Showing posts with label Tibet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tibet. Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2026

[Botany • 2026] Koenigia bingchachaensis (Polygonaceae) • A remarkable New Species from the Alpine Subnival of Bingchacha, Zayü, Xizang, China


Koenigia bingchachaensis  Bo Xu & H. Sun, 

in Xu, Sun et Luo. 2026.  

ABSTRACT
A new species, Koenigia bingchachaensis Bo Xu & H. Sun (Polygonaceae), is described and illustrated based on material from the alpine subnival of Zayü County, Xizang, China. The species is characterized by a perennial tufted habit, extensively developed braided-fissured rhizomes, numerous simple spreading stems, prominently petiolate (1.5–4.0 cm) and arched leaves, and paniculate inflorescences borne both terminal and axillary with a short, twisted rachis. Morphologically, it is closely allied to K. tortuosa and K. hookeri, but can be readily distinguished from both by a stable combination of vegetative and reproductive characters. Molecular phylogenetic analyses based on complete plastome and nuclear ribosomal ITS sequences strongly support K. bingchachaensis as a distinct species, resolving it as a well-supported sister lineage to the clade comprising K. hookeri and K. tortuosa. The integrative taxonomic approach, combining detailed morphology with molecular data, unequivocally confirms the specific status of K. bingchachaensis. The discovery expands the known diversity of Koenigia and highlights the potential for uncovering unique plant lineages in the extreme alpine environments of the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau.

Koenigia bingchachaensis: (A) sampling location; (B) plant habit; (C) type specimen; (D) plant showing underground roots; (E) the scanning electron micrographs of pollen grains and achenes; and (F) dissected structures of roots, inflorescence, perianth, ovary, and seeds.

Koenigia bingchachaensis Bo Xu & H. Sun sp. nov.  

 Diagnosis: Within the genus Koenigia, K. bingchachaensis is morphologically distinctive and highly diagnostic. Although it shares the characteristic of terminal paniculate with K. tortuosa and K. hookeri, the new species can be clearly differentiated by the following combination of features: its unique tufted growth habit; elongated and braided-fissured rhizomes that may fragment; simple and spreading stems; and leaves with prominent petioles (1.5–4.0 cm long) that are arched and enclose the plant. Addtionally, its paniculate inflorescences occur both terminal and axillary, with a short, twisted rachis often concealed within the leaf cluster. Taken together, these morphological characteristics support its distinction from all other known species in the genus Koenigia.

  Etymology: The specific epithet “bingchachaensis” refers to the renowned Bingchacha Highway (part of National Highway G219), also known as the new Yunnan-Xizang corridor, which traverses a remote and rugged region of the Himalayas. The type specimen was collected along this very road. The construction of this highway has been pivotal in providing access to this previously inaccessible and botanically underexplored area, leading directly to the discovery of this new species. The name thus commemorates the highway's role as a unique link between human engineering and scientific discovery, a conduit that unveiled a hidden natural treasure.
 

Bo Xu, Hang Sun, Dong Luo. 2026. Koenigia bingchachaensis (Polygonaceae), a remarkable New Species from the Alpine Subnival of Bingchacha, Zayü, Xizang, China. Ecology and Evolution. DOI: doi.org/10.1002/ece3.73290 [28 March 2026]
 
Koenigia bingchachaensis Bo Xu & H. Sun (Polygonaceae), a remarkable new species from the alpine subnival of Zayü County, Xizang, China, is described and illustrated. The integrative evidence from morphology and phylogenetics confirms the status of K. bingchachaensis as a new species, which also highlights the ongoing discovery of unique biodiversity in poorly explored alpine regions of the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

[Entomology • 2026] Vermitigris tsangyanggyatsoAfter forty-eight years: An enigmatic New wormlion fly (Diptera: Vermileonidae) from Xizang, China

 

 Vermitigris tsangyanggyatso   
Shan & Wang, 2026 

 仓央嘉措印穴虻  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1276.184675 

 Abstract
The brachyceran family Vermileonidae (wormlion flies) is characterised by larvae that construct pitfall traps for predation. The Oriental genus Vermitigris Wheeler, 1930 previously included four described species distributed in China, India, Indonesia, and Malaysia. In 1978, unidentified larvae of Vermitigris were collected by Fa-Sheng Li from Yadong, Xizang, China, but the adult stage remained unknown. During a 2025 expedition, adult specimens were obtained, enabling their association with the larvae and recognition as a new species. Herein, Vermitigris tsangyanggyatso sp. nov. is described, with accounts of its immature stages and notes on its biology. This discovery increases the number of Vermitigris species recorded from China from one to two, the total number of species in the genus from four to five, and all the extant species in the family from 66 to 67. The biogeographical implications for Vermitigris are also discussed.

Key words: Dinggyê, new species, taxonomy, western China, Yadong

Morphological characters of Vermitigris tsangyanggyatso sp. nov. (I).
 A. Holotype, male, dorsal view; B. Paratype, male, dorsal view; C. Terminal portion of right hind leg of holotype, male, dorsal view; D. Paratype, female, dorsal view; E. Right halter of paratype, male, dorsal view; F. Paratype, male, left-lateral view. Scale bars: 2.0 mm (A, B, D, F); 0.2 mm (C, E).

Habitats and habitus of  Vermitigris tsangyanggyatso sp. nov. 
A. A pavilion shades a larval colony; B. Larval colony in fine-grained soil under a giant rock; C. Larva inhabiting wood debris produced by wood-boring insects under a pavilion; D. Larva inhabiting fine-grained river sands accumulated under a giant rock next to a river; E, F. Male resting on a plant leaf.

Order Diptera Linnaeus, 1758
Suborder Brachycera Zetterstedt, 1842

Family Vermileonidae Williston, 1886

Genus Vermitigris Wheeler, 1930

Vermitigris tsangyanggyatso Shan & Wang, sp. nov.
Chinese vernacular name. 仓央嘉措印穴虻.

Differential diagnosis.
In the larvae of this species, the marginal spines in the proleg are approximately as long as or only slightly shorter than the middle ones (Fig. 6B–D). However, in V. fairchildi, whose adults are unknown, the marginal spines are approximately half as long as the middle ones (Wheeler 1930: fig. 25j).
....

Etymology. The species is dedicated to Tsangyang Gyatso (1683–1706), the 6th Dalai Lama, a Tibetan poet-monk from Xizang, renowned for his romantic verse and unconventional life. Noun in apposition.


Li-Xia Shan and Ji-Shen Wang. 2026. After forty-eight years: An enigmatic New wormlion fly from Xizang, China (Diptera, Vermileonidae). ZooKeys. 1276: 249-262. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1276.184675 [07 Apr 2026]

Thursday, February 12, 2026

[Botany • 2026] Impatiens ngariensis (Balsaminaceae) • A New Species from Xizang, China

 

Impatiens ngariensis S.Peng, G.W.Hu & Q.F.Wang,

Li, Yuan, T. Hu, G.-W. Hu, Peng et Wang, 2026. 
 
Abstract
A new species, Impatiens ngariensis (Balsaminaceae) from western Xizang, China, is described in this study. Morphological and phylogenetic evidence supports its taxonomic placement within I. sect. Racemosae. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that I. ngariensis forms a clade with I. thomsonii, I. bomiensis, I. fragicolor, I. edgeworthii and I. glandulifera. Morphologically, the new species closely resembles I. sulcata in petiole with 2 basal glands, subcorymbose-racemose inflorescences, lateral sepals ovate, dorsal petal suborbicular and capsule linear, but can be distinguished by several key characteristics, including a suborbicular dorsal petal with a cordate base and a shorter spur.

Key words: Impatiens, New Taxon, Phylogeny, Xizang

Impatiens ngariensis. A. Habitat; B. Whole plant; C. Adaxial and abaxial view of leaf; D. Glands; E. Roots and basal part of stem, showing node; F. Inflorescences; G. Front view of flower; H. Lateral view of flower; I. Dissection of a flower (a. dorsal petal; b. lateral sepals; c. lateral united petals; d. lower sepal; e. stamens and pedicel); J. Inflorescences with immature fruit; K. Seeds.
Photographed by Shuai Peng and Ru-Ping Li.

Impatiens ngariensis S.Peng, G.W.Hu & Q.F.Wang, sp. nov.

Diagnosis. Impatiens ngariensis is morphologically allied to I. thomsonii and I. sulcata, but differs from the former by its larger flowers, suborbicular (vs. orbicular) dorsal petal and a markedly shorter spur (4–6 mm vs. 1 cm); from the latter, it is distinguished by the oblong (vs. broadly dolabriform to broadly elliptic or ovate) upper petal, dolabriform (vs. subdolabriform to oblong-ovate) lower petal and a broadly funnel-form (vs. saccate) lower sepal.


 Ru-Ping Li, Tao-Hua Yuan, Tian Hu, Guang-Wan Hu, Shuai Peng and Qing-Feng Wang. 2026.  Impatiens ngariensis (Balsaminaceae), A New Species from Xizang, China. PhytoKeys. 271: 1-13.  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.271.177400 [10-02-2026]

Friday, January 16, 2026

[Botany • 2026] Agapetes lichengii (Ericaceae) • A New Species from Xizang, China



Agapetes lichengii  Y.H.Tong & B.M.Wang, 

in Tong, Ye, Ni, Wang et Zheng. 2026. 

Abstract
A new species of Ericaceae, Agapetes lichengii, from Xizang Autonomous Region, China, is described and illustrated. The new species is morphologically most similar to A. pentastigma, but differs by having leaf blade with an obtuse or slightly auriculate leaf base, corolla with a constricted basal part and V-shaped stripes, spurless anthers and stigma without obvious gap between crenae. Detailed description, colour plates, and taxonomic notes on the new species are provided.

Key words: Agapetes, Mêdog, morphology, stigma ornamentation, taxonomy

Agapetes lichengii Y.H.Tong & B.M.Wang, 
A. Habit, the arrow shows a plant of this species epiphytic on a big tree trunk; B. Infructescence; C. Flowering branch and leaf branch; D. Leaves; E. Lateral view of flowers, showing the V-shaped transverse bands on corolla tube; F. Front view of flowers.
Photos (A, B) by Cheng Li, (C–F) by Y.H. Tong. 
(A. Unvouchered; B. based on J.B. Ni et al. TYH-2813; C–F. based on B.M. Wang s.n.).

Agapetes lichengii.
A. Inflorescence; B. Ovary, transection view; C. Bract and bracteoles; D. Calyx lobes, adaxial view; E. Pedicel; F. Corolla; G. Style and androecium; H. Style; I. Stamens, adaxial (left), lateral (middle) and abaxial (right) view; J. Lower part of stamens, showing pubescent filaments and echinate thecae, adaxial (left), lateral (middle) and abaxial (right) view; K. Front view of flower, showing the 5-crenated capitate stigma and corolla lobes; L. Front view of young fruits, showing the rounded ring of 10 distinct filament scars.
Scale bars: 3 cm (A, E, F, G, H, I); 5 mm (B, D, J, L); 2 mm (C); 1 cm (K).

 Agapetes lichengii Y.H.Tong & B.M.Wang, sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis. Agapetes lichengii is morphologically similar to A. pentastigma in having pseudo-whorled leaves, corymbose inflorescences, greenish yellow corolla with crimson transverse bands and capitate stigmas, but can be distinguished from it by the elliptic to oblanceolate (vs. oblong-lanceolate) leaf blades with an obtuse or slightly auriculate (vs. attenuate) base, corolla with a constricted(vs. not constricted) basal part, V-shaped (vs. ladder-like) stripes and triangular and spreading or slightly reflexed (vs. triangular-lanceolate and reflexed) lobes, anthers without dorsal spurs (vs. with two small dorsal spurs), stigma without gap between crenae (vs. with obvious gap between crenae), and filament scars forming a rounded ring (vs. a pentagonal ring) on fruit top (Fig. 3; Table 1).

Etymology. The species is named in honor of Mr. Li Cheng, who devoted lots of time and energy to the biodiversity conservation of Mêdog County, and is also one of the discoverers of this new species. The Chinese name is given as 李成树萝卜 (pinyin: lĬ chéng shù luó bo).


Yi-Hua Tong, Xue-He Ye, Jing-Bo Ni, Bing-Mou Wang and Xi-Rong Zheng. 2026. Agapetes lichengii (Ericaceae), A New Species from Xizang, China. PhytoKeys. 269: 183-191.  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.269.177341 

Thursday, January 8, 2026

[Botany • 2026] Aletris medogensis (Nartheciaceae) Integrating Morphology and Chloroplast Genomics: A New East Asian Species of Aletris with Insights Into Regional Phylogeny and Evolution

 

Aletris medogensis  W.B.Ju, Y.L.Qiu & Bo Xu,

in X. Li, Qiu, J.-T. Li, Xu, Yu et Ju, 2026. 
墨脱粉条儿菜  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.1002/ece3.72654

ABSTRACT
The genus Aletris L. (Nartheciaceae) encompasses approximately 21–24 species distributed in East Asia and North America, yet taxonomic ambiguity persists due to overlapping morphological traits among closely related species. During fieldwork in southeastern Xizang, China, a morphologically distinct candidate species, Aletris medogensis, was discovered. To validate its taxonomic status and explore evolutionary relationships within East Asian Aletris, we integrated detailed morphological observation with comparative chloroplast phylogenomics. The newly proposed species is characterized by creeping stolons, narrow leaves, and glandular-pubescent inflorescences. Comparative analysis of 14 East Asian Aletris complete chloroplast genomes revealed a conserved quadripartite structure with species-specific variations, including pseudogenization of ycf1, loss of rrn4.5, and shifts in IR boundaries. Phylogenomic analyses strongly supported A. medogensis as a distinct species closely related to A. alpestris. We identified 18 hypervariable regions as potential molecular markers and detected signals of positive selection in genes ccsA, cemA, and rps12, suggesting adaptive evolution. This study confirms the recognition of A. medogensis as a new species endemic to the eastern Himalayas and demonstrates the utility of chloroplast genomics in resolving taxonomic complexity and understanding evolutionary mechanisms in Aletris.

Keywords: Aletris medogensis, comparative chloroplast genome analysis, East Asia, IR boundary dynamics, molecular markers, Nartheciaceae, selective pressure

Aletris medogensis. Lateral (a), front (b), and back (c) views of the flower. (d) Stamens. (e) Ovary and stigma. (f) Inflorescence. (g) Scape. (h) Bracteate leaf. (i) Leaf. (k) Roots. (l) Plant.

Aletris medogensis W.B.Ju, Y.L.Qiu & Bo Xu, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Aletris medogensis is morphologically most similar to Aletris alpestris, but it can be distinguished from the latter in having narrower leaves (0.45–0.9 mm wide vs. 1–2.5 mm wide) and an obtuse apex (vs. an acuminate apex); the flower pedicels are extremely short, the rachis has densely glandular hairs (vs. sparsely puberulent), the two bracts are unequal in length and shorter than the flowers (vs. one of them 1–4 × flower length). Lobes are obtuse to rounded at the apex (vs. the apex being obtuse to acute).

 Etymology: Located in southeastern Xizang Autonomous Region, Medog (Pinyin spelling “motuo”) County is one of the biodiversity hotspots in China, which has rich plant diversity in the Eastern Himalaya (Qiu et al. 2022). The new species, Aletris medogensis, is found in this region and is named after the geographic location. Its Chinese name, mo tuo fen tiao er cai (墨脱粉条儿菜).

Habit of Aletris medogensis on moss-covered rocks along streams
(photographed by Wen-Bin Ju).
 


Xiong Li, Yong-Ling Qiu, Jiang-Tao Li, Bo Xu, Qi Yu and Wen-Bin Ju. 2026. Integrating Morphology and Chloroplast Genomics: A New East Asian Species of Aletris (Nartheciaceae) With Insights Into Regional Phylogeny and Evolution. Ecology and Evolution. DOI: doi.org/10.1002/ece3.72654 [05 January 2026]

[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

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

[Botany • 2020] Strobilanthes sunhangii (Acanthaceae) • A New Species from Tibet, China

 

   Strobilanthes sunhangii T. Deng, J.T. Chen & Y.F. Deng, 

in Chen, Huang, Lv, Kuang, Luo, Y.-F. Deng et T. Deng. 2020. 
双曲马蓝  ||  DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.166.58831

Abstract
A new species of Acanthaceae, Strobilanthes sunhangii, is described from Mêdog County, Tibet, China. Morphologically, the new species is closely similar to S. medogensis and S. divaricata, but S. sunhangii differs in having glabrous stems, longer spikes, glabrous rachis, double curved corolla and glabrous calyx, different stamens and style.

Keywords: Mêdog, morphological evidence, new species, Strobilanthes sunhangii

 Photograph of the holotype of  Strobilanthes sunhangii T. Deng, J.T. Chen & Y.F. Deng (KUN barcode 1345286!).

 Strobilanthes sunhangii T. Deng, J.T. Chen & Y.F. Deng
A plant showing flowering branch and leaves B flower (view from side) C pistil, ovary and style D calyx E opened corolla showing androecium (Drawn by Xiaoshuang Zhang based on the holotype of Sunhang19964).

 Strobilanthes sunhangii T. Deng, J.T. Chen & Y.F. Deng
A habitat and flowering branch B, C flowering branch and flower (view from front) D, E flower (view from side) F calyx G style H leaf adaxial surfaces I leaf abaxial surfaces.


Strobilanthes sunhangii T. Deng, J.T. Chen & Y.F. Deng, sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis: Strobilanthes sunhangii resembles S. medogensis, but differs by its stems subterete, glabrous (vs. slightly sulcate, bifariously puberulent); spikes (7–)11–22 cm long (vs. 3–6 cm long), rachis glabrous (vs. bifariously pubescent); corolla outside and lobes pinkish-white, inside purplish-pink (vs. corolla yellowish-white, but dull purple on lobes), the tube bent to ca. 90° twice (vs. straight), lobes apices emarginate (vs. rounded); calyx 7–8 mm long, glabrous, 5-lobed to middle (vs. ca. 12 mm long, gland-tipped pubescent, 5-lobed to base), lobes ovate, equal (vs. narrowly oblong-elliptic, subequal); stamens included (vs. exserted), filaments of shorter pair ca. 2 mm long (vs. 7–8 mm long), longer pair ca. 4 mm long (vs. 9–10 mm long), anther thecae ca. 4 mm (vs. ca.1 mm); style with sparse gland-tipped trichomes (vs. glabrous).

Etymology: Strobilanthes sunhangii is named after Prof. Hang Sun (1963–) for his outstanding contributions to the flora of Himalayan regions and collecting this new species for the first time. Verucular name: The Chinese name is given as “双曲马蓝” (shuāng qū mǎ lán), referring to the double-curved corolla of the new species.


 Jun-Tong Chen, Xian-Han Huang, Zhen-Yu Lv, Tian-Hui Kuang, Jian Luo, Yun-Fei Deng and Tao Deng. 2020. Strobilanthes sunhangii (Acanthaceae), A New Species from Tibet, China. PhytoKeys. 166: 117-127. DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.166.58831

Sunday, January 4, 2026

[Botany • 2023] Gastrochilus linzhiensis (Orchidaceae: Aeridinae) • A New Species from Xizang, China

 

Gastrochilus linzhiensis M.K.Li, Y.Luo & Z.Xing, 

in Li, Yu, Ma, Chen, Deng, Liu, Luo et Xing, 2023. 
林芝盆距兰  ||  taiwania.ntu.edu.tw/abstract/1941   

Abstract 
A new species Gastrochilus linzhiensis M.K.Li, Y.Luo & Z.Xing from Linzhi City, Xizang, China is described and illustrated here. It is morphologically similar to G. prionophyllus and G. distichus, but can be distinguished from them in having no awned leaf, smaller flowers, semicircular epichile, cushion with 2–3 round papillary projection, and conically elongated hypochile.  

Keyword: Data Deficient, Gastrochilus distichus, Gastrochilus prionophyllus, section Microphyllae



Gastrochilus linzhiensis M.K.Li, Y.Luo & Z.Xing.
A. plants and habitat; B–C. branches with inflorescence; D. inflorescence; E1–E4. flowers (E1–E2. front view; E3. side view; E4. upward view); F1–F2. sepals and petals; G1–G2. close-up of lips (G1. top view; G2. side view); G3–G5. front view of epichile; H. column and ovary; I1–I2. anther caps; J. pollinia; K. fruit. (Photos: A. by Ying-Peng Yu in Bomi; B-K. by Meng Kai Li).

Gastrochilus linzhiensis M.K.Li, Y.Luo & Z.Xing, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Gastrochilus linzhiensis is similar to G. prionophyllus H. Jiang, D.P. Ye & Q.Liu and G. distichus (Lindl.) O.Kuntze in having pendulous and branched stem with slightly twisted leaves, but differs from them by having longer stem, no awned leaf, more smaller flowers, the semicircular epichile, cushion with 2–3 round papillary projection, and conical hypochile.

Etymology: The specific epithet ‘linzhiensis’ refers to the type locality where the new species occurs, Linzhi City, Xizang, China.
Vernacular name: Lin Zhi Pen Ju Lan, 林芝盆距兰

. Morphological differences between Gastrochilus linzhiensis and its two closely related species.
A1-A2. G. linzhiensis; B1- B2. G. prionophyllus; C1-C2. G. distichus.
(Photos: A1-A2. by Meng-Kai Li; B1-B2, C2.by Qiang Liu; C1. by Ji-Dong Ya).


Meng-Kai Li, Ying-Peng Yu, Peng-Yue Ma, Xue-Da Chen, Jian-Ping Deng, Qiang Liu, Yan Luo and Zhen Xing. 2023. Gastrochilus linzhiensis (Aeridinae, Vandeae, Epidendroideae, Orchidaceae), A New Species from Xizang, China. Taiwnaia.68(3); 314-317. taiwania.ntu.edu.tw/abstract/1941 


Wednesday, December 31, 2025

[Botany • 2022] Rhodiola yushuensis (Crassulaceae) • A New Species from Qinghai, China


Rhodiola yushuensis S.Y. Meng & J. Zhang,

in Rong, Li, Zheng, Zhang et Meng, 2022. 
玉树红景天  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.548.1.5
 
Abstract
A new species from the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau is described and illustrated. Rhodiola yushuensis S.Y. Meng et J. Zhang sp. nov. is similar to Rhodiola smithii (Hamet) S. H. Fu, but it differs in its inner caudex leaves with obvious petioles and the leaf blades are obovate-triangular (vs. inner caudex leaves with strongly descends to the base of the petiole, and the leaves are long linear) and the outer caudex leaves are scalelike, triangular-suborbicular (vs. scalelike, narrowly triangular). Principal component analysis (PCA) analysis of the leaf traits and seed coat architecture also showed that R. yushuensis can be separated from R. smithii. The nrDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences also support the claim that this plant is a new species, and it is grouped with R. smithii.

Rhodiola, Principal component analysis (PCA), Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), New species, Internal transcribed spacers (ITS), Eudicots
 
 Rhodiola yushuensis S.Y. Meng et J. Zhang,
(A) natural habitat, (B) cyme, (C) fruits.

Rhodiola yushuensis S.Y. Meng et J. Zhang sp. nov.


Yu-Lin RONG, Guo-Dong LI, Hai-Lei ZHENG, Jun ZHANG and Shi-Yong MENG. 2022. Rhodiola yushuensis, A New Species of Rhodiola (Crassulaceae) from Qinghai, China. Phytotaxa. 548(1); 63-72. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.548.1.5

Thursday, December 11, 2025

[Ichthyology • 2025] Glaridoglanis verruciloba • A New glyptosternine catfish (Siluriformes: Sisoridae) from the Zayul River in southeastern Tibet, China


Glaridoglanis verruciloba  Gong, 

in Gong, Wang, Liu & Li, 2025 
疣叶凿齿鮡  ||  DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1262.172819

Abstract
Glaridoglanis verruciloba sp. nov. is described from the Zayul River in southeastern Tibet, China. It has long been misidentified as G. andersonii. This new species is diagnosed by the following combination of characters: an enlarged lower lip bearing 4–7 verruciform lobes on the central-posterior margin; an anus situated close to the origin of the anal fin; the ventral surface at the base of maxillary barbels densely covered with striae; 11 branched pectoral-fin rays; 5–6 branched anal-fin rays; and relatively short mandibular barbels. Molecular phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences further supported the validity of this new species, which is within a well-supported clade with substantial genetic divergence from G. andersonii.

Key words: Cytochrome b gene, Glyptosterninae, morphological comparison, phylogenetic analysis, taxonomy

Dorsal, lateral, and ventral views of Glaridoglanis verruciloba sp. nov., holotype, IPBX F202504001, 147.8 mm SL.

 Glaridoglanis verruciloba Gong, sp. nov.

Diagnosis. Glaridoglanis verruciloba sp. nov. can be distinguished from its two congeneric species by the following combination of characters: enlarged lower lip bearing 4–7 verruciform lobes on the central-posterior margin; anus close to the anal-fin origin; ventral surface at the base of maxillary barbels densely covered with striae; 11 branched pectoral-fin rays; 5–6 branched anal-fin rays; head relatively short (HL 19.1–21.7% of SL); and mandibular barbels relatively short (inner mandibular barbel length 13.9–17.7% and outer mandibular barbel length 29.1–36.4% of HL).

Etymology. The specific epithet is derived from the Latin verruca (= wart) and lobus (= lobe), referring to the verruciform lobes on the central-posterior margin of lower lip. As Glaridoglanis is feminine (fide Kottelat 2013), the specific epithet is treated accordingly. The Chinese common name of this species is 疣叶凿齿鮡 (Yóu yè záo chǐ zhào), which literally means “wart-lobed chiseled-tooth catfish”.

Type locality of Glaridoglanis verruciloba sp. nov.:
a mountain stream flowing into the Sangqu River, the eastern branch of the upper Zayul River (upper left); paratype locality: a mountain stream flowing into the Gongrigabu River, the western branch of the upper Zayul River (right); the mainstem of Gongrigabu River (lower left); and a living specimen (approx. 140 mm SL) photographed in an aquarium.


 Zheng Gong, Huanshan Wang, Yanchao Liu and Jianchuan Li. 2025. Glaridoglanis verruciloba sp. nov., A New glyptosternine catfish (Siluriformes, Sisoridae) from the Zayul River in southeastern Tibet, China. ZooKeys 1262: 289-301. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1262.172819

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

[Mammalogy • 2025] Soriculus dexingensis • A New Species of the Genus Soriculus (Eulipotyphla: Soricidae) from Medog, Tibet, China, based on morphological and molecular data

 

Soriculus dexingensis
Tao Zhang, Yang, Jiang, Gu, Zou, Fu, Guo, Tong Zhang, Liu & Chen, 2025
  

Abstract
The genus Soriculus (Soricidae, Eulipotyphla) currently comprises five recognized species, predominantly distributed in the Himalayas and the Gaoligong Mountains. During our survey of small mammals in Medog County, Tibet, China, 11 Soriculus specimens were collected. In this study, we conducted phylogenetic analyses of the genus using one mitochondrial gene (Cytb) and three nuclear genes (BRCA1, APOB, and RAG2) to assess the phylogenetic relationships of these specimens. The morphology of the 11 specimens was compared with other species within the genus. Our results demonstrate that these specimens represent a new species, Soriculus dexingensis sp. nov. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that S. dexingensis sp. nov. forms a distinct sister clade to S. medogensis, and the Kimura 2-Parameter (K2P) distances between all known species of Soriculus ranged from 0.111 to 0.187, indicating interspecific divergence. Morphologically, the new species is distinguished by a relatively longer tail and a significantly higher TL/HB ratio. The discovery of S. dexingensis sp. nov. in Medog County suggests that the diversity of Soriculus species remains underestimated. Further biodiversity surveys of small mammals across the Himalayan region are warranted.

Key words: Morphology, new species, phylogeny, shrew, small mammals, Soriculus, taxonomy

Left: Dorsal, ventral and lateral views of the skull and mandibles of Soriculus dexingensis sp. nov. (SAF11216).
 Right: dorsal, ventral, and lateral views of S. dexingensis sp. nov. (SAF11216).

Soriculus dexingensis sp. nov.



 Tao Zhang, Siyu Yang, Haijun Jiang, Lin Gu, Qingfang Zou, Changkun Fu, Keji Guo, Tong Zhang, Shaoying Liu and Shunde Chen. 2025. A New Species of the Genus Soriculus (Soricidae, Eulipotyphla, Mammalia) from Medog, Tibet, China, based on morphological and molecular data. ZooKeys. 1262: 175-189. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1262.164459

Monday, December 8, 2025

[Entomology • 2025] Layahima qilin, L. pixiu, ... • New Insights into Diversity and Evolution of the Oriental Antlion Genus Layahima Navás, 1912 (Neuroptera: Myrmeleontidae), with Description of New Species and new larvae from China


Layahima chiangi Banks, 1941; 
[C] Layahima qilin sp. nov., male, holotype, Weixi (Yunnan); [D] L. haohani sp. nov., female, holotype, Puer (Yunnan);
[E] L. pixiu sp. nov., female, holotype, Hutiaoxia (Yunnan); [F] L. zhitengi sp. nov., female, holotype, Fugong (Yunnan).

Zheng, Tu, Badano & Liu, 2025

Abstract
Layahima Navás, 1912 is the most diverse antlion genus of the tribe Acanthoplectrini (Myrmeleontidae: Dendroleontinae) endemic to the Oriental region, currently comprising 12 species. However, the species diversity of this genus is still far from completely explored, and its larval stage is poorly known. Here, we describe four new species of Layahima, i.e., L. haohani sp. nov., L. qilin sp. nov., L. pixiu sp. nov., and L. zhitengi sp. nov., from Southwest China. Moreover, we describe the larval stages of three Layahima species, i.e., L. chiangi Banks, 1941, L. lhoba Zheng, Badano, Liu, 2023, and L. yangi Wan & Wang, 2006. The precise distribution of L. chiangi, whose type locality was previously unclear, has now been clarified to be exclusively restricted to the Nujiang dry hot river valley around Cawarong, Xizang. The phylogeny of Layahima by adding new species herein reported was inferred based on molecular data. The L. zonata group, once considered monophyletic, was recovered as paraphyletic within Layahima.

Keywords: Myrmeleontoidea, taxonomy, phylogeny, larva, Oriental region

Distribution map of Layahima spp.

Habitus of Layahima spp. from China, adults:
A L. chiangi Banks, 1941, male, Cawarong (Xizang); B L. chiangi, male, holotype (© D. Grimaldi from AMNH);
L. qilin sp. nov., male, holotype, Weixi (Yunnan); D L. haohani sp. nov., female, holotype, Puer (Yunnan);
L. pixiu sp. nov., female, holotype, Hutiaoxia (Yunnan); F L. zhitengi sp. nov., female, holotype, Fugong (Yunnan).

Layahima chiangi Banks, 1941, living photos and its habitat:
 A Habitat, Cawarong (Xizang), B living adult. C Newly hatched first instar larva. D Well-fed first instar larva (photos by Y. Zheng).


Yuchen Zheng, Yuezheng Tu, Davide Badano and Xingyue Liu. 2025. New Insights into Diversity and Evolution of the Oriental Antlion Genus Layahima Navás, 1912 (Neuroptera: Myrmeleontidae), with Description of New Species and new larvae from China. Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny. 83: 543-571. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/asp.83.e145082 [17 Oct 2025]

Saturday, December 6, 2025

[Botany • 2025] Balanophora xinfeniae (Balanophoraceae) • A New Species from Xizang, China


Balanophora xinfeniae C.L. Fu, M. Li & B. Xu, 

in Fu, Zhou, Liao, Zhang, Xu et Li, 2025. 
 
Abstract
Balanophora xinfeniae C.L.Fu, M.Li & B.Xu, a new species discovered in Xizang, China, is described and illustrated here. Molecular phylogenetic analyses and morphological comparisons strongly support B. xinfeniae as a new species within the genus Balanophora. The most distinctive characteristic of the new species is its dioecious sexual system, with male flowers having a 3-lobed perianth, opposite leaves with serrated tips, and yellow scapes. Although it shares morphological similarities with B. henryi, B. xinfeniae can be distinguished by its flat spheroid tubers without stellate lenticels, yellow scape, prominently serrated apical leaf margins, and nearly spherical or ovoid-ellipsoid female inflorescences.

Key words: Balanophora xinfeniae, China, holoparasitic plants, phylogeny, taxonomy

Line illustration of Balanophora xinfeniae C.L. Fu, M. Li & B. Xu.
 A. Male individual; B. Male flower; C. Female individual; D. Female flowers surrounding one claviform body.
Drawn by Zi-Heng Yu based on YLZB11691-A and YLZB11691-B specimens stored in CDBI.

Balanophora xinfeniae C.L. Fu, M. Li & B. Xu.
 A, B. Habitats (both male and female; arrows point to female individuals); C. Female individual (upper) and male individual (lower); D. Male individual; E. Female individual; F. Leaves and scape; G. Leaves; H. Tuber; I. Male inflorescence; J. Female inflorescence; K. Female flower and claviform body.
Photos by Meng Li and Chen-Long Fu.

Morphology of Balanophora xinfeniae (A–C), B. henryi (D–F),
B. involucrata
(G–I), and B. flava (J–M).
A, D, G, J, K. Male and female individuals; B, E, H, L. Leaves; C, F, I, M. Tubers.
Photos by Meng Li and Wei-Hua Liao.

 Balanophora xinfeniae C.L.Fu, M.Li & B.Xu, sp. nov.
  
Diagnosis. Balanophora xinfeniae is morphologically similar to B. henryi, but the two species can be distinguished by several features. The tuber branching shape of B. xinfeniae is characterized as flat spheroid or subglobose, whereas that of B. henryi is irregularly spherical or oblate. The scapes of B. xinfeniae are yellow, in contrast to the red or red-to-yellow scapes of B. henryi. In B. xinfeniae, the apical margins of the leaves are prominently serrate, whereas those of B. henryi are entire. The female inflorescence of B. xinfeniae is nearly spherical or ovoid-ellipsoid, while that of B. henryi is broadly ovoid. The flowering period of B. xinfeniae is from April to May, compared to September to November for B. henryi (Table 2; Fig. 2).

Etymology. The species epithet xinfeniae honors Prof. Xin-Fen Gao (former curator of the CDBI Herbarium), a distinguished botanist who made significant contributions to the taxonomy of seed plants, lycopods, and pteridophytes.

Vernacular name. Chinese Mandarin: Xìn fēn shé gū (信芬蛇菰).


Chen-Long Fu, Jia-Ning Zhou, Wei-Hua Liao, Tong Zhang, Bo Xu and Meng Li. 2025. Balanophora xinfeniae (Balanophoraceae), A New Species from Xizang, China. PhytoKeys. 266: 241-252. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.266.147400 [19 Nov 2025]