Tuesday, July 16, 2013

[Botany • 2004] มหาพรหมราชินี | Mitrephora sirikitiae • a remarkable new species (Annonaceae) endemic to northern Thailand


มหาพรหมราชินี
Mitrephora sirikitiae
Weerasooriya, Chalermglin & R.M.K. Saunders

Abstract
A new species of Annonaceae, Mitrephora sirikitiae, is described from Mae Hong Son Province in northern Thailand. It is easily distinguished from the seven species of Mitrephora previously recorded from Thailand due to its very large, showy flowers. It is most similar to M. winitii, but differs in its larger flowers, with inner petals that become undulate at maturity. The profuse blooming of the new species and its large flowers with mild fragrance suggest that may be of significant horticultural potential.




  

มหาพรหมราชินี
 Mitrephora sirikitiae Weerasooriya, Chalermglin & R.M.K. Saunders
วงศ์:  ANNONACEAE

“มหาพรหมราชินี” มีถิ่นกำเนิดอยู่บริเวณยอดเขาสูงชัน ที่ระดับความสูง ๑,๑๐๐ เมตร ในเขตอำเภอเมือง จังหวัดแม่ฮ่องสอน

ข้อมูลพรรณไม้ดังกล่าว ลงตีพิมพ์ในวารสาร Nordic Journal of  Botany แห่งประเทศเดนมาร์ก โดยได้รับพระราชทานพระบรมราชานุญาต ให้ใช้พระนามาภิไธย เป็นชื่อพรรณไม้ชนิดใหม่ว่า มหาพรหมราชินี | Mitrephora sirikitiae เพื่อเป็นการร่วมเฉลิมพระเกียรติสมเด็จพระนางเจ้าฯ พระบรมราชินีนาถ เนื่องใน โอกาศมหามงคลเฉลิมพระชนมพรรษา ๖ รอบ ใน ๑๒ สิงหาคม พ.ศ. ๒๕๔๗


Aruna D. Weerasooriya, Piya Chalermglin & Richard M. K. Saunders. 2004. Mitrephora sirikitiae (Annonaceae): a remarkable new species endemic to northern Thailand. Nordic Journal of Botany. 24 (2): 201–206. DOI: dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1756-1051.2004.tb00833.x



Monday, July 15, 2013

[Crustacea • 2013] Mictyris thailandensis | ปูทหารยักษ์ปากบารา • A new species of Mictyris Latreille, 1806 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Mictyridae) from the Andaman coast of Thailand, with notes on its ecology and behaviour


ปูทหารยักษ์ปากบารา | Mictyris thailandensis
Davie, Wisespongpand & Shih 2013

Abstract
A new species of soldier crab (genus Mictyris Latreille, 1806) is described from the Andaman Sea coast of Thailand. Mictyris thailandensis sp. nov. differs morphologically from its described congeners by its pale plain colouring, the differently shaped apex of the male first gonopod, and by chela features. It also has significant genetic divergence (cytochrome oxidase I ≥ 11.95%) from other described species.

Key words: Mictyridae, Mictyris, Thailand, Andaman Sea, Indian Ocean, new species, taxonomy, intertidal, ecology, behaviour, COI



Davie, Peter J. F., Puntip Wisespongpand & Hsi-te Shih. 2013. A new species of Mictyris Latreille, 1806 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Mictyridae) from the Andaman coast of Thailand, with notes on its ecology and behaviour. Zootaxa. 3686(1): 65-76. 



Friday, July 12, 2013

[Ichthyology • 2013] Tetraodon palustris | ปลาปักเป้าบึง • a new freshwater pufferfish (Tetraodontiformes: Tetraodontidae) from the Mekong Basin of Thailand


 Tetraodon palustris Saenjundaeng, Vidthayanon & Grudpun. 2013

Abstract
Tetraodon palustris, new species, is described from the Mekong basin of Thailand. Tetraodon palustris differs from T. cochinchinensis and T. fangi in having no ocellus on the flank and spinules dorsally from the interorbital region to the end of the dorsal-fin base. Tetraodon cochinchinensis is distinguished from T. fangi by having a longer snout (43.5–49.2% HL in T. cochinchinensis vs. 37.9–41.1% HL in T. fangi) and is covered with spinules dorsally from the front of the nasal organs to the end of the dorsal-fin base (vs. from the front of the eyes to the end of the dorsal-fin base in T. fangi).

Key words: Tetraodon, new species, Mekong basin





Saenjundaeng, Pasakorn, Chavalit Vidthayanon & Chaiwut Grudpun. 2013. Tetraodon palustris, a new freshwater pufferfish (Tetraodontiformes: Tetraodontidae) from the Mekong Basin of Thailand. Zootaxa. 3686(1): 77–84. 

[Paleontology • 2013] Ocepechelon bouyai • A Giant Chelonioid Turtle from the Late Cretaceous of Morocco with a Suction Feeding Apparatus Unique among Tetrapods



Ocepechelon bouyai gen. et sp. nov., life reconstruction
 by Charlène Letenneur 
This species appears to have been a suction-feeder, although unlike extant turtles which use that strategy, the gape is very small and the snout is a long bony tube. Remarkably, the functional morphology has been compared to beaked whales and pipefish. This illustration also shows the curious posteriorly-placed nostrils and traces of mouth papillae (inferred from leatherbacks and beaked whales). What it doesn’t show is the size; with a 70 cm long skull, this was one of the largest of the marine turtles.

Abstract

Background
Secondary adaptation to aquatic life occurred independently in several amniote lineages, including reptiles during the Mesozoic and mammals during the Cenozoic. These evolutionary shifts to aquatic environments imply major morphological modifications, especially of the feeding apparatus. Mesozoic (250–65 Myr) marine reptiles, such as ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, mosasaurid squamates, crocodiles, and turtles, exhibit a wide range of adaptations to aquatic feeding and a broad overlap of their tooth morphospaces with those of Cenozoic marine mammals. However, despite these multiple feeding behavior convergences, suction feeding, though being a common feeding strategy in aquatic vertebrates and in marine mammals in particular, has been extremely rarely reported for Mesozoic marine reptiles.

Principal Findings
A relative of fossil protostegid and dermochelyoid sea turtles, Ocepechelon bouyai gen. et sp. nov. is a new giant chelonioid from the Late Maastrichtian (67 Myr) of Morocco exhibiting remarkable adaptations to marine life (among others, very dorsally and posteriorly located nostrils). The 70-cm-long skull of Ocepechelon not only makes it one of the largest marine turtles ever described, but also deviates significantly from typical turtle cranial morphology. It shares unique convergences with both syngnathid fishes (unique long tubular bony snout ending in a rounded and anteriorly directed mouth) and beaked whales (large size and elongated edentulous jaws). This striking anatomy suggests extreme adaptation for suction feeding unmatched among known turtles.

Conclusion/Significance
The feeding apparatus of Ocepechelon, a bony pipette-like snout, is unique among tetrapods. This new taxon exemplifies the successful systematic and ecological diversification of chelonioid turtles during the Late Cretaceous. This new evidence for a unique trophic specialization in turtles, along with the abundant marine vertebrate faunas associated to Ocepechelon in the Late Maastrichtian phosphatic beds of Morocco, further supports the hypothesis that marine life was, at least locally, very diversified just prior to the Cretaceous/Palaeogene (K/Pg) biotic crisis.


Figure 3. Ocepechelon bouyai gen. et sp. nov., right lateral view of the skull.

______________________

Etymology: Genus name from OCP, acronym for the Groupe Office Chérifien des Phosphates, the mining company exploiting phosphatic deposits in Morocco, and from Χελώνη (chelone), meaning turtle in Greek; species name from Mr. Baâdi Bouya, engineer geologist, head of the OCP Geological Survey in Khouribga, for his help during our fieldwork.


Conclusion
During the Mesozoic, large marine carnivorous reptiles such as ichthyopterygians, sauropterygians, mosasaurid squamates and crocodyliformes exhibited a wide range of feeding strategies based on their tooth morphologies, from benthic crushing feeders to huge open-sea generalist predators. However, despite this considerable diversity in the Mesozoic marine reptile modes of predation, as well as a broad overlap of their tooth morphospaces with those of Cenozoic marine mammals, indicating multiple feeding behavior convergences, suction feeding, though being a common feeding strategy in aquatic vertebrates has been extremely rarely reported among Mesozoic marine reptiles. It has been hypothesized (but without any concrete argument) for Hupesuchus, a small marine reptile from the Middle Triassic of China and recently postulated for Shonisaurus and Shastasaurus, both large toothless Triassic ichthyosaurs, interpreted as suction feeders also comparable to many extant odontocetes.

The unique anatomy and ecology of Ocepechelon suggest a prey capture behavior similar to that of several extant suction feeding odontocetes. Furthermore it is the only bony pipette-feeder ever reported among tetrapods. Irrespective of its feeding strategy, Ocepechelon dramatically illustrates the anatomical and taxonomic diversification of chelonioid turtles during the Late Cretaceous (Figures 6, 7). It combines turtle morphology with a feeding device that parallels the adaptation of modern pipefishes and some living odontocetes.

With its peculiar morphology, Ocepechelon likely occupied a different ecological niche compared to other coeval marine reptiles. Its specialization further emphasizes the tremendous diversity that prevailed among the fishes and reptiles in the shallow marine environments of the Late Maastrichian Phosphates of Morocco, shortly before the K/Pg mass extinction event.


 Bardet, N.; Jalil, N. E.; De Lapparent De Broin, F.; Germain, D.; Lambert, O.; Amaghzaz, M. 2013. A Giant Chelonioid Turtle from the Late Cretaceous of Morocco with a Suction Feeding Apparatus Unique among Tetrapods. In Viriot, Laurent. PLoS ONE. 8 (7): e63586. doi: dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063586 

[Herpetology • 2013] Range extension of Rhacophorus dulitensis Boulenger, 1892 (Anura: Rhacophoridae) in western Sarawak, Borneo


Figure 2. Female Rhacophorus dulitensis (NMBE 1056708)
from Kubah National Park, Sarawak, Malaysia (western Borneo).

Abstract
 We report on a record of Rhacophorus dulitensis from Kubah National Park in western Sarawak. The new record extends the known geographical range of the species 300 km to the west.

________________

Rhacophorus dulitensis is endemic to Borneo, the largest of the Southeast Asian Greater Sunda Islands, where it occurs in primary lowland forest at elevations below 600 m a.s.l. (Harvey et al. 2002; Malkmus et al. 2002). Although not a rare species, it is seldom encountered because it lives in the canopy layer of forests and only descends to lower vegetation in order to breed (Dehling 2011). 

Rhacophorus dulitensis has a scattered distribution in central and northern Borneo. Originally described from Mt. Dulit in eastern Sarawak (3°25’ N, 114°00’ E), it has since been recorded from several localities in central and eastern Sarawak, Brunei Darussalam, Sabah, and East Kalimantan (Boulenger 1892; Inger et al. 2004; Inger and Stuebing 2005; Das 2007; Figure 1).

.......................

J. Maximilian Dehling and D. Matthias Dehling. 2013. Range extension of Rhacophorus dulitensis Boulenger, 1892 (Amphibia: Anura: Rhacophoridae) in western Borneo. Check List. 9(2): 425–426.

[Herpetology • 2012] Novel behaviors of Southeast Asian rhacophorid frogs (Anura, Rhacophoridae) with an updated anuran species list for Danum Valley, Sabah, Malaysian Borneo


FIGURE 2. A. Rhacophorus pardalis constructing leaf nest around foam egg mass.

Abstract
Land-use change and the predicted impacts of climate change are major threats to the biodiversity of Southeast Asia. Judging their impacts requires baseline biodiversity data and an understanding of the behavior of resident species in order to effectively manage that diversity. Here, we present an updated anuran species list for Danum Valley Field Center from the results of a nine-week survey expedition. We employed nocturnal stream searches as the basis of sampling and include data gathered from opportunistic encounters. We documented 47 anuran species, including one new locality record. In addition, we recorded a single species of caecilian (Gymnophiona). During this survey period we also documented aggressive territoriality in Rhacophorus appendiculatus, the manipulation of leaves to surround eggs by Rhacophorus pardalis, and predation of an adult Rhacophorus dulitensis by Polypedates otilophus. These observations and their implications are discussed.

Key words: Amphibians, Rhacophorus, Polypedates, reproduction, predation, diet, call recording




Rhacophorus pardalis nest construction.
– On three occasions, we observed female Rhacophorus pardalis laying eggs, and subsequently manipulating leaves to cover the foam nest. In each case, the female laid her eggs on a single leaf and after the male departed, used her front and hind limbs to pull an adjacent leaf towards the egg mass or folded over the leaf on which her eggs were placed, to form a cover for the foam nest. The female then positioned herself in a way that allowed her to press the two leaves together around the eggs (Fig. 2A), which appeared to 'glue' the leaves or leaf blades to the egg mass. Each time, the female sat near the bottom or top of the clutch with her front and hind feet splayed to press the leaves, or halves of the single leaf, together for approximately 30 minutes, then shifted her position to the top or bottom end, again pressing the leaves together for an additional 30 minutes. 

FIGURE 2.  B. Polypedates otilophus consuming Rhacophorus dulitensis

Frog predation by Polypedates otilophus.
– On a single occasion, we observed an adult Polypedates otilophus in the process of consuming an adult male Rhacophorus dulitensis (Fig. 2B). Upon collection of the P. otilophus, the meal was disgorged. To our knowledge, this is the first documented case of frog predation by a rhacophorid.


CONCLUSION
The novel behaviors and new locality records reported here for Danum Valley highlight the importance of preserving lowland Bornean forests. Currently, much of Southeast Asia is being logged or converted to oil palm plantations (Sodhi et al., 2004; Sodhi et al., 2010), with devastating consequences for ecosystem services and biodiversity in general. Studies are currently under way to determine the effects of conversion of forest to oil palm on biodiversity of amphibians. Continued monitoring of lowland biodiversity is essential as a baseline to judge the impacts of forest fragmentation and potential latitudinal and elevation range shifts, through lowland biotic attrition, predicted under climate change scenarios. It may be possible for many species to behaviorally adapt to land use and climate change, and it is important to document baseline behavioral patterns where possible. We encourage further research on Bornean amphibian ecology, evolution, and behavior in order to more fully understand the region‘s biodiversity before it is lost.


Sheridan, J.A., S.D. Howard, P. Yambun, J.L. Rice, R. Cadwallader-Staub, A. Karolus, and D. Bickford. 2012. Novel behaviors of Southeast Asian rhacophorid frogs (Anura, Rhacophoridae) with an updated anuran species list for Danum Valley, Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. Tropical Natural History. 12 (1): 1-8.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

[Mammalogy / Ecology • 2013] Dawn Bat, Eonycteris spelaea Dobson (Chiroptera: Pteropodidae) Feeds Mainly on Pollen of Economically Important Food Plants in Thailand


Dawn Bat Eonycteris spelaea and Parkia flower

The diet of Eonycteris spelaea was determined for bats captured monthly between June 2002-June 2003 at a cave entrance in Songkhla Province, Southern Thailand. Faecal analysis and pollen collected from the bats’ fur were used to identify the plant species ingested. From 1,155 diet records from 506 samples, at least eleven plant taxa were identified. Individual bats feed on flowers of up to six plant species each night. Parkia spp. (34%) and Musa spp. (28%) have the highest percentage frequency followed by Eugenia spp. (9.4%), Oroxylum indicum (6.4%), Durio zibethinus (6.2%), Ceiba pentandra (5.5%), Sonneratia spp. (5.2%), while Cocos nucifera and an unknown plant species, made up a minor proportion (<2.5%). Parkia and Musa were the main dietary items of E. spelaea in nearly every month, while the remaining components of the diet varied seasonally. Durio spp. is an important contributor to the diet during March–April (39–42%). The results from pollen collected from fur generally corresponded with those from faecal analysis, but Musa spp. had a higher percentage frequency on the fur (34%) than Parkia spp. (23%). The dawn return patterns of the bats to their roosts differ significantly between sexes. Most mature males return early in the night while most females return at dawn. Earlier returning males were significantly heavier than those returning later. This return pattern is similar to that reported during the breeding period for those polygynous fruit bats that maintain a harem. Thus, these results suggest that Espelaea may exhibit a resource-defence polygynous mating system.

 Keywords: Eonycteris, diet, faecal analysis, nectarivorous bat, Parkia, pollen, polygyny, return pattern


Dawn Bat Eonycteris spelaea pollinating a wild banana flower


Sara Bumrungsri, Duncan Lang, Colin Harrower, Ekapong Sripaoraya, Kitika Kitpipit and Paul A. Racey. 2013. The Dawn Bat, Eonycteris spelaea Dobson (Chiroptera: Pteropodidae) Feeds Mainly on Pollen of Economically Important Food Plants in Thailand. Acta Chiropterologica. 15(1):95-104. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.3161/150811013X667894 

[PaleoEcology / Paleontology • 2013] Skull Ecomorphology of Megaherbivorous Dinosaurs from the Dinosaur Park Formation (Upper Campanian) of Alberta, Canada | Dinosaurs, Diets and Ecological Niches


Styracosaurus, Euoplocephalus & Gryposaurus 
Herbivorous (plant-eating) Dinosaurs from Alberta,
about 75 million years ago, shows niche partitioning at work. It is likely that dietary differences between each species allowed the habitat to support such a diverse population of herbivores.
Shown are six species including two ceratopsids, two hadrosaurs and two anylosaurs;
Chasmosaurus belli, Lambeosaurus lambei and Styracosaurus albertensis,
 
Euoplocephalus tutus, Gryposaurus and Panoplosaurus mirus with Styracosaurus in background
illustration: Julius Csotonyi

Abstract

Megaherbivorous dinosaur coexistence on the Late Cretaceous island continent of Laramidia has long puzzled researchers, owing to the mystery of how so many large herbivores (6–8 sympatric species, in many instances) could coexist on such a small (4–7 million km2) landmass. Various explanations have been put forth, one of which–dietary niche partitioning–forms the focus of this study. Here, we apply traditional morphometric methods to the skulls of megaherbivorous dinosaurs from the Dinosaur Park Formation (upper Campanian) of Alberta to infer the ecomorphology of these animals and to test the niche partitioning hypothesis. We find evidence for niche partitioning not only among contemporaneous ankylosaurs, ceratopsids, and hadrosaurids, but also within these clades at the family and subfamily levels. Consubfamilial ceratopsids and hadrosaurids differ insignificantly in their inferred ecomorphologies, which may explain why they rarely overlap stratigraphically: interspecific competition prevented their coexistence.

Mallon JC, Anderson JS. 2013. Skull Ecomorphology of Megaherbivorous Dinosaurs from the Dinosaur Park Formation (Upper Campanian) of Alberta, Canada. PLoS ONE. 8(7): e67182.


Chasmosaurus & Lambeosaurus | EuoplocephalusGryposaurus Panoplosaurus with Styracosaurus in background

GryposaurusPanoplosaurus mirus and Styracosaurus albertensis in background


Dinosaurs, diets and ecological niches: Study shows recipe for success
A new study by a Canadian Museum of Nature scientist helps answer a long-standing question in palaeontology—how numerous species of large, plant-eating dinosaurs could co-exist successfully over geological time.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

[Ichthyology • 1999] Carinotetraodon imitator • a new freshwater pufferfish (Teleostei: Tetraodontiformes) from India


  Carinotetraodon imitator Britz & Kottelat, 1999
(a) live male in normal coloration; (b) in courting coloration with skin keels erected; (c) live female in normal coloration.

Abstract
Carinotetraodon imitator, new species, a sexually dimorphic freshwater pufferfish, is described from Kerala, India. It has a colour pattern resembling that of Tetraodon travancoricus. The two species differ, however, in details of the colour pattern, in body spination, and the presence of an erectible dorsal and ventral keel of skin in courting males; the latter character assigns the new species to the genus Carinotetraodon. It is distinguished from C. lorteti and C. salivator, by colour pattern of both sexes, body spination, and a maximum size of less than 26 mm standard length which makes C. imitator one of the smallest known pufferfishes. The keels have not been observed in T. travancoricus but this species is hypothesized to belong to Carinotetraodon on the basis of osteological characters.

Key words: Tetraodontidae, Carinotetraodon, sexual dimorphism, skin keels

Britz, R. & Kottelat, M., 1999. Carinotetraodon imitator, a new freshwater pufferfish from India (Teleostei: Tetraodontiformes). Journal of South Asian Natural History. 4 (1): 39-47.

[Ichthyology • 1995] Carinotetraodon salivator • a New Species of Pufferfish (Teleostei: Tetraodontidae) from Sarawak, Malaysia


Carinotetraodon salivator K. K. P. Lim & Kottelat, 1995

Abstract
 Carinotetraodon salivator, a new species of freshwater pufferfish, is described from Sarawak. It differs from its only known congener, C. lorteti, in having a shallower body (depth 36-41% SL, vs. 45- 5 3), 10 anal fin rays (vs. 11), 16-17 pectoral fin rays (vs. 14-15), 17-18 (mode 18) vertebrae (vs. 15-17, mode 16), eyes situated nearer the dorsal profile of the head, a distinct pale blotch present under the lower lip, a white distal margin absent from the caudal fin, and a ventrum which is striped in females and cross-banded in mature males. A lectotype is designated for Tetraodon borneensis Regan, 1902 .

Kelvin K.P. Lim; Maurice Kottelat . 1995. Carinotetraodon salivator, a New Species of Pufferfish from Sarawak, Malaysia (Teleostei: Tetraodontidae). Japanese Journal of Ichthyology. 41(4): 359-365.  http://www.wdc-jp.biz/pdf_store/isj/publication/pdf/41/414/41401.pdf

[Paleontology • 2013] Tataouinea hannibalis • A new sauropod dinosaur from the Early Cretaceous of Tunisia with an extreme avian-like pneumatization


Tataouinea hannibalis
Fanti, Cau, Hassine & Contessi 2013
Art by D. Bonadonna

Recent interpretations of the postcranial anatomy of sauropod dinosaurs differ about pneumatic features supporting an avian-like ventilatory system; the most conservative workers reject most postcranial pneumatizations as being unambiguous evidence of abdominal air sacs. Here we describe the first articulated dinosaur skeleton from Tunisia and refer it to a new rebbachisaurid sauropod, Tataouinea hannibalis gen. et sp. nov. The Tunisian specimen shows a complex pattern of caudosacral and pelvic pneumatization—including the first report of an ischial pneumatic foramen among Dinosauria—strongly supporting the presence of abdominal air sacs. Character optimization among Rebbachisauridae indicates that in the caudal vertebrae, pneumatization of the neural arches preceded that of the centra; in the pelvis, pneumatization of the bones adjacent to the sacrum preceded that of more distal elements. Tataouinea was more closely related to European nigersaurines than to otherwise Gondwanan rebbachisaurids; this supports an Afro-European route for rebbachisaurid dispersal.

Subject terms: Biological sciences, Evolution, Palaeontology





Fanti F., Cau A., Hassine M., Contessi M. 2013. A new sauropod dinosaur from the Early Cretaceous of Tunisia with an extreme avian-like pneumatization. Nature Communications. 4 (2080): 1–7. DOI: 10.1038/ncomms3080

[Paleontology • 2011] Demandasaurus darwini • a new rebbachisaurid sauropod from the Early Cretaceous of the Iberian Peninsula


Demandasaurus darwini
Fernández-Baldor, Canudo, Huerta, Montero, Suberbiola and Salgado 2011

A new medium−sized rebbachisaurid sauropod from the Castrillo la Reina Formation (Upper Barremian–Lower Aptian) in Burgos Province, Demandasaurus darwini gen. et sp. nov., is described. It is known from an incomplete but associated
skeleton that includes cranial and post−cranial remains. Demandasaurus darwini gen. et sp. nov. presents 9 autapomorphies in the teeth and vertebrae. Demandasaurus is the first diplodocoid sauropod described from the Cretaceous of the Iberian Peninsula. Its inclusion in the Rebbachisauridae is well supported by our phylogenetic hypothesis, which situates it as a sister group of Nigersaurus from the Aptian of Niger, with which it shares various synapomorphies. The discovery of Demandasaurus provides further evidence of the sporadic use of the Apulian Route by dinosaurs during the Early Cretaceous for moving between the south of Europe (Laurasia) and the north of Africa (Gondwana).

Key words: Sauropoda, Rebbachisauridae, systematic, palaeobiogeography, Early Cretaceous, Spain.


Demandasaurus darwini
by ~Olorotitan | olorotitan.deviantart.com

Fidel Torcida Fernández-Baldor, José Ignacio Canudo, Pedro Huerta, Diego Montero, Xabier Pereda Suberbiola and Leonardo Salgado. 2011. Demandasaurus darwini, a new rebbachisaurid sauropod from the Early Cretaceous of the Iberian Peninsula. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 56 (3): 535–552. doi: dx.doi.org/10.4202/app.2010.0003/.

Saturday, July 6, 2013

[Herpetology • 2013] Leptolalax zhangyapingi • A New Species of the Genus Leptolalax (Anura: Megophryidae) from Doi Saket, Chiang Mai Province, northern Thailand


Leptolalax zhangyapingi | Chiang Mai Litter Frog or Zhang’s Asian Toad

Abstract 
A new species of the genus Leptolalax is described from Doi Saket, Chiang Mai Province, northern Thailand. The new species is distinguished from its congeners by the following combination of characters: 1) adult size large (male SVL 45.8−52.5 mm); 2) tympanum distinct; 3) skin of dorsal surface mostly smooth, with distinct tubercles on dorsal and lateral parts of the body; 4) ventrolateral glandular ridge distinct and complete; 5) lateral body and groin covered with dark brown or black spots; 6) throat, chest, and belly nearly immaculate white; and 7) bi-colored iris, upper onethird golden, and lower two-thirds gray. Molecular phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial 16S rRNA further distinguishes it from its congeners for which sequences are available.

Keywords: Anura, new species, molecular phylogenetics, Doi Saket, Thailand


Leptolalax zhangyapingi sp. nov. (Figures 2−4)
Holotype: KIZ07258, an adult male from Phang Num Poo, Doi Saket, Chiang Mai Province, northern Thailand (18.98° N, 99.33° E, elevation 870 m; Figure 1), collected by Ke JIANG at night on 11 October 2011.

Etymology: Following the Chinese style of placing the given name after the family name, the species is named after Prof. Yaping Zhang, the sponsor of the international “COLD CODE” program of DNA barcoding amphibians and reptiles. We acknowledge his continuous support and encouragement of our biodiversity survey in southeastern Asia. Its common name is suggested as Zhang’s Asian Toad.


Discussion
The genus Leptolalax has been considered to contain a high proportion of cryptic diversity (Rowley et al., 2010a, b). Our result clearly supports this view and one more new species, L. zhangyapingi is described here based on its diagnosable morphological characters.

Presently, there are 37 described species in total in this genus, including L. zhangyapingi. However, most of them were studied based on morphology only, not combined with acoustic data and molecular data. Recently, the discovery of new species is increasing mostly aided by molecular tool (Rowley et al., 2010a, 2010b; Ohler et al., 2011). Combined with the sequences available in this genus (Ohler et al., 2011; Rowley et al., 2012), our phylogenetic tree recovered the new described species as one clearly distinct lineage, which largely diverges from other known species as shown in Figure 1.

In conclusion, at present seven described species of Leptolalax exist in Thailand, L. fuliginosus and L. gracilis in the southwest, L. heteropus and L. solus in the south, L. melanoleucus in the southwest and south, L. minimus and L. zhangyapingi sp. nov. in the north (Chan-ard, 2003; Das et al., 2010; Frost, 2013; Matsui, 2006; Nabhitabhata et al., 2000; Ohler et al., 2011). L. pelodytoides and L. bourreti are now restricted to the Karin Hills of Myanmar and Vietnam, respectively indicated by Ohler et al. (2011). Both of them were considered to exist in Thailand by Das et al. (2010). Recently, Ohler et al. (2011) resurrected L. minimus which was described from Chiang Mai Province, Thailand by Taylor (1962), and was considered to be a junior synonym of L. oshanensis by Dubois (1981).


Ke JIANG, Fang YAN, Chatmongkon SUWANNAPOOM, Siriwadee CHOMDEJ and Jing CHE. 2013. A New Species of the Genus Leptolalax (Anura: Megophryidae) from Northern Thailand. Asian Herpetological Research. 4(2): 100–108. DOI: dx.doi.org/10.3724/SP.J.1245.2013.00100

[Herpetology • 2013] Protobothrops himalayanus • A New Species of the Genus Protobothrops (Squamata: Viperidae) from Southern Tibet, China and Sikkim, India


Protobothrops himalayanus
Pan, Chettri, Yang, Jiang, Wang, Zhang & Vogel, 2013

Abstract 
A new species of the genus Protobothrops Hoge & Romano-Hoge, 1983, was described from Jilong County, southern Tibet, China, and Chungthang, northern Sikkim, India. It differs from congeners by the following characters: 1) relatively large body size (total length up to 1510 mm); 2) dorsal scale rows 25–25–19; 3) except for the smooth outermost row, dorsal scales are weakly keeled; 4) relatively high number of ventral (198–216) and subcaudal (65–76 pairs) scales; 5) 7–8 supralabials; 6) 11 to 13 infralabials; 7) dorsal head uniform dark brown, laterally a reddish-brown obscure postocular streak; 8) dorsum of trunk and tail olive, with distinct black edged red brown transverse bands across the body and tail; and 9) eye from bright brown and reddish brown to mildly brown. The new species was also observed from the Haa Valley in western Bhutan.

Keywords: new species, Protobothrops, Viperidae, Squamata, Himalayan region





Hujun PAN, Basundhara CHETTRI, Daode YANG, Ke JIANG, Kai WANG, Liang ZHANG and Gernot VOGEL. 2013. A New Species of the Genus Protobothrops (Squamata: Viperidae) from Southern Tibet, China and Sikkim, India. Asian Herpetological Research. 4(2): 109–115. 
Himalayan lance-headed pit viper

Thursday, July 4, 2013

[Mammalogy • 2013] Crocidura sapaensis • Bones and genes: resolution problems in three Vietnamese species of Crocidura (Soricomorpha, Soricidae) and the description of an additional new species


adult male Crocidura sapaensis


Abstract

Recent investigations of Southeast Asian white toothed shrews belonging to the genus Crocidura have revealed discrepancies between the results of morphological and molecular studies. The following study concerns three species of Crocidura occurring in Vietnam, namely C. attenuata, C. tanakae and C. wuchihensis, and an undescribed fourth species revealed by molecular analysis. For many years Crocidura attenuata has been known to occur in Vietnam but, until very recently, the morphologically similar and comparably sized C. tanakae was believed to be restricted to Taiwan. Following several molecular studies over the last few years, this species is now believed to be considerably more widespread and recognised as occuring also in Vietnam. The results of one of these recent molecular studies also revealed the presence of an undescribed species of Crocidura, similar in size and morphology to Crocidura wuchihensis, which is herein described. Data are provided on geographical variation in Vietnam and the problems of defining morphologically similar yet molecularly disparate species are discussed.

Keywords: Crocidura, new species, morphology, molecular analysis, geographical variation


Etymology: The new species is named after Sa Pa, the capital of Sa Pa District in Lao Cai Province of northern Vietnam, with the Latin suffix -ensis (belonging to).

Natural history: The series of type specimens was collected from a variety of habitats in the vicinity of Tram Ton Station of Hoang Lien National Park: mixed evergreen forest; forested banks of small streams; open grassy glades (Fig. 6); primary forest with large trees at an elevation 1930–2200m (Abramov et al. 2008b). During 2005–2010 a total of 190 shrews was captured in this area, including 4 species (Crocidura sapaensis, Blarinella griselda Thomas, 1912, Anourosorex squamipes Milne Edwards, 1872, and Episoriculus leucops (Horsfield 1855)). Crocidura sapaensis was the most numerous species (90% of the total captures), followed by Anourosorex squamipes and Blarinella griselda (5.3% and 4.2% respectively), while only one Episoriculus leucops was captured (Abramov et al. 2010). Crocidura sapaensis was more abundant in slightly disturbed mixed forest (2.2–3.0 specimens per 100 trap/nights), the occurrence in open glades, amongst shrubs on stream banks and in undisturbed primary forest was 0.3–2.6 specimens per 100 trap/nights. The proportion of males to females in Crocidura sapaensis was greater in all seasons; on average the male to female ratio is 2.3. Pregnant females were recorded from May to mid-July. Mean litter size in Crocidura sapaensis was 3.0 (2-4, n=15).

Distribution: Confirmed specimens of Crocidura sapaensis are recorded from Lao Cai Province, Sa Pa District on the basis of cyt b analysis and morphology of m3. On the basis of morphology, specimens from the northern part of Lao Cai Province, Ngai Tio (elevation 1450m) and from the vicinity of Cat Cat Village near Sa Pa Town (elevation 1400–1450m) in relatively close geographical proximity also probably belong to the same species.

Populations of Crocidura wuchihensis identified on the basis of cyt b and those probably representing this species on the basis of morphology (from Pa Kha and Thai Nien, both in Lao Cai Province) all occur in northeastern Vietnam in localities to the east of the Song Hong (Red River). The observation that this river marks the border between the two species, with Crocidura wuchihensis to the east and Crocidura sapaensis to the west, was made by Bannikova et al. (2011), however this apparent biogeographical separation is based on few locality records. These authors also observed that, in the cyt b analysis, the two northern Vietnamese populations of Crocidura wuchihensis (from Mt Tay Con Linh II [22°46'N, 104°49'E] and Tam Dao [21°27'N, 105°38'E]) were separated by a p- distance of 2.1% suggesting that they probably represent distinct geographic populations.

The population of Crocidura wuchihensis recorded from Huong Son, Ha Tinh Province in the southern Annamites by Lunde et al. (2004) and Jenkins et al. (2009), does of course, occur west of the Song Hong and samples have not been included in any of the previous molecular studies. Specimens from Mt Tay Con Linh II are larger on average (CIL 15.7–17.1, mean 16.4) than those from Huong Son (CIL 15.8-16.4, mean 16.0). The Canonical Variate Analysis reported in Jenkins et al. (2009: Fig. 10) shows that these two groups respectively from northern Vietnam and the southern Annamites are moderately well separated from each other. In view of the problems outlined in this paper, lacking further evidence from molecular studies, it is impossible to predict if the population from Huong Son is correctly assigned to Crocidura wuchihensis, could belong to Crocidura sapaensis, or might indeed represent a further undescribed species.


New Species of White Toothed Shrew Identified
 A genetic analysis of the Vietnamese white toothed shrew fauna, reported in the open access journal ZooKeys, has revealed a new species in the genus Crocidura, named Crocidura sapaensis.


Paula Jenkins, Alexei Abramov, Аnna Bannikova, Viatcheslav Rozhnov. 2013. Bones and genes: resolution problems in three Vietnamese species of Crocidura (Mammalia, Soricomorpha, Soricidae) and the description of an additional new species. ZooKeys. 313 : 61-79.