthens the taxonomic framework of the genus IndosinosuchusIndosinosuchus peninsularensis sp. nov., discovered in a low-energy lagoonal environment, offers significant insights on the ecological preferences of teleosaurids. In contrast to the fluvially deposited Phu Kradung Formation of northeastern Thailand, the lagoonal and marginal marine sediments of the Khlong Min Formation are considered indicative of a broad spectrum of habitat occupation by Asian teleosauroids. Based on these observations, a high degree of ecological plasticity has been inferred for Thai teleosaurids, and their extensive dispersal across both the Sibumasu and Indochina terranes during the Middle to Late Jurassic has been further substantiated. The recognition of I. peninsularensis sp. nov. contributes to our understanding of teleosaurid diversity and paleobiogeography in Southeast Asia.

Keywords: Indosinosuchus, Khlong Min Formation, Sibumasu, Phu Kradung Formation, Indochina


Indosinosuchus peninsularensis sp. nov. from the Khong Min Formation, Ban Nam Pun, southern Thailand. Photographs and interpretive drawings of Indosinosuchus peninsularensis sp. nov. from the Khong Min Formation, Ban Nam Pun, Nakhon Si Thammarat Province, southern Thailand.
PRC-205: anterior rostrum in dorsal view (A, B) and dorsal vertebrae in ventral view (C, D). PRC-206: osteoderms and dorsal vertebrae in dorsal view (E, F) and ventral view (G, H).
Abbreviations: dv, dorsal vertebrae; en, external nares; mx, maxilla; n, nasal; ost, osteoderm; pmx, premaxilla.

CROCODYLOMORPHA Hay, 1930
THALATTOSUCHIA Fraas, 1901
NEOTHALATTOSUCHIA Young et al., 2024a; Young et al., 2024b
TELEOSAUROIDEA Delfino & Dal Sasso, 2006
TELEOSAURIDAE Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1831

Genus Indosinosuchus Martin et al., 2019

Indosinosuchus peninsularensis 

Holotype: PRC 205 and PRC 206, comprising an anterior portion of the rostrum, osteoderms, and dorsal vertebrae.

Type locality: Ban Nam Pun, Bang Khan District, Nakhon Si Thammarat Province, southern Thailand.

Stratigraphic occurrence: Lower part of the Khlong Min Formation, Thung Yai Group, late Middle Jurassic to early Late Jurassic.

Diagnosis. Indosinosuchus peninsularensis, PRC 205, is characterized by the following combination of characters (autapomorphies denoted with*): (1) four premaxillary alveoli; (2) moderately laterally expanded premaxilla with subequal length and width, producing a broad yet unflared outline; (3) margin of premaxillary-maxillary suture is concave between the 4th premaxillary –1st maxillary alveoli; (4) the external narial opening is subcircular or slightly ‘8-shaped’ in dorsal view; (5) absence of incisive foramen at medial contact of premaxillae*; (6) anterior tip of nasals reaching the level of the 18th maxillary alveolus*.

Locality, lithostratigraphy, and petrographic characteristics of the fossiliferous limestone within the Khlong Min Formation at Ban Nam Pun, southern Thailand.
(A) Tectonic subdivision map of Thailand (modified after Udchachon et al., 2022), illustrating the distribution of Jurassic sedimentary rock units (based on Meesook & Saengsrichan, 2011). The Khlong Min Formation, including the Ban Nam Pun locality, is situated within the Sibumasu Terrane, whereas the Phu Kradung Formation and its equivalents are located within the Indochina and Sukhothai Terranes. (B) Simplified geological map of the Krabi–Khlong Thom–Trang region (adapted from Thailand Department of Mineral Resources, 1999; Meesook & Saengsrichan, 2011), with the study site marked by a red star.
(C) Field photograph of the fossiliferous limestone outcrop intercalated with mudstone. The rock hammer (circled) is 30 cm in length for scale. (D–F) Close-up view of fossiliferous limestone rich in bivalves, (D) Modiolus sp. assemblage, (E) Actinostreon sp. (F) Protocardia sp. (G) MF1: Bioclast wackestone characterized by shell fragments, benthic foraminifera (f), and peloids (p). The yellow arrow indicates a bivalve shell with geopetal fabric: the lower portion infilled with micritic matrix and peloids, and the upper portion filled with sparry calcite cement. (H) MF2: Bioclast-peloidal packstone to grainstone, dominated by peloids (p) and benthic foraminifers (f) with minor ostracod shells (o).


 Komsorn Lauprasert, Apirut Nilpanapan, Jeremy E. Martin, Julien Claude, Kamonlak Wongko, Kantanat Trakunweerayut, Nuntida Dobutr, Sita Manitkoon, Supanut Bhuttarach and Thanit Nonsrirach. 2026. A new teleosaurid (Crocodylomorpha, Thalattosuchia) from the Sibumasu Terrane of Southeast Asia and A Taxonomic Reassessment of IndosinosuchusPeerJ. 14:e20944. DOI: doi.org/10.7717/peerj.20944 [2026-03-20]
 

[Fungi • 2026] Gibellula mineiraThe Silent Hunters of Spiders: Discovering A New Gibellula (Ascomycota: Cordycipitaceae) Fungus in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest


Iguarima censoria (Anyphaenidae) spiders
unparasitized and parasitized by Gibellula mineira sp. nov.
Santos, Mendes-Pereira, Ribeiro & Kloss. 2026 

 
Abstract
In tropical forests, there is a high diversity of parasites that use arthropods as resource, particularly arachnids. One of the most frequent groups of spiders’ parasites in tropical forests are fungi of the genus Gibellula, for which a considerable knowledge gap remains in these environments. In this study, we present the description of a new species that infects spiders of the species Iguarima censoria (Anyphaenidae) in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, Gibellula mineira sp. nov. We also described the prevalence of the new fungal species in the host spider population and evaluated whether the host size influences their probability of parasitism. Morphological and molecular analyses revealed that G. mineira represents a distinct species forming a clade with 100% support of bootstrap and showing a close phylogenetic relationship with Gibellula aurea. The characteristics that distinguish it from other species of the genus include light brown hyphae, white and slightly larger conidiophores, and thinner phialides. We observed a high prevalence of parasitism in this interaction, reaching 25% of the observed I. censoria population. Furthermore, we noted that the cadavers of parasitized spiders are exclusively attached to the underside of leaves, following the typical pattern observed for Gibellula species. Parasitism is more frequent in smaller I. censoria individuals, which is probably associated with thinner cuticles or higher foraging activity in smaller individuals. We suggested that G. mineira is an important natural enemy of I. censoria, directly influencing the population dynamics of this spider and expanding our knowledge of the ecology and biodiversity of araneopathogenic fungi.
 
Keywords: Hypocreales, Araneae, Behavioral manipulation, Parasitism, Araneopathogenic fungi


 Iguarima censoria (Anyphaenidae) spiders unparasitized and parasitized by Gibellula mineira sp. nov.
(A) Unparasitized individual foraging in vegetation; (B) Silk retreat built by unparasitized spiders on the leaf lamina;
(C) Adult I. censoria individual infected by G. mineira at an early stage of fungal development; (D) G. mineira colony at mature stage of development;
(E) I. censoria individual showing newly formed synnemata (white); (F) I. censoria individual showing mature synnemata (light brown);
(G) Detail of a white synnema, at the beginning of development, with conidiophores showing chains of conidia; (H) Developed light brown synnema, with dense, white conidiophores.
Scale bars: E, G, H = 1 mm.  

Gibellula mineira sp. nov. 



Aline dos Santos, Thairine Mendes-Pereira, Camila de Fátima Ferreira Ribeiro and Thiago Gechel Kloss. 2026. The Silent Hunters of Spiders: Discovering A New Gibellula (Ascomycota: Cordycipitaceae) Fungus in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Fungal Biology. 130(3); 101748. DOI: doi.org/10.1016/j.funbio.2026.101748

Thursday, March 19, 2026

[Paleontology • 2026] Doolysaurus huhmini • A New Dinosaur Species from Korea and its implications for early-diverging neornithischian diversity


 Doolysaurus huhmini
Jung, Kim, Jo & Clarke, 2026


Abstract
The Korean dinosaur fossil record is exceptionally rich in trackways and eggs, yet skeletal remains are exceedingly rare. Two species have been described based on postcranial elements, and a taxon known from cranial materials has not yet been reported. Here, we report a new early-diverging neornithischian species, known from a small, partially articulated skeleton comprising cranial and postcranial elements as well as gastroliths. The specimen is from the mid-Cretaceous Ilseongsan Formation of Aphae Island (Aphaedo). X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) revealed the anatomy of the new species, including the first studied cranial remains of a dinosaur from Korea. The size and anatomical features of the specimen, along with histological analysis, indicate that it is not a fully grown individual, probably 0–2 years old. Gastroliths are present, with morphologies and a relative mass proposed to be consistent with a more omnivorous diet. Phylogenetic analyses recover the new species, Doolysaurus huhmini gen. et sp. nov., as a thescelosaurid. The recovery of Doolysaurus with most other Asian thescelosaurids near the base of this clade provides further evidence for its origin and early biogeography. The new discovery suggests that other small dinosaur fossils may be found at Aphaedo or at sites with similar taphonomic conditions in Korea; Doolysaurus is consistent with richer dinosaurian diversity in the Cretaceous of Korea than is represented in its rich trace fossil record.

Key Words: Aphaedo, Doolysaurus huhmini, mid-Cretaceous, Neornithischia, Thescelosauridae, Shinan

Skeletal anatomy of Doolysaurus huhmini gen. et sp. nov.
All scale bars are 10 mm. Artwork by Janet Cañamar.
Abbreviations: 4th tr: fourth trochanter; be: buccal emargination; boc: basioccipital condyle; bpro: boss for articulation with proatlas; bt: basal tubera; cc: cnemial condyle; cfo: carotid aorta foramen; cpc: coronoid process; dh: dorsal head; dtt: dentary tooth; ec: endocranial cavity; eoas: exoccipital articular surface; fm: foramen magnum; lc: lateral condyle; lw: lateral wing; mc: medial condyle; mkc: Meckelian canal; mt: metatarsal; mw: medial wing; mxt: maxillary tooth; ns: neural spine; oc: occipital condyle; pd: pedal digit; plp: posterolateral process; pop: paroccipital process; poz: postzygapophysis; prz: prezygapophyses; pscf: posterior semicircular canal foramen; ptf: posttemporal foramen.

An artist’s interpretation of a juvenile Doolysaurus huhmini gen. et sp. nov.
 It is depicted alongside birds and other dinosaurs that lived during the Cretaceous in what is now South Korea.
Artwork by Jun Seong Yi.

 Doolysaurus huhmini gen. et sp.

Diagnosis. Doolysaurus huhmini is a small-bodied, early-diverging neornithischian dinosaur with the following unique combination of features recovered from analysis of the Fonseca et al. (2024) dataset, including one optimized autapomorphy (*): (1) the lateral condyle of the quadrate is larger than the medial condyle (shared with Orodromeus and Haya) (ch.196:2); (2) Exoccipital, relative positions of the exits of the hypoglossal nerve (XII) combined into a single exit (shared with Jeholosaurus) (ch. 254:2); (3) Basioccipital, contribution to the border of the foramen magnum more than 1/3 its basioccipital condyle size (shared with Fona) (ch. 261: 0); (4) the apex of the maxillary teeth is located posterior to the center (shared with ...

Etymology. The generic name Doolysaurus honors “Dooly the Little Dinosaur,” an iconic Korean cartoon baby dinosaur character created by Soo-Jung Kim in 1983; saurus is from the Greek σαῦρος (sauros), meaning “lizard.” The specific name, huhmini, honors Professor Dr. Min Huh, a paleontologist who conducted research on a theropod fossil nest from the Aphaedo site, in recognition of his outstanding contributions to the study of dinosaurs in Korea over the past 30 years.


 Jongyun Jung, Minguk Kim, Hyemin Jo and Julia A. Clarke. 2026. A New Dinosaur Species from Korea and its implications for early-diverging neornithischian diversity. Fossil Record 29(1): 87-113. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/fr.29.178152 
https://blog.pensoft.net/2026/03/19/fossil-x-ray-reveals-new-species-of-baby-dino-named-after-iconic-korean-cartoon

[Ichthyology • 2026] Formosania tangi • A New Species of Suck-loach (Cypriniformes: Gastromyzontidae) from the Jiulongjiang River, southeastern China


Formosania tangi 
Chen, Zhou, Chen & Yang, 2026

文乔缨口鳅  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1273.184335 
 
Abstract
For decades, populations of the suck-loach genus Formosania from the Jiulongjiang River in Fujian Province, China, have been identified as F. fascicauda, a species originally described from in a separate coastal drainage basin in Fuqing County. Employing an integrative taxonomic approach combining morphological and molecular phylogenetic analyses, we demonstrate that the Jiulongjiang River population represents a distinct species, formally described here as Formosania tangi sp. nov. It is diagnosed by a combination of characters: 13 rostral barbels arranged in two rows, a distinct straight, dark, longitudinal stripe along the lateral line, and an emarginate caudal fin. Phylogenetic analyses consistently recover it as a unique evolutionary lineage showing significant genetic divergence from true F. fascicauda, with a Kimura 2-parameter distance of 4.16%. The description of F. tangi clarifies the taxonomic status of the Jiulongjiang River population and enhances our understanding of species diversity and biogeography of Formosania in the coastal drainages of southeastern China.

Key words: Molecular phylogeny, morphology, new species, taxonomy

Lateral, dorsal, and ventral views of Formosania tangi sp. nov., holotype, adult, SHOU20251010601, 63.74 mm SL.

Formosania tangi sp. nov.
Habitat (photographed by Yong-Sheng Lin)
and live appearance. (photographed by Hao-Jun Chen).

 Formosania tangi sp. nov. 
 
Diagnosis. The new species can be distinguished from congeners by combination of following characters: rostral barbels 13, well developed, arranged in two rows (Fig. 3B) (vs one row in F. davidi, F. fasciolata, F. galericula, and F. immaculata – Fig. 3A; 12–15 rudimentary barbels in F. chenyiyui – Fig. 3C); lateral line accompanied by broad, dark, longitudinal band, margins weakly undulating or nearly straight, pale stripe between lateral line band and dark dorsal surfaces ...

Etymology. The species name honours Wen-Qiao Tang, a senior Chinese ichthyology researcher, and is derived from the latinized Chinese spelling of his family name, in recognition of his contributions to the field. We propose “Wén Qiáo Yīng Kŏu Qiū” (文乔缨口鳅) as its Chinese common name.


Yang Chen, Jia-Jun Zhou, Jing-Chen Chen, Jin-Quan Yang. 2026. Formosania tangi, A New Species of Suck-loach (Cypriniformes, Gastromyzontidae) from the Jiulongjiang River, southeastern China, with Taxonomic Notes on F. fascicaudaZooKeys. 1273: 147-166. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1273.184335 [17 Mar. 2026]


[Entomology • 2026] Luzonogryllus appa • Note on Phalangopsidae Crickets from Sabah and the Philippines, with Description of A New Species of Luzonogryllus (Orthoptera: Phalangopsinae)


Luzonogryllus (Apterozaclaappa Tan & Alo,

in Tan, Modina, Alo, Haibil, Mapi-Ot, Macas, Nuñeza, Yap, Damit, Japir, Chung et Robillard, 2026. 

Abstract
Recent field work in Sabah state of Malaysia in Borneo, as well as Mindanao, Negros and Siquijor Islands in the Philippines has led to the collection of crickets from the family Phalangopsidae. This allows us to review the taxonomy of Luzonogryllus Yamasaki, 1978 from the Philippines and Sabah. We also describe a new species from Mindanao: Luzonogryllus (Apterozaclaappa Tan & Alo, sp. nov. We also present new locality records for Luzonogryllus (Apterozaclamindoroensis Gorochov, 2006 in Negros and Siquijor Islands. Lastly, we also present new material of Strophiola lugubrina (Stål, 1877) from Mindanao and Negros Islands.

Malaysia, Orthoptera, Parendacustina, , Phalangopsini, Southeast Asia


Luzonogryllus (Apterozaclaappa Tan & Alo, sp. nov.


MING KAI TAN, RIS MENOEL R. MODINA, JOANNA ROSE A. ALO, HELEN H. HAIBIL, EMMARIE F. MAPI-OT, JESSIE JAY P. MACAS, OLGA MACAS NUÑEZA, SHERYL A. YAP, DAYANG FAZRINAH BINTI AWG DAMIT, RAZY JAPIR, ARTHUR Y.C. CHUNG and TONY ROBILLARD. 2026. Note on Phalangopsidae Crickets from Sabah and the Philippines, with Description of A New Species of Luzonogryllus.  Zootaxa. 5777(1); 46-60. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5777.1.2 [2026-03-17]


[Herpetology • 2026] Hemiphyllodactylus dayaoensis, H. maguanensis, H. xingyiensis, ... • Systematic Revision of the Hemiphyllodactylus yunnanensis complex (Squamata: Gekkonidae) with Descriptions of Six New Species

 

 Hemiphyllodactylus yunnanensis  (Boulenger, 1903)
Hemiphyllodactylus dayaoensis sp. nov.;
H. jingdongensis sp. nov.;
H. maguanensis sp. nov.;
H. shuangbaiensis sp. nov.
Zhou, Wang, Han, Ang, Zhang, Liu & Rao, 2026


Abstract
Hemiphyllodactylus Bleeker 1860, one of the fastest-growing genera in the Gekkonidae, comprises 22 species distributed in China, among which Hemiphyllodactylus yunnanensis is believed to be a species complex. Despite the gradual description of Hemiphyllodactylus populations in various regions of China as new species in the past decade, the taxonomy of the Hemiphyllodactylus yunnanensis complex remains unresolved. We collected Hemiphyllodactylus populations of the yunnanensis complex from 11 locations. Based on 1809 bp dataset (1039 bp mitochondrial ND2 gene, fragments of 375 bp nuclear C-mos + 395 bp PDC genes) and a solo 1039 bp NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 (ND2) sequence fragment dataset, the constructed phylogenetic topology revealed that our samples fell into seven independent lineages of Clade 7. Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery (ABGD) results are consistent with our phylogenetic findings. The uncorrected genetic pairwise distance between populations exceeded 4.2% in ND2 gene, and there were also significant morphological differences among them. Therefore, we consider the specimens that cluster with the topotype specimens as true Hemiphyllodactylus yunnanensis, and describe the other six lineages as new species, respectively.

Keywords: Integrative taxonomy, Yunnan province, Cryptic species, Slender geckos 


Hemiphyllodactylus yunnanensis
  
(A) KIZ2023Z097, Topotype, female in life; (B) KIZ2023Z098, Topotype, male in life;
(C) KIZ2023Z311, male in life; (D) KIZ2023Z082, female in life.
 
Hemiphyllodactylus dayaoensis sp. nov. (A) KIZ2023Z177, Holotype, male in life; (B) KIZ2023Z176, Paratype, female in life.
Hemiphyllodactylus jingdongensis sp. nov. (A) KIZ2023Z212, Paratype, male in life; (B) KIZ2023Z211, Holotype, female in life.
Hemiphyllodactylus maguanensis sp. nov. (A) KIZ2023Z332, Paratype, male in life; (B) KIZ2023Z331, Paratype, female in life; (C) KIZ2023Z336, Paratype, female in life; (D) KIZ2023Z333, Paratype, female in life.

Hemiphyllodactylus dayaoensis sp. nov.  
 
Etymology: The scientific name “dayaoensis” is derived from its type locality Dayao County in Yunnan province. we suggest Dayao Slender Gecko in English and “大姚半叶趾虎(Dà Yáo Bàn Yè Zhǐ Hǔ)” in Chinese.


Hemiphyllodactylus jingdongensis sp. nov.  

Etymology: The scientific name “jingdongensis” is derived from its type locality Jingdong County in Yunnan province. we suggest Jingdong Slender Gecko in English and “景东半叶趾虎(Jǐng Dǒng Bàn Yè Zhǐ Hǔ)” in Chinese.


Hemiphyllodactylus maguanensis sp. nov.  

Etymology: The scientific name “maguanensis” is derived from its type locality Maguan County in Yunnan province. we suggest Maguan Slender Gecko in English and “马关半叶趾虎(Mǎ Guān Bàn Yè Zhǐ Hǔ)” in Chinese.

Hemiphyllodactylus shuangbaiensis sp. nov. (A) KIZ2023Z120, Paratype, female in life; (B) KIZ2023Z125, Holotype, female in life.
Hemiphyllodactylus xingyiensis sp. nov. (A) KIZ2023Z303, Paratype, female in life; (B) KIZ2023Z308, Holotype, female in life.
Hemiphyllodactylus yuanyangensis sp. nov. (A) KIZ2023Z392, Paratype, male in life; (B) KIZ2023Z387, Holotype, male in life.

Hemiphyllodactylus shuangbaiensis sp. nov.  

Etymology: The scientific name “shuangbaiensis” is derived from its type locality Shuangbai County in Yunnan province. we suggest Shuangbai Slender Gecko in English and “双柏半叶趾虎(Shuāng Bǎi Bàn Yè Zhǐ Hǔ)” in Chinese.


Hemiphyllodactylus xingyiensis sp. nov. 

Etymology: The scientific name “xingyiensis” is derived from its type locality Xingyi County in Yunnan province. we suggest Xingyi Slender Gecko in English and “兴义半叶趾虎(Xīng Yì Bàn Yè Zhǐ Hǔ)” in Chinese.


Hemiphyllodactylus yuanyangensis sp. nov. 

Etymology: The scientific name “yuanyangensis” is derived from its type locality Yuanyang County in Yunnan province. we suggest Yuanyang Slender Gecko in English and “元阳半叶趾虎(Yuán Yáng Bàn Yè Zhǐ Hǔ)” in Chinese.


Hongxin Zhou, Jishan Wang, Keguo Han, Yufan Ang, Dongru Zhang, Shuo Liu and Dingqi Rao. 2026. Systematic Revision of the Hemiphyllodactylus yunnanensis complex with Descriptions of Six New Species. Scientific Reports. 16: 5562. DOI: doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-35912-9 [10 February 2026]