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Showing posts with label Himalaya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Himalaya. Show all posts

Saturday, January 4, 2025

[Mammalogy • 2024] Neodon lhozhagensis • A New Species of Mountain Vole (Rodentia: Cricetidae: Neodon) from south Xizang, China

 

Neodon lhozhagensis Wang & Jiang,

in S.-Y. Wang, Y.-X. Li, Q. Li, Song, H.-J. Wang, He, Onditi, Khanal, X.-Y. Li, Chen et Jiang, 2024.  
Lhozhag mountain vole |  洛扎松田鼠  ||  

Abstract
A survey of small mammals conducted on the Qinghai-Xizang Plateau in August 2023 yielded a series of specimens of a distinctive and previously unidentified Neodon species from high-altitude shrubland and grassland habitats at elevations of 2800–4000 m in Lhozhag County, Xizang, China. This study employed an integrative approach, combining molecular and morphological evidence to determine the taxonomic placement of the species. Results confirmed that these specimens represent a new species, formally described herein as Neodon lhozhagensis sp. nov. The new species can be distinguished from all other Neodon species based on larger body size, longer tail, five closed triangles in first lower molar, and obvious interorbital crest. Molecular analysis strongly supported Neodon lhozhagensis sp. nov. as a monophyletic clade that diverged from its sister taxon, Neodon tsonaensis, approximately 0.89–1.68 million years ago. Kimura-2-parameter genetic distances of the complete cytochrome b gene between Neodon lhozhagensis sp. nov. and other nominal Neodon species ranged from 9.3% to 12.8%. This discovery underscores the importance of continued efforts to investigate and document the biodiversity of the Himalayan region.

Keywords: Neodon, Small mammals, Taxonomy, Morphology, Molecular systematics

Skull and skin of Neodon lhozhagensis sp. nov. (KIZ042896)
A: Dorsal, ventral and lateral views of skull and mandibles; B: Upper and lower molars; C: Dorsal, ventral, and lateral views of skin. 10 mm (A); 5 mm (B); 50 mm (C).
Photo bySi-Yuan Wang

Neodon lhozhagensis Wang & Jiang, sp. nov.

Suggested common name: Lhozhag mountain vole, 
洛扎松田鼠.

Diagnosis: The M1 of Neodon lhozhagensis sp. nov. possesses five closed triangles anterior to the posterior transverse space, a characteristic shared with N. clarkei, N. bershulaensis, and N. linzhiensis, but distinct from all other known species of the genus. The interorbital crest is prominently developed, differentiating it from N. bershulaensis (Figure 5). Compared to N. clarkei, Neodon lhozhagensis sp. nov. has a longer incisive foramina (5.4±0.3 mm vs. 4.9±0.4 mm) and a wider interorbital breadth (4.2±0.2 mm vs. 4.0±0.1 mm). Additionally, the new species is characterized by a larger body size, including a longer tail and a greater relative tail length (TL=50–65 mm; TL/HB=41.67%–54.17%) compared to N. linzhiensis (TL=27–37 mm; TL/HB=30.00%–35.24%).


Etymology: The specific name lhozhag is derived from Lhozhag County, the type locality of the new species, and –ensis is Latin for “belonging to”.

Distribution: The Lhozhag mountain vole is presently known only from Lhozhag County, south Xizang, China, at elevations of 2800–4000 m a.s.l. It is allopatric with other Neodon species.

Habitat: Bamboo forests, coniferous forests, and shrubs.

 
Si-Yuan Wang, Yi-Xian Li, Quan Li, Wen-Yu Song, Hong-Jiao Wang, Shui-Wang He, Kenneth Otieno Onditi, Laxman Khanal, Xue-You Li, Zhong-Zheng Chen and Xue-Long Jiang. 2024. A New Species of Mountain Vole (Rodentia, Cricetidae, Neodon) from south Xizang, China. Zoological Research: Diversity and Conservation. 1(4); 282-289. DOI: doi.org/10.24272/j.issn.2097-3772.2024.011 

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

[Botany • 2024] Ophioglossum hongii (Ophioglossaceae) • A New Species from Xizang, China


Ophioglossum hongii   

 in Li, Yang, Yan, Chen,... et Qin, 2024. 
 
Abstract
Ophioglossum hongii (Ophioglossaceae) is described as a new species from the plateau area of Xizang, China. It was recorded as the species O. nudicaule previously, but obviously differs in its shorter sporophores and the conspicuous persistent petiole bases at the top of rhizome. O. hongii is similar to O. polyphyllum in morphology, but it can be distinguished from the latter by plant size, trophophyll shape, fertile stalk and exospore ornamentation. O. hongii is the sister to the clade (O. polyphyllum, O. engelmannii) according to molecular phylogenetic analysis of seven plastid fragments (atpB, matK, psbA-trnH, rbcL, rps4, rps4-trnS, and trnL-F). Detailed taxonomic description, distribution, ecology, conservation status and chloroplast genome resources are provided.

chloroplast genome, Himalayas, phylogeny, pteridophytes, taxonomy





Min-Yu LI, Fu-Sheng YANG, Yue-Hong YAN, Li-Jun CHEN, Zhi-Cong HUANG, Jiang-Ping SHU and Xin-Sheng QIN. 2024. Ophioglossum hongii (Ophioglossaceae), A New Species from Xizang, China.  Phytotaxa. 676(2); 169-180. [2024-12-10] DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.676.2.5

Friday, December 27, 2024

[Botany • 2024] Aeschynanthus chayangtajoensis (Gesneriaceae) • A New Species from Arunachal Pradesh, India


Aeschynanthus chayangtajoensis   

in Chowlu, Shenoy, Ray et Kabeer, 2024.
 
Abstract
Aeschynanthus chayangtajoensis, a new species of Gesneriaceae from East Kameng district of Arunachal Pradesh, India, is described and illustrated. It is morphologically similar to A. acuminatus, A. moningerae and A. pedunculatus, in habit, shape and texture of leaves, inflorescence, and seeds with single hilar appendage, but differs from all by gibbous corolla base, completely glabrous gynoecium and much smaller fruit. A detailed description of the new species with color photographs and a comparison table of similar species are provided. The new species is evaluated and provisionally assessed as ‘Critically Endangered (CR)’ according to IUCN Red List Criteria.

LIPSTICK PLANT, INDIAN HIMALAYAN REGION, AESCHYNANTHUS SECT. HAPLOTRICHIUM, EUDICOTS



Krishna CHOWLU, Akshath SHENOY, Ajit RAY and Althaf Ahamed KABEER. 2024. Aeschynanthus chayangtajoensis (Gesneriaceae), A New Species from Arunachal Pradesh, India.  Phytotaxa. 678(1); 65-70. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.678.1.6

Monday, December 23, 2024

[Herpetology • 2024] Hidden on the Roof of the World: Mitochondrial Data Reveals Exceptional Genetic Diversity of Himalayan Ablepharine Skinks (Reptilia: Scincidae)


Diversity of the Asian Ablepharine skinks from mtDNA sequences:
Protoblepharus (blue), the Ablepharus sikkimensis group (yellow), the Ablepharus himalayanus group (red), and the Ablepharus ladacensis group (green).


in Bragin, Litvinchuk, Borkin, Melnikov, Skorinov, ...et Poyarkov, 2024. 

Abstract
Snake-eyed, or ablepharine skinks, are common residents of the highest mountain ranges on Earth, including the Himalayas, the Tibetan Plateau, Karakoram, Pamir, and Tian Shan, colloquially known as the Roof of the World. Historically, these skinks were alternatively assigned to the genera Scincella, Ablepharus, Asymblepharus, and Himalblepharus, but recent revisions proposed to group them in only two genera, namely Protoblepharus (the eastern Himalayan taxa) and Ablepharus (all other taxa). The taxonomy of this group yet remains in a state of flux due to the limited informativeness of available phylogenies (often with little material from the Himalayan region), discrepancies in morphological patterns of variation, and the potentially high yet unconsidered degree of diversity of the group. To shed some light, we assess the mitochondrial diversity and evolution of Himalayan snake-eyed skinks based on >200 individuals sampled across Pakistan, India, Nepal, and China, representing nine out of ten Himalaya currently recognized species. Phylogenetic relationships were inferred from 2998 bp of mitochondrial sequences (12S, 16S, ND2, cyt b). Our analyses reveal a remarkably high cryptic diversity, including 14 to 16 species-level lineages within Ablepharus and four species-level lineages within Protoblepharus, which would substantially increase the number of species by at least twofold. This hidden diversity highlights the Himalayas as a center of phylogeographic diversification and endemism, likely shaped by geological and climatic factors associated with orogenesis, which now houses over half of the ablepharine skink species.

Keywords: Ablepharus; biogeography; distribution; Himalaya; Himalblepharus; lizards; mtDNA barcoding; Protoblepharus; Sphenomorphinae

Distribution of the major clades of AblepharusProtoblepharus (blue), the Ablepharus sikkimensis group (yellow), the Ablepharus himalayanus group (red), the Ablepharus ladacensis group (green), and the ‘core’ Ablepharus with fully or partially fused eyelids (white).
Distribution of the Ablepharine skinks in the Himalaya: Protoblepharus (blue), the Ablepharus sikkimensis group (yellow), the Ablepharus himalayanus group (red), and the Ablepharus ladacensis group (green).


Andrey M. Bragin, Spartak N. Litvinchuk, Leo J. Borkin, Daniel A. Melnikov, Dmitriy V. Skorinov, Daniel Jablonski, Rafaqat Masroor, Hmar Tlawmte Lalremsanga, Zeeshan A. Mirza, Christophe Dufresnes and Nikolay A. Poyarkov. 2024. Hidden on the Roof of the World: Mitochondrial Data Reveals Exceptional Genetic Diversity of Himalayan Ablepharine Skinks (Reptilia: Scincidae). Russian Journal of Herpetology. 31(6); 351 – 368. DOI: doi.org/10.30906/1026-2296-2024-31-6-351-368

[Botany • 2024] Henckelia arunachalensis (Gesneriaceae) • A New Species from Patkai Hills of Arunachal Pradesh, India

  

 Henckelia arunachalensis   

 in Sahani, Pertin, Variya, Taram, Maity et Borah, 2024.

Abstract
Repeated expeditions conducted since 2018 in Arunachal Pradesh led to the collection of several taxa of Gesneriaceae, many of which are newly described. Among these, a peculiar species from the Patkai Hills of Arunachal Pradesh is described here as Henckelia arunachalensis, a species new to science. This new species is allied to Henckelia dibangensis but differs in its elliptic to obovate leaves with 9–13 pairs of lateral veins (vs ovate to ovate-elliptic with 5–8 pairs of lateral veins), erect to perpendicular cymes with 1–5 flowers (vs pendulous cymes with 1–2 flowers), broadly ovate to ovate lanceolate bracts (vs linear bracts), a leathery calyx, pale green and puberulous outside, glabrous inside (vs light green, glabrous calyx), and a purplish white corolla with white flaps (vs a pale pink corolla with no flaps). An extended taxonomic description, accompanied by photographs and ecological information, is provided.

Flora of India, Henckelia dibangensis, Himalaya, Northeast India, taxonomy, Eudicots



Henckelia arunachalensis


Vinay Kumar Sahani, Minom Pertin, Mayur H. Variya, Momang Taram, Rohan Maity and Dipankar Borah. 2024. Henckelia arunachalensis (Gesneriaceae), A New Species from Patkai Hills of Arunachal Pradesh, India. Phytotaxa. 678(1); 71-76. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.678.1.7

[Botany • 2024] Ophiorrhiza gajureliana (Rubiaceae) • A New Species from Arunachal Pradesh, India


Ophiorrhiza gajureliana   

in Bawri, Baro, Singh et Sarma, 2024.  
 
Abstract
Ophiorrhiza gajureliana is described and illustrated here as a new taxon. It was discovered in the Lower Dibang Valley, Arunachal Pradesh, India. The taxon is identified using conventional taxonomic techniques by critically examining the specimens and scrutinising the relevant literature. The conservation status of the taxon is also evaluated as Critically Endangered.

Keywords: Ophiorrhiza, Critically endangered, Arunachal Pradesh, 

Ophiorrhiza gajureliana sp. nov.
a habit, b inflorescence c-e leaf (upper surface), f Single flower, g Calyx, h-i Dissected flower, j-l Leaf (lower surface), m Gynocium, n Stamen

Ophiorrhiza gajureliana Bawri and Baro sp. nov. 

Etymology: The species is named to honour Prof. Padma Raj Gajurel in recognition of his noteworthy role in botanical research in the eastern Himalayan region, India.


Amal Bawri, Daimalu Baro, Y. Disco Singh and Kuladip Sarma. 2024. Ophiorrhiza gajureliana (Rubiaceae): A New Species from Arunachal Pradesh, India. Vegetos. DOI: doi.org/10.1007/s42535-024-01094-w 


Sunday, December 15, 2024

[Botany • 2024] Henckelia davidwoodii (Gesneriaceae) • A New Species from Indian eastern Himalayas

  

Henckelia davidwoodii   

in Borah, Taram et Maity, 2024. 

Abstract
Henckelia davidwoodii (Gesneriaceae) is described here as a new species based on collections made from the Shi-Yomi district in the eastern Himalayan state of Arunachal Pradesh, India. This new species resembles H. lallanii Taram, D.Borah, Tag and R.Kr. Singh in its habit, infundibuliform corolla without flaps or flanges, and stamens with slightly geniculate filaments, but it can be differentiated by having 2-flowered cymes (versus solitary in H. lallanii), ovate bracts with undulate margins (versus narrowly ovate-lanceolate bracts with entire margins in H. lallanii), non-reflexed 5-veined calyx lobes (versus reflexed calyx lobes without veins in H. lallanii), and a cupular disc (versus tubular in H. lallanii). It also superficially resembles H. urticifolia (Buch.-Ham. ex D.Don) A.Dietr., however, it can be differentiated by its distinct sessile to sub-sessile bracts with undulate margins and a round to cordate base, often recurved at the base and overlapping to form a conical to cupulate structure, and stamens that are slightly geniculate (versus bracts with serrate margins and cuneate bases, never forming the aforementioned structures; stamens distinctly geniculate in H. urticifolia). A detailed taxonomic description is provided for this new species, accompanied by photographs and ecological information.

Keywords: Henckelia, Indian flora, Indian Himalayan Region (IHR), northeast India, taxonomy




Dipankar Borah, Momang Taram and Rohan Maity. 2024. Henckelia davidwoodii (Gesneriaceae), A New Species from Indian eastern Himalayas. Nordic Journal of Botany. DOI: doi.org/10.1111/njb.04662 
 Researchgate.net/publication/386734094_Henckelia_davidwoodii_a_new_species_from_Indian_eastern_Himalayas


Saturday, December 14, 2024

[Botany • 2024] Whittieria hengduanensis (Ophioglossaceae) • A New fern Species from Southwest China demonstrates a unique intercontinental disjunct pattern in plants between the Himalaya and the Americas

 
Whittieria hengduanensis Z.L.Liang & Li Bing Zhang, 

in Liang et Zhang. 2024. 

Abstract
A new fern species, Whittieria hengduanensis (Ophioglossaceae), from Sichuan, Xizang, and Yunnan, Southwest China (eastern Himalaya), is described and illustrated. This species is similar to W. engelmannii in the Americas in having a cylindrical rhizome and complex-reticulate venation. In addition, both species grow in open habitat on basic soil. However, the two species are distinguishable in root number per rhizome and the number of the larger areolae per trophophore. Our molecular study also supports that they are sister to each other but divergent at the molecular level. The discovery of W. hengduanensis shows that the genus is intercontinentally disjunct between the Himalaya and the Americas, a unique pattern not having been documented in the literature.

Key words: Adder’s tongues, fern biogeography, intercontinental disjunctions

Whittieria hengduanensis
A, B habitat C lower portion of plant showing stem and roots D individuals in different sizes E trophophores and sporophore stalks F sporophore G veins showing complex-reticulate venation.

Whittieria hengduanensis 
A, B habit C trophophore and base of sporophore D sporophore spike E veins showing complex-reticulate venation.

 Whittieria hengduanensis Z.L.Liang & Li Bing Zhang, sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Whittieria hengduanensis is similar to W. engelmannii but the former has up to 25 (–50) roots per rhizome and 10–20 large areolae per trophophore, whereas the latter has fewer than 15 roots per rhizome and 0–8 areolae per trophophore.

Etymology: The species epithet henduanensis is based on the distribution of this species in the Hengduan Mountain.


Zhen-Long Liang, Li-Bing Zhang. 2024. Discovery of Whittieria hengduanensis sp. nov. (Ophioglossaceae) from Southwest China demonstrates a unique intercontinental disjunct pattern in plants between the Himalaya and the Americas. PhytoKeys 249: 27-36. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.249.135379 

Thursday, November 28, 2024

[Entomology • 2023] Salassa sunwukongi • A New Species and A New Group of Salassa Moore, 1859 (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) with a molecular study based on partial COI


 Salassa sunwukongi  Zheng & Wang, 2023
 (A-D) male; (E, F) female.
 
 
Abstract
Salassa is a genus of the family Saturniidae. It comprises over 30 species that are widely distributed in Asia. This study describes a new species, Salassa sunwukongi sp. nov., found in Chinese Yunnan province. The first molecular study of Salassa was conducted using COI fragments. Molecular and morphological analyses revealed the presence of a monophyletic group, royi-group, distributed in the Himalayas. A key to members of the royi-group, along with species lists and distinguishing characteristics of all three groups of Salassa, is provided.

Lepidoptera, Salassinae, giant silk moth, systematics, taxonomy

 Adults of Salassa sunwukongi sp. nov.:
 (A) male holotype (dorsal view); (B) male holotype (ventral view);
(C) male paratype (dorsal view); (D) male paratype (dorsal view);
(E) female paratype (dorsal view); (F) female paratype (ventral view).
Scale bars: 10.0 mm.
 

Salassa sunwukongi sp. nov.

Distribution. China: Yunnan Province.

Etymology. The new species was named after Sun Wukong, the Monkey King in Chinese Mythology, for the diverse colours and monkey-face-like pattern in the hindwing of the new species.


Xuhongyi ZHENG and DONG WANG. 2023. Description of A New Species and A New Group of Salassa Moore, 1859 (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) with a molecular study based on partial COI.  Zootaxa. 5375(2); 285-296. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5375.2.10 
 facebook.com/LeslieLin9562/posts/7213681108650789

Friday, November 22, 2024

[Herpetology • 2024] Raorchestes asakgrensis • Rediscovery and Redescription of Ixalus garo and Ixalus kempiae Boulenger, 1919 (Anura: Rhacophoridae), and the Description of A New species from the Garo Hills of Meghalaya

 

Raorchestes asakgrensis Naveen, Chandramouli & Babu, 

in Naveen, Chandramouli, Babu, Ryndongsngi, Karunakaran et Kumara, 2024. 


Abstract
Bush frogs from Garo and Khasi Hills were collected, and a thorough examination based on morphology and geographic distribution revealed that two of the populations sampled from Garo Hills during this study agree with the holotypes and descriptions of the taxa Ixalus garo and I. kempiae, described more than a century ago. The original description lacked information on several morphological characters, genetic material, and photographs of the species in life. The absence of such information posed challenges in field identification of these species. Our phylogeny shows them to be nested within the Raorchestes clade, and therefore, we allocate these two species to this genus and formally announce their rediscovery. We also redescribe these two species here based on additional adult vouchers and report geographic range extensions from new localities. Based on molecular and morphological analysis, we reassess the status of the recently described Raorchestes cangyuanensis, resulting in its placement under the subjective junior synonymy of R. kempiae. We also describe a morphologically distinct new species from this region. This paper bridges an important gap in the knowledge of the genus Raorchestes in this part of India and highlights the importance of systematic surveys in documenting and understanding amphibian diversity in the region.

Key Words: cryptic diversity, Indo-Burma hotspot, IUCN red list, Rhacophoridae, synonymy, systematics

Raorchestes asakgrensis sp. nov.
holotype, SACON VA 805, an adult female dorso-lateral view in life (above);
paratype, SACON VA 340, an adult male dorso-lateral view in life (below).

 Raorchestes asakgrensis Naveen, Chandramouli & Babu, sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis: Raorchestes asakgrensis sp. nov. is placed in the genus Raorchestes due to the combination of the following characters: small body size, vomerine teeth absent, single translucent external subgular vocal sac present, and tips of all fingers and toes expanded into discs with circum-marginal grooves (see Biju et al. 2010). The species can be distinguished from congeners in the Indo-China region by the following combination of characters: A small-sized (mean SVL 20.49 mm) arboreal species with an obtusely pointed snout; tympanum fairly visible with a visible supra-tympanic, ...

Etymology: The species is named after the type locality, Eman Asakgre Community Reserve, to honor the residents who greatly supported the surveys during which the type specimens were collected.


 R. S. Naveen, S. R. Chandramouli, S. Babu, A. M. Ryndongsngi, P. V. Karunakaran and Honnavalli N. Kumara. 2024. Rediscovery and Redescription of Ixalus garo Boulenger, 1919, and Ixalus kempiae Boulenger, 1919, with A Reassessment of the Taxonomic Status of Raorchestes cangyuanensis Wu, Suwannapoom, Xu, Murphy & Che, 2019 and the Description of A New species from the Garo Hills of Meghalaya. Herpetozoa. 37: 359-372. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/herpetozoa.37.e122825

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

[Ichthyology • 2024] Oreichthys warjaintia • A New Species of cyprinid fish (Cypriniformes: Cyprinidae) from Meghalaya, India

 

Oreichthys warjaintia
Dann, Dahanukar & Raghavan, 2024 

 
Abstract
Oreichthys warjaintia, new species, is described from the Pyrngang stream (Surma–Meghna basin), Meghalaya, northeast India. It can be distinguished from all known species within the genus Oreichthys in having the following combination of characters: complete lateral line with 25–27 pored scales, 13 branched pectoral-fin rays, 5–5½ branched anal-fin rays, 14 rows of papillae on suborbital, ½3/1/2½ scale rows in transverse line on body, presence of a black blotch on caudal-fin base, and in the coloration of dorsal, caudal, and anal fins. Oreichthys warjaintia is distinct from all known Oreichthys species for which mitochondrial cox1 sequence data are available by a raw genetic distance ranging from 8.3% to 11.1%.

Keywords: Cox1 gene, eastern Himalaya, high-fin barb, Surma–Meghna, taxonomy


Oreichthys warjaintia sp. nov.


 

Lekiningroy Dann, Neelesh Dahanukar and Rajeev Raghavan. 2024. Oreichthys warjaintia, A New Species of cyprinid fish from Meghalaya, India (Cypriniformes: Cyprinidae). Journal of Fish Biology. DOI: doi.org/10.1111/jfb.16001
 

Saturday, November 2, 2024

[Mammalogy • 2024] Murina yushuensis • A New Species of Tube-nosed Bat (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae: Murina) from Qinghai–Tibet Plateau, China

  

Murina yushuensis Han, Csorba & Wu, 
  
in Wang, Han, Csorba, Wu, Chen, Zhao, Dong, Yu et Lu, 2024. 

Abstract
In 2018, an adult male of a small-sized Tube-nosed Bat (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae: Murina) was captured at an arid cave located on the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau in Yushu City, Qinghai Province, China. Despite external morphological similarities with those of M. harpioloides and M. chrysochaetes, the individual in question displays explicit craniodental differences that distinguish it from either species. Morphological and morphometric evidence, coupled with phylogenetic analyses utilizing the mitochondrial COI gene, confirmed that it represents a distinct and still unknown species of Murina, described herewith as M. yushuensis sp. nov. Our research highlights the importance of future surveys aimed at exploring cryptic species diversity in the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau and adjacent under-surveyed regions.

morphometrics, Murininae, phylogeny, systematics, taxonomy


Skull and dentition of Murina yushuensis sp. nov. (Holotype, GZHU 20077).
(A) Lateral view of skull and mandible. (B) Dorsal view of skull. (C) Ventral view of skull with details of the upper toothrow. (D) Occlusal view of mandible with details of the lower toothrow.


 External features and habitat of Murina yushuensis sp. nov. (Holotype, GZHU 20077).
(A) Live individual. (B) Dorsal, and (C) ventral aspect of the body. (D) Surrounding environment of the cave in July, and (E) in March. (F) Type specimen hibernating in the cave.
Photos by Xuesong Han, Yi Wu, and Wenhua Yu.



Xiaoyun Wang, Xuesong Han, Gábor Csorba, Yi Wu, Huaiqing Chen, Xiang Zhao, Zhengyi Dong, Wenhua Yu and Zhi Lu. 2024. A New Species of Tube-nosed Bat (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae: Murina) from Qinghai–Tibet Plateau, China. Journal of Mammalogy. gyae104. DOI: doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyae104



本研究于2018年在中国青海玉树1个河流旁的干燥洞穴中捕获1只雄性小型管鼻蝠(翼手目Chiroptera:蝙蝠科Vespertilionidae:管鼻蝠属Murina)。其主要特征为,前臂长31.34 mm,颅全长14.14 mm;耳小而圆,无缺刻;背毛呈现基部黑色,顶端为棕金色;腹毛基部较长,呈深黑色,顶部呈灰白色。基于形态学证据和COI构建的系统发育树,本研究将其鉴定为管鼻蝠属的新物种,命名为玉树管鼻蝠(Murina yushuensis sp. nov. Han, Csorba et Wu, 2024)。该发现不仅丰富了翼手目物种多样性,还说明了在青藏高原及周边区域等特殊生境开展翼手目调查的重要性。 ||   形态度量学, 管鼻蝠亚科, 系统发育关系, 系统学, 分类学
 

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

[Herpetology • 2024] Anguiculus dicaprioi • Phylogeny and Systematics of the colubrid snake Genera Liopeltis and Gongylosoma (Squamata: Colubridae) and Description of A New Himalayan endemic Genus and Species


Anguiculus dicaprioi gen. et sp. nov.
Mirza, Bhardwaj, Pal, Lalremsanga, Vogel, Campbell & Patel, 2024 


Abstract
The colubrid snakes of the genera Gongylosoma Fitzinger, 1843 and Liopeltis Fitzinger, 1843 are distributed across south and southeast Asia with five and eight nominate species, respectively. Despite their wide distribution, members of these genera are among some of the least-known colubrids. The two genera were considered synonymous in the past only to be separated later, and are defined on rather nebulose characters with a lack of support from molecular data. To test the monophyly of the two genera, we generated molecular data for the type species of Gongylosoma and species representing the two genera, including samples of Liopeltis rappii (Günther, 1860) from the western Himalayas. Results recovered paraphyly of Liopeltis, especially with regard to the genus Gongylosoma. Morphological data supports recognizing the western and eastern populations of L. rappii as two distinct species. The findings from our integrative taxonomic approach advocate establishing a new genus to embody Liopeltis rappii and a new allied species from the central and western Himalayas. A rediagnosis and revised classification of the genera Gongylosoma and Liopeltis is presented. The results further hint at cryptic diversity across members of the two genera, warranting scrutiny of the most widespread members of the group.
 
Keywords: Cryptic species, MicroCT, Phylogeny, Reptilia, Serpentes, Taxonomy


 
Anguiculus dicaprioi gen. et sp. nov. in life,
 (a) holotype female NCBS NRC-AA-0013, Photo by Virender Bharadwaj;
(b) uncollected individual from Nainital, Uttarakhand. Photo by Vipul Ramanuj.

Anguiculus gen. nov.

Type species: Anguiculus dicaprioi gen. et. sp. nov.

Species included: Anguiculus rappii comb. nov. (Günther, 1860), 
Anguiculus dicaprioi sp. nov.

Diagnosis: Small-sized snakes characterized by 15 smooth DSR throughout; head not distinct form neck in adults; internasal not fused with nasal; nasal divided bearing a laterally oriented nostril between the two; eye of moderate size (not large) in relation to the head; 177–192 ventral scales; 57–75 subcaudal scales; anal divided; prefrontal not in contact with supralabial, 6 supralabials (rarely 5), extending beyond the angle of the jaw; loreal present; 1 preocular, 2 postoculars and temporals 1 + 1. The supraoccipital is chevron-shaped. The maxilla bears 22–24 subequal functional teeth. The teeth are arranged in a continuous manner, lacking a diastema, and no enlargement of teeth is observed. The basisphenoid bears median foramen. Hemipenis unilobed, distal less than half of the organ calyculate or spinose; numerous subequal spines present except for two large ones at the base; the organ lacks folds.

Etymology: The generic epithet is a Latin masculine noun that refers to a ‘small snake’. The proposed nomen highlights the small size (SVL) of members of the new genus in relation to members of the family Colubridae. Suggested common English name ‘Himalayan snake’.


New genus
𝑨𝒏𝒈𝒖𝒊𝒄𝒖𝒍𝒖𝒔 ZMirza, Bhardwaj, Pal, Lalremsanga, Vogel, Campbell & Patel, 2024

Species included:
𝑨𝒏𝒈𝒖𝒊𝒄𝒖𝒍𝒖𝒔 𝒅𝒊𝒄𝒂𝒑𝒓𝒊𝒐𝒊 Mirza, Bhardwaj, Pal, Lalremsanga, Vogel, Campbell & Patel, 2024
: Central and Western Himalayas (Nepal, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh). 
𝑨𝒏𝒈𝒖𝒊𝒄𝒖𝒍𝒖𝒔 𝒓𝒂𝒑𝒑𝒊𝒊 (Günther, 1860) 
: Eastern Himalayas (Sikkim, Bhutan, Arunachal Pradesh)


Zeeshan A. Mirza, Virender K. Bhardwaj, Saunak Pal, H. T. Lalremsanga, Gernot Vogel, Patrick D. Campbell and Harshil Patel. 2024. Phylogeny and Systematics of the colubrid snake Genera Liopeltis and Gongylosoma (Squamata: Colubridae) and Description of A New Himalayan endemic Genus and Species. Scientific Reports. 14: 24743. DOI: doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-74271-1

Saturday, October 19, 2024

[Botany • 2024] Begonia neisti (Begoniaceae, sect. Platycentrum) • A New Species from Arunachal Pradesh, India


 Begonia neisti  

in Hajong, Bhat et Bharali. 2024.  

Abstract
Begonia neisti sp. nov., a new species of B. sect. Platycentrum, from Dibang valley of Arunachal Pradesh, India is described and illustrated. A detailed taxonomic description, along with a photographic plate, illustration, distribution map and conservation status are provided. The conservation status of the new species is preliminarily assessed as data deficient (DD) according to the IUCN red list criteria. Molecular data (ITS2) underwent phylogenetic analysis (maximum parsimony (MP) and Bayesian inference (BI)) to elucidate the relationships of the studied species within the genus.

Keywords: Begonia, Eastern Himalaya, new taxon, phylogeny, Platycentrum, taxonomy




Begonia neisti sp. nov. 

 
Bipankar Hajong, Nazir Ahmad Bhat and Pankaj Bharali. 2024. Begonia neisti sp. nov. (Sect. Platycentrum, Begoniaceae), A New Species from Arunachal Pradesh, India. Nordic Journal of Botany. e04463. DOI: doi.org/10.1111/njb.04463 
  x.com/CSIR_NEIST/status/1847160446664454607