64,994 results on '"chordata"'
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2. A new species of Lepidodactylus (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from Umboi Island, Papua New Guinea
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FRED KRAUS, VARPU VAHTERA, and VALTER WEIJOLA
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Reptilia ,Squamata ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Gekkonidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
We describe a new species of Lepidodactylus from Umboi Island, just to the west of New Britain. It is a member of the Lepidodactylus guppyi Group and can be distinguished from all other Melanesian Lepidodactylus by aspects of digital scalation, digital webbing, enlarged femoral/precloacal scales, and color pattern. It is genetically distinct from its closest congeners, and genetic and morphological data indicate that the new species is most similar among named species to Lepidodactylus guppyi from the Solomon Islands, but it diverged from this species and other close relatives approximately 8 MYA or longer at a time prior to the existence of the island that it now occupies. The new species is known from only three individuals collected on a single tree, and efforts to find more animals in what seemed good habitat nearby were unsuccessful. This duplicates the pattern of apparent rarity seen for many Lepidodactylus species. Sufficient habitat exists on Umboi Island for arboreal geckos, suggesting that the species is not actually endangered but is ecologically cryptic. However, lack of needed information leads us to assess this species’ conservation status as Data Deficient.
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- 2023
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3. Type specimens of Elasmobranchii in the Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo (MZUSP)
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ARTHUR DE LIMA, THIAGO SILVA LOBODA, MICHEL DONATO GIANETI, JOÃO PAULO CAPRETZ BATISTA DA SILVA, and MARIO DE PINNA
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Dasyatidae ,Torpediniformes ,Squatiniformes ,Squaliformes ,Biodiversity ,Rajidae ,Myliobatiformes ,Squalidae ,Scyliorhinidae ,Carcharhiniformes ,Rajiformes ,Narcinidae ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Squatinidae ,Potamotrygonidae ,Chordata ,Sphyrnidae ,Arhynchobatidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy ,Elasmobranchii - Abstract
The type specimens of the subclass Elasmobranchii deposited in the Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo are compiled in an annotated list, including updated measurements, verified collection data and recent photographs of holotypes and selected paratypes. Relevant information on the preservation condition of the specimens and their current taxonomic status are also provided. The collection holds a total of 135 lots of type specimens of elasmobranchs, three holotypes and seven paratypes in the division Selachii plus 16 holotypes, one neotype, and 108 paratypes in the division Batoidea (total specimen count: 137). Four paratypes were not located and one was donated to another institution, and publication mistakes in catalog numbers and locality assignments are corrected. The vast majority of specimens belong to the neotropical freshwater stingrays (subfamily Potamotrygoninae). The present catalogue intends to facilitate taxonomic research by providing access to updated information on type specimens of mostly large-sized taxa, which are notoriously difficult or impossible to examine outside of their home institution.
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- 2023
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4. A new species of the Miniopterus australis species complex (Chiroptera: Miniopteridae) from the Western Ghats, India
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BHARGAVI SRINIVASULU and ADITYA SRINIVASULU
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Miniopteridae ,Chiroptera ,Mammalia ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
The genus Miniopterus is highly diverse in cryptic species. Based on integrated approaches of morphometrics, echolocation call analysis, and molecular phylogenetics, we present evidence of a hitherto undescribed species, Srini’s Bent-winged bat Miniopterus srinii sp. nov.. The new species, found in the Western Ghats of southern Karnataka, India, closely resembles the Small Bent-winged bat Miniopterus pusillus, found elsewhere in Karnataka, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu, India. Although it shows external similarity with Miniopterus pusillus sensu stricto from the Nicobar Islands, the new species is relatively larger and distinct in craniodental measurements and echolocation call parameters, despite slight overlaps. Importantly, Miniopterus srinii exhibits morphological convergence with Miniopterus pusillus as despite similarities in morphologies, there is a significant genetic distance of 10.84 ± 0.22%. The new cryptic species shares distribution with Miniopterus phillipsi and Miniopterus pusillus in the Western Ghats, further highlighting the need to study both the genus’ cryptic diversity, and the region’s conservation importance.
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- 2023
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5. Description of a geographically variable elongate rock-dwelling cichlid (Cichliformes: Cichlidae) from Lake Malaŵi, Africa
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JAY R. STAUFFER and ADRIANUS F. KONINGS
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Actinopterygii ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Cichlidae ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy ,Perciformes - Abstract
The rock-dwelling cichlids from Lake Malaŵi, known as mbuna, comprise a diverse group of haplochromine fishes that are placed among 14 genera. Within the mbuna, Pseudotropheus is a polyphyletic genus, which has served as a catch-all for many of these fishes. Recently, many of the species-groups within Pseudotropheus have been elevated to separate genera. Herein, we describe an elongate form that was originally placed in the Pseudotropheus elongatus species group but is now described as a member of Metriaclima.
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- 2023
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6. Barbus urmianus, a synonym of Barbus cyri (Teleostei: Cyprinidae)
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ARASH JOULADEH-ROUDBAR, HAMID REZA GHANAVI, CÜNEYT KAYA, and JÖRG FREYHOF
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Cypriniformes ,Actinopterygii ,Cyprinidae ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Barbus urmianus, from the upper Mahabad River in Lake Urmia basin, was distinguished from B. cyri based on several morphological characters. Our analysis demonstrated very small molecular (COI) differences between both species and mostly overlapping or identic morphological character states. Therefore, Barbus urmianus is treated as a junior synonym of B. cyri.
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- 2023
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7. Reassessment of species delimitation using nuclear markers in three lentic-breeding salamanders from the Chugoku District of Japan (Amphibia: Caudata: Hynobiidae)
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Tomimori, Yusuke, Matsui, Masafumi, Okawa, Hiroshi, Nishikawa, Kanto, Tanabe, Shingo, and Kamasaka, Ryo
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Amphibia ,Caudata ,Hynobiidae ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Hynobius akiensis sensu lato has recently been split into three species based on short sequence analyses of cyt-b gene of mtDNA and without data of nuclear DNA, and strange sympatric distribution in some areas has been indicated in two species. We analyzed nuclear DNA marker (SNPs) and complete sequence of cyt-b in H. akiensis sensu lato to reassess species delimitation and genetic introgression among species. As a result, we found two lineages with discordant mitochondrial and nuclear DNA in some areas. Of H. akiensis sensu lato, each of the two contains the type locality of two species recently reported (H. sumidai and H. geiyoensis), and the use of these names has been previously advocated. However, their sympatric distribution was rejected based on nuclear DNA data, which we consider is more reliable than mtDNA. We thus clarify geographic boundary of these two species and revise the species delimitations.
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- 2023
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8. A third species of glassfrog in the genus Chimerella (Anura, Centrolenidae) from central Peru, discovered by an integrative taxonomic approach
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Jörn Köhler, Pablo J. Venegas, Ernesto Castillo-Urbina, Frank Glaw, César Aguilar-Puntriano, and Miguel Vences
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Sarcopterygii ,Centrolenidae ,Chimerella ,Asteraceae ,Amphibia ,bioacoustics ,Centroleninae ,Magnoliopsida ,Gnathostomata ,morphology ,Animalia ,Chordata ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,new species ,Asterales ,Biota ,Arctium ,Tracheophyta ,Chimerella mira ,Osteichthyes ,Insect Science ,Carduoideae ,molecular genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Anura - Abstract
We studied the taxonomic status of glassfrogs collected in Departamento Huánuco, central Peru, which in the field were tentatively allocated to Chimerella, one of the twelve genera currently recognized in the family Centrolenidae. Detailed analyses of their morphology, bioacoustics, and molecular genetics supported their generic allocation and provided evidence for them representing a divergent and unnamed evolutionary lineage within Chimerella. We herein describe this lineage as a new species, being mainly distinguished from the two other known congeners, C. corleone and C. mariaelenae, by details of colouration in life and preservative, substantial differences in advertisement call, and differentiation in mitochondrial markers (12S rRNA, 16S rRNA, cytochrome b) and a nuclear-encoded marker (Rag-1). The new species is the southernmost distributed species in the genus and was found in a swampy habitat at the bank of the Río Patay Rondos, a tributary of the Río Monzon, in rainforest at the Andean-Amazon foothills at 798 m above sea level. Aspects of species delimitation within Chimerella and related future research are briefly addressed and discussed.
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- 2023
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9. Tropidonotus nicobarensis Sclater, 1891 is a junior synonym of Thamnophis saurita (Linnaeus, 1766) (Squamata: Serpentes: Natricinae)
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Lee, Justin L., Chandramouli, S. R., and Bauer, Aaron M.
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Reptilia ,Squamata ,Colubridae ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Natricidae ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Tropidonotus nicobarensis Sclater, 1891 is an enigmatic snake currently referred to the natricine genus Hebius Thompson, 1913. No specimens have been recorded since the original discovery of the name-bearing type in the late 19th century, which was allegedly collected on Kamorta Island in India’s Nicobar Archipelago. Recently, a second observation of this species was reported from Havelock Island (Swarajdweep) in the nearby Andaman Archipelago. However, the snake in question is clearly conspecific with another natricine, Thamnophis saurita (Linnaeus, 1766), native to eastern North America. This discovery prompted us to examine the type specimen of Tropidonotus nicobarensis, which revealed that it too is conspecific with Thamnophis saurita. The provenance of the Tropidonotus nicobarensis type specimen and the Havelock Island snake are discussed, with the latter likely representing an introduced animal.
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- 2023
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10. An annotated checklist of the Diptera of the Galápagos Archipelago (Ecuador)
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Sinclair, Bradley J.
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Insecta ,Odiniidae ,Sarcophagidae ,Cecidomyiidae ,Ceratopogonidae ,Hybotidae ,Sepsidae ,Pipunculidae ,Ephydridae ,Heleomyzidae ,Hippoboscidae ,Keroplatidae ,Simuliidae ,Drosophilidae ,Tabanidae ,Agromyzidae ,Anthomyzidae ,Chordata ,Stratiomyidae ,Periscelididae ,Sciaridae ,Tephritidae ,Muscidae ,Biodiversity ,Canacidae ,Milichiidae ,Lonchaeidae ,Bombyliidae ,Asteiidae ,Aves ,Mycetophilidae ,Mythicomyiidae ,Arthropoda ,Micropezidae ,Chironomidae ,Calliphoridae ,Fanniidae ,Tachinidae ,Chloropidae ,Animalia ,Ulidiidae ,Syrphidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy ,Chyromyidae ,Scenopinidae ,Sphaeroceridae ,Diptera ,Carnidae ,Asilidae ,Culicidae ,Piophilidae ,Scatopsidae ,Neriidae ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Psychodidae ,Phoridae ,Dolichopodidae ,Limoniidae - Abstract
The Diptera fauna of the Galápagos Archipelago is updated and an annotated checklist is presented. Currently 50 families, 207 genera, and a minimum of 324 species are recorded from the islands. Approximately 107 species are considered to have arrived on the Galápagos Islands through human introductions, an estimated 101 species are considered endemic, 42 species have naturally colonized the islands from mainland Americas, 21 species are either introduced or arrived naturally and 53 species remain unidentified. The following new combination is proposed: Chrysanthrax primitivus (Walker) is moved to Hemipenthes Loew as H. primitivus (Walker) comb. nov. All references to the Galápagos taxonomic literature are included, known island species distributions listed and general remarks on the biology of many species are provided.
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- 2023
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11. Solving the taxonomic identity of Hipposideros cineraceus sensu lato (Chiroptera: Hipposideridae) in the Thai-Malay Peninsula, with the description of a new species
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PHUTITA WONGWAIYUT, SUNATE KARAPAN, PUCHIT SAEKONG, CHARLES M. FRANCIS, ANTONIO GUILLÉN-SERVENT, JULIANA SENAWI, FAISAL ALI ANWARALI KHAN, PAUL J. J. BATES, SOPARK JANTARIT, and PIPAT SOISOOK
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Chiroptera ,Mammalia ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Hipposideridae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
A new species of small Hipposideros in the bicolor group is described based on specimens from Thailand and Malaysia. It can be distinguished from other small Hipposideros in Southeast Asia by a combination of external, craniodental, and bacular morphology, as well as echolocation call frequency. The new species has a distinct rounded swelling on the internarial septum of the noseleaf, with a forearm length of 35.3–42.6 mm, greatest skull length of 15.94–17.90 mm, and a call frequency of maximum energy of 132.3–144.0 kHz. Although clearly different in morphology, the new species forms a sister clade with H. kunzi and H. bicolor in the phylogenetic trees based on mitochondrial DNA. In addition, this study reports echolocation and genetic data, with a confirmed record of H. einnaythu from Thailand for the first time. The new species most closely resembles H. einnaythu. However, it differs in the details of the noseleaf and craniodental morphology, and it has a genetic distance of 9.6% and 10.4% based on mitochondrial COI and ND2, respectively. It is currently documented from five localities: two in peninsular Thailand, at Hala Forest in Yala Province, and Phru To Daeng Swamp Forest in Narathiwat Province, one from peninsular Malaysia at Krau Wildlife Reserve in Pahang, and another two in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo at Gunung Kinabalu, and near Madai Caves. However, it is likely that many previous records of “H. cineraceus” from Borneo refer to this species. Most records of the species are from lowland evergreen rainforest, though one record from Sabah was at 1800m. The roosting sites for this new species are currently unknown. Future research with a combination of data such as genetics, echolocation and morphology would be necessary to further determine the species geographic distribution in Southeast Asia.
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- 2023
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12. A new species of Microteiid Lizard (Gymnophthalmidae, Cercosaurini, Selvasaura) from a remote area in the Peruvian Andes
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Germán Chávez, Luis A. García-Ayachi, and Alessandro Catenazzi
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Sarcopterygii ,Lacertoidea ,Amniota ,Selvasaura ,central Peru ,phylogeny ,Biota ,New species ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,Insect Science ,Squamata ,Animalia ,eastern Andes ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chordata ,Gymnophthalmidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
We describe a new species of Selvasaura lizard from the western slopes of the eastern Andes of central Peru. Among other characters, the new species differs from congeners in having keeled dorsal scales and more transverse rows of scales on dorsum. We present a phylogeny as additional evidence supporting delimitation of the new species.
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- 2023
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13. A new fossil subspecies of booby (Aves, Sulidae: Papasula) from Mauritius and Rodrigues, Mascarene Islands, with notes on P. abbotti from Assumption Island
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Hume, Julian P.
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Sulidae ,Suliformes ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Aves ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
A new subspecies of Papasula booby is described from fossil remains collected in the Mascarene Islands of Mauritius and Rodrigues, southwestern Indian Ocean. The Mascarene Booby Papasula abbotti nelsoni ssp. nov., larger than nominate Abbott’s Booby P. a. abbotti from Christmas Island, northeast Indian Ocean, was approximately the same size as the extinct Hiva Oa Booby P. a. costelloi from the Marquesas in the Eastern Pacific. Mentioned in early accounts of Mauritius in 1668 and in 1725–26 and 1761 on Rodrigues, the Mascarene booby became extinct by the end of the 18th century. Members of another isolated but now extirpated population of Papasula abbotti from Assumption Island in the Seychelles Archipelago, the island from which the type specimen was collected, are identical to extant Christmas Island birds in size and colouration and discussed in detail herein.
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- 2023
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14. A taxonomic revision of Boiga multomaculata (Boie, 1827) and B. ochracea (Theobald, 1868), with the description of a new subspecies (Squamata, Serpentes, Colubridae)
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GUNTHER KÖHLER, PANUPONG THAMMACHOTI CHARUNROCHANA, LINDA MOGK, NI LAR THAN, NIA KURNIAWAN, AHMAD MUAMMAR KADAFI, ABHIJIT DAS, FRANK TILLACK, and MARK O’SHEA
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Reptilia ,Squamata ,Colubridae ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
The analyses of molecular genetic data (mtDNA markers 16S, ND4, CYTB, and the nuclear marker c-mos) provided evidence that the Asian cat snake taxa Boiga multomaculata and B. ochracea actually represent a single species. They form mixed clades of low intraclade genetic differentiation. This evidence for conspecificy is supported by the lack of differentiation in all examined pholidotic and morphometric characters. Therefore, we formally place Dipsas ochracea Theobald, 1868 in the synonymy of Dipsas multomaculata Boie, 1827. We provide a summary of the tangled taxonomic history of the taxa involved in this study. Also, we resurrect Dipsadomorphus stoliczkae Wall, 1909 from synonymy of B. ochracea, for specimens exhibiting 21 midbody dorsal scale rows. Boiga stoliczkae is found in the Himalayas north and west of the Brahmaputra valley. Finally, based on the detection of historical genetic lineages within the newly defined species Boiga multomaculata we recognize three subspecies: Boiga multomaculata multomaculata (Boie, 1827), Boiga multomaculata ochracea (Theobald, 1868), and Boiga multomaculata septentrionalis n. ssp. which is distributed in northern Myanmar and Assam and Nagaland, India. We designate BMNH 1946.1.2.60 (1) as neotype of Dipsas ochracea Theobald, (2) as lectotype of D. ochraceus Günther, and (3) as lectotype of Boiga ochracea walli Smith, thereby making these names objective synonyms. Finally, we designate BMNH 94.12.31.55 as lectotype of Dipsadomorphus stoliczkae Wall.
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- 2023
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15. A new species of Caecilia Linnaeus, 1758 (Amphibia: Gymnophiona: Caeciliidae) from the Pacific lowlands of Colombia, with comments on the status of C. tenuissima Taylor, 1973
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Fernández-Roldán, Juan David and Lynch, John D.
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Amphibia ,Animalia ,Gymnophiona ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Caeciliidae ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
We here describe a new species of the genus Caecilia from the Pacific lowlands of Colombia that was mistaken in previous literature as C. tenuissima, but which has more primary and secondary grooves than that species (among other differences). The description of Caecilia wilkinsoni sp. nov. restricts the known distribution of C. tenuissima to Guayaquil, Ecuador, re-establishing its status as an endemic species. We comment on the type locality of C. tenuissima, the current condition of its holotype, and on the distributions of the Caecilia that inhabit the Pacific region of Colombia.
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- 2023
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16. A new Bolitoglossa (Amphibia, Caudata, Plethodontidae) from the Cordillera Oriental of Colombia
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Yeny Rocio López-Perilla, Juan David Fernández-Roldán, Fabio Leonardo Meza-Joya, and Guido Fabian Medina-Rangel
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Caudata ,Insecta ,Hemidactyliinae ,Arthropoda ,Sarcopterygii ,Ceramiales ,Florideophyceae ,coloración ,taxonomía ,coloration ,Biodiversidad ,salamandras ,sistemática filogenética ,Amphibia ,salamanders ,taxonomy ,Gnathostomata ,Caraboidea ,Animalia ,Plethodontidae ,Stenolophini ,Chordata ,Plantae ,Bolitoglossa ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Stenolophus ,Rhodomelaceae ,Bostrychia ,Biodiversity ,Biota ,Harpalinae ,Coleoptera ,phylogenetic systematics ,Osteichthyes ,Rhodophyta ,Eurhodophytina ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Carabidae - Abstract
A new salamander species of the genus Bolitoglossa is here described from the cloud forests of the western slopes of the Cordillera Oriental of Colombia, in the Cundinamarca department. The most salient characters of this new species are its numerous maxillary and vomerine teeth, its moderate webbing on hands and feet, its short and robust tail, and its chromatic variation. Based on molecular analyses this new species is assigned to the adspersa species group and its status established as the sister species of B. adspersa, with which it was previously confused. Lastly, the distribution, natural history, and conservation status of the new species are discussed.
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- 2023
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17. A new lizard species of the Liolaemus kingii group (Squamata: Liolaemidae) from northwestern Chubut province (Argentina)
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Sánchez, Kevin I., Morando, Mariana, and Avila, Luciano J.
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Reptilia ,Squamata ,Animalia ,Liolaemidae ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
We describe Liolaemus attenboroughi sp. nov., a lizard distributed in the northwestern Patagonian Steppe of Chubut province (Argentina) previously confused with L. kingii (Bell 1843). Recent studies based on molecular evidence supports its evolutionary independence. Here we provide a morphological diagnosis of this lineage, comparisons between three molecular species delimitation methods, and an updated phylogeny of the L. kingii group. Based on current knowledge of its distribution, this new species is allopatric with geographically close species of the L. kingii group.
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- 2023
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18. A new species of Schindleria (Teleostei: Gobiiformes: Gobiidae) from the Red Sea (Saudi Arabia) with a specialized caudal-fin complex
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Harald Ahnelt, Oliver Macek, and Vanessa Robitzch
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Vertebrata ,Schindleriidae ,Actinopterygii ,Phytolaccaceae ,Biota ,Caryophyllales ,Perciformes ,miniaturization ,Tracheophyta ,Magnoliopsida ,Rivinoideae ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,progenesis ,Animalia ,Gobiidae ,Gobiiformes ,Chordata ,Plantae ,paedomorphosis ,Schindleria ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Species of the gobiid genus Schindleria are among the smallest and fastest reproducing vertebrates of the oceans. We describe a new species, Schindleria qizma, from the Red Sea, Saudi Arabia. It is an extreme example of progenesis, within the already paedomorphic genus, with morphological traits clearly differentiating it from its congeners. Schindleria qizma has a unique, unflexed notochord with a straight urostyle of which the tip is inserted into the hypural cartilage, rather than the typical flexed notochord with an upturned urostyle of the other species of Schindleria. Schindleria qizma belongs to the short dorsal-fin type of Schindleria. It is further characterized by an elongated but relatively deep body; a short dorsal fin originating just slightly anterior to the anal fin (predorsal-fin length 59.4% of SL vs. preanal-fin length 60.2% of SL); a head continuously increasing in depth posteriorly with a straight dorsal profile; a short snout (18.6% of head length); large eyes (34.4% of head length); a short pectoral-radial plate (6.3% of SL); 13 dorsal-fin rays; 11 anal-fin rays; 0–2 procurrent rays (where the last procurrent ray is short, if present); an anal fin with the first anal-fin ray situated opposite the second dorsal-fin ray; toothless oral jaws; females with few (10–11, total) but very large (4.6% of SL) eggs and with a conspicuous urogenital papilla characterized by a wide urogenital opening flanked by two long, bilobed projections; a dorsally pigmented swim-bladder; blackish, iridescent eyes, capped by a silvery layer with irregular rows of black dots or blotches; and no additional external pigmentation on its body, at least in preserved specimens.
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- 2023
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19. Five new species of the pelodryadid genus Litoria Tschudi from the southern versant of Papua New Guinea’s Central Cordillera, with observations on the diversification of reproductive strategies in Melanesian treefrogs
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STEPHEN J. RICHARDS, STEPHEN C. DONNELLAN, and PAUL M. OLIVER
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Amphibia ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Pelodryadidae ,Anura ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
New Guinea has the most diverse insular frog fauna in the world, and rates of species discovery and description have increased rapidly in the last two decades. Pelodryadid treefrogs are the second most diverse family of anurans on the island but their taxonomy, relationships, and especially ecology remain poorly documented. Based on differences in morphology, advertisement calls (where available) and phylogenetic analyses of a 787 base pair alignment from the mitochondrial ND4 gene and flanking tRNA, we describe five new species of small treefrogs from hill and lower montane forests in the high rainfall belt that straddles the southern versant of Papua New Guinea’s Central Cordillera. Three of these species are known only from forest growing on karst substrates, adding to the growing number of herpetofauna species currently known only from the extensive karst habitats of Papua New Guinea’s South-fold Mountains. We also describe the arboreal breeding strategies of two of the new species, and report obligate treehole (phytotelm) breeding in New Guinean frogs for the first time. The new phytotelm–breeding species has juveniles with colour and patterning that closely resemble bird droppings, suggesting defensive mimicry or masquerade. A preliminary phylogeny suggests that arboreal-breeding frogs do not form a monophyletic group and that arboreal breeding has evolved multiple times within the New Guinean pelodryadid radiation. A further striking feature of the phylogeny is poor support for most basal nodes in the most diverse radiation of Melanesian Pelodryadidae, suggesting rapid ecological diversification and speciation, potentially following colonisation from Australia and/or mountain uplift. These new taxa and observations highlight previously unrecognised ecological and reproductive diversity in the Melanesian Pelodryadidae.
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- 2023
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20. A decade of amphibian studies (Animalia, Amphibia) at Sekayu lowland forest, Hulu Terengganu, Peninsular Malaysia
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Baizul Hafsyam Badli-Sham, Muhamad Fatihah Syafiq, Mohd Shahrizan Azrul Aziz, Natrah Rafiqah Mohd Jalil, Muhammad Taufik Awang, Muhammad Nouril Ammin Othman, Anis Azira Abdul Aziz, Khunirah Dzu, Nurul Asyikin Abdol Wahab, Nor Liyana Jamil, Murni Azima Ismail, Wan Ahmad Aidil Wan Azman, Ooi Xin Wei, Nur Ain Nabilah Jamaha, Mohamad Aqmal-Naser, Muhammad Fahmi-Ahmad, Noor Shahirah-Ibrahim, Syed Ahmad Rizal, Daicus M. Belabut, Chan Kin Onn, Evan Seng Huat Quah, Larry Lee Grismer, and Amirrudin B. Ahmad
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Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Sarcopterygii ,Ceramiales ,Florideophyceae ,herpetofauna ,Biodiversity conservation ,Amphibia ,Gnathostomata ,Caraboidea ,Animalia ,Stenolophini ,Chordata ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Stenolophus ,Rhodomelaceae ,Malaysia ,Bostrychia ,Biota ,Harpalinae ,Coleoptera ,Osteichthyes ,Rhodophyta ,Eurhodophytina ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Carabidae ,protected areas ,lowland forest - Abstract
Amphibians of Sekayu lowland forest have been studied more than a decade, with discoveries of new records of species showing no sign of abating between the years 2003 to 2020, indicating the remarkably rich diversity of anurans in this forest. Despite ceaseless anthropogenic activities in this area, this study successfully recorded 52 species of amphibians from 32 genera in the lowland forest of Sekayu. The species composition consisted of a single species from the family Ichthyophiidae and 51 species of anurans of 31 genera and six families. The number of species recorded has steadily increased especially during more recent surveys from 2015 to 2020. This study augments the total number of amphibian species recorded from Hulu Terengganu by ten additional species, increasing the total to 70 species for the district.
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- 2023
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21. Unraveling Siren (Caudata: Sirenidae) systematics and description of a small, seepage specialist
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Fedler, Matthew T., Enge, Kevin M., and Moler, Paul E.
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Amphibia ,Caudata ,Sirenidae ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
For approximately four decades, scientists have known of the existence of several undescribed species of Siren in the southeastern United States Coastal Plain. One of these species, S. reticulata, was recently described, but a small, seepage-dwelling species has remained undescribed until now. To resolve outstanding questions concerning the phylogeny of Siren, we collected sequence and morphometric data from specimens across the range of Siren. We found S. lacertina and S. reticulata to represent strongly supported monophyletic groups, with S. reticulata having a sister relationship to all other Siren. Additionally, we found five distinct mtDNA lineages within what has been recognized as S. intermedia. Siren lacertina and type-locality S. intermedia (lineage A) are sister mtDNA lineages, whereas S. intermedia lineages B and C show a high level of mitogenomic divergence from type-locality S. intermedia. Analyses of two scnDNA loci revealed that S. lacertina is monophyletic but nested with low positional support in a clade including the three S. intermedia mtDNA lineages. Further study is needed to determine whether S. intermedia lineages A, B, and C represent distinct species or incompletely sorted lineages. We restrict the range of S. intermedia to the region from the Escambia and Perdido river drainages of Florida and Alabama eastward through Virginia (the combined ranges of lineages A, B, and C). We also elevate S. i. nettingi (lineage E) to species status and include the larger S. i. texana form in that taxon, generating a species that occurs from the Mobile Bay drainages westward through the Mississippi Basin and southwest into northeastern Mexico. Lastly, we describe a new miniature species, S. sphagnicola, that ranges from the Florida Parishes of Louisiana eastward to the westernmost tributary creeks of Choctawhatchee Bay in the western Florida panhandle.
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- 2023
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22. Type specimens of non-passerines in Naturalis Biodiversity Center (Animalia, Aves)
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Steven D. van der Mije, Pepijn Kamminga, and René W. R. J. Dekker
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,ZMA ,Sarcopterygii ,RMNH ,Amniota ,Biota ,Leiden ,non-passerines ,Schlegel ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,birds ,Animalia ,types ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chordata ,Aves ,Temminck ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The non-passerine type specimens in Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden are listed as an update to Van den Hoek Ostende et al. (1997) ‘Type-specimens of birds in the National Museum of Natural History, Leiden, Part 1. Non-Passerines’ and Roselaar and Prins (2000) ‘List of type specimens of birds in the Zoological Museum of the University of Amsterdam (ZMA), including taxa described by ZMA staff but without types in the ZMA’. All new names published by Temminck and Schlegel are listed, even when types are not in Naturalis but in other collections. We have added 380 new names and deleted 13 names originally listed in Van den Hoek Ostende et al. (1997).
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- 2023
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23. The advertisement calls of Pristimantis galdi Jiménez de la Espada, 1870 and Pristimantis katoptroides (Flores, 1988) (Anura, Strabomantidae)
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Diego Batallas and Jorge Brito
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Pristimantis ,Sarcopterygii ,spiny green frogs ,Craugastoridae ,Asteraceae ,Amphibia ,Magnoliopsida ,Gnathostomata ,Animalia ,Sangay National Park ,Chordata ,Ceuthomantinae ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Brachycephaloidea ,calls ,Asterales ,acoustic communication ,Biota ,Arctium ,Tracheophyta ,Osteichthyes ,Pristimantis galdi ,Carduoideae ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Pristimantis katoptroides ,Anura - Abstract
In this study we describe for the first time the calls of Pristimantis galdi and Pristimantis katoptroides. Recordings were obtained in Sangay National Park, Ecuador. We highlight the importance of recording P. galdi since its call has been recorded after 153 years of having been described as a species. The call of P. galdi consists of 7 to 9 short notes, the sounds of which are similar to a hammer hitting a nail, with a mean dominant frequency of 2.39 kHz. In turn, the call of P. katoptroides consists of a single note, the sound of which is similar to a metallic “tic”, with a mean dominant frequency of 1.74 kHz. We compared the advertisement calls of P. galdi, P. katoptroides and P. roni as these species share similar morphological characteristics and are grouped in the spiny green frog’s ecotype. Despite these morphological similarities, their advertisement calls are different. Obtaining calls of Pristimantis species in Ecuador might prove difficult with short-term studies due to the great sampling efforts that may be needed to get these recordings. Therefore, implementing active and passive monitoring could help improve our knowledge of acoustic signals in Ecuador’s rainfrogs.
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- 2023
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24. Body size and body condition in the nose-horned viper (Vipera ammodytes): effects of sex and populations
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Tijana Čubrić, Xavier Bonnet, and Jelka Crnobrnja‐Isailović
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Sarcopterygii ,Vipera ammodytes ,Amniota ,Biota ,inter-population difference ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,Vipera ,sexual dimorphism ,morphological traits ,Squamata ,Viperidae ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chordata ,Viperinae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vipera transcaucasiana - Abstract
Snakes are ecologically and morphologically plastic organisms that exhibit extensive variations in body size and body condition in response to environmental factors. Documenting inter-population variations is important to describe species comprehensively across their distribution range and to monitor trends over time (e.g. decreasing body condition due to alteration of habitat). Thus, we analyzed the influence of population and sex on body size and body condition in three populations of nose-horned vipers (Vipera ammodytes) in Serbia. In one population, males were larger than females (F1, 39=4.802, p=0.034), but not in the two other populations (F1, 36=0.075, p=0.786; F1, 21=0.018, p=0.893). Females exhibited higher body condition (residual values from the regression of log-body mass against log-body size) than males (F1, 90=10.444, p=0.002); this sex difference was not found in one population when analyzed separately (F1, 35=1.834, p=0.184). Moreover, we found strong inter-population differences in mean body size and mean body condition (F2, 96=8.822, pF2, 90=10.319, p=0.001, respectively). While inter-population difference in body size was driven by males, inter-population difference in body condition was driven by females. These results suggest that, in this species, body size might be an important determinant of mating success in males, while body condition may play a major role in female fecundity.
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- 2023
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25. A contribution to taxonomy and biology of Spalerosophis diadema diadema (Schlegel, 1837) along with a new record of Spalerosophis atriceps (Fischer, 1885) from the Poonch District of Jammu and Kashmir, India (Reptilia, Squamata, Colubridae)
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Sarshad Hussain, Khursheed Ahmad, and Asgar Ali Shah
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Sarcopterygii ,Western Himalayas ,Colubridae ,Poonch ,S. d. diadema ,Amniota ,Spalerosophis diadema diadema ,Biota ,taxonomy ,Colubroidea ,Gnathostomata ,Spalerosophis ,Osteichthyes ,Pir Panjal ,Squamata ,Animalia ,Spalerosophis atriceps ,Spalerosophis diadema ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chordata ,Colubrinae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Colour morphs - Abstract
The present study is aimed to validate the occurrence of two species of Diadem or Royal snakes of Genus Spalerosophis Jan, 1865 from the Poonch District of Jammu and Kashmir, India along with the presentation of eight different colour morphs and diagnostic characteristics. The eight different colour morphs include four colour morphs of adults of S. d. diadema (Schlegel, 1837), two colour morphs of adults of S. atriceps (Fischer, 1885), one colour morph of subadults of unknown parentage and one colour morph of the adult of S. diadema (Schlegel, 1837) represented by a single individual whose identification at subspecies level (ssp. cliffordii/diadema) is the subject for further investigations for want of more specimens. This solitary specimen shares many similarities with S. d. diadema, but it has less number of sub-caudal scales which point towards the likelihood of S. d. cliffordii (Schlegel, 1837). The distribution, activity, habitat and behaviour have also been reported along with the morphological, morphometric and meristic characters. Between two identified species S. atriceps is a new report from the Poonch District. Reported specimens are mapped across the study area and are depicted here in the distribution map.
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- 2023
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26. The Australian gulf snapping turtle Elseya lavarackorum (Testudines: Chelidae) revisited—Is the late Pleistocene fossil species extant?
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Scott A. Thomson, Natália R. Friol, Arthur White, Dion Wedd, and Arthur Georges
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,chelid ,fossil ,Sarcopterygii ,chronospecies ,Amniota ,Chelonia ,Biota ,Chelidae ,Gnathostomata ,Lazarus turtle ,Osteichthyes ,Testudines ,Elseya lavarackorum ,Pleurodira ,Elseya ,Animalia ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Disagreement exists on the taxonomic identity of the extant populations of the Australian Elseya referred to in 1992 as the gulf Elseya (= Elseya sp. aff. dentata [Nicholson]). The extant form has since 1997 been considered conspecific with the late Pleistocene fossil Elseya lavarackorum (White and Archer, 1994). Recently it has been considered a new species, Elseya oneirosJoseph-Ouni et al., 2020, conspecific with another fossil found in the same site and stratum as Elseya lavarackorum. Here we re-examine the fossil material and reassess the characters used by previous authors in an attempt to decide the issue. We find that the anterior bridge suture with the carapace of the fossil Elseya lavarackorum is associated with extensive and prominent plastral elements, which has led to misinterpretation of characters associated with this structure. We furthermore show that interindividual variation in sulci patterns is so great as to render them of little taxonomic value. On the basis of (a) deviation of the anterior shape of the carapace from ovoid such that, in aged individuals, the most anterior point of the carapace occurs at marginal scutes M2 (a resultant nuchal bay occurs in such individuals); (b) the typical absence of a cervical scute; (c) no evidence of a medial constriction in the anterior bridge strut suture; and (d) absence of evidence of any other informative variation of taxonomic value; we conclude that the decision to consider the late Pleistocene (ca 23 kyr old) fossil and the extant Elseya sp. aff. dentata [Nicholson] as Elseya lavarackorum (White and Archer, 1994) as conspecific should stand.
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- 2023
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27. A review of the genus Bronchocela Kaup, 1827 (Reptilia: Agamidae) in the Nicobar Archipelago with the description of two new species
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Chandramouli, S.R., Adhikari, Omkar D., Amarasinghe, A.A. Thasun, and Abinawanto, A.
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Reptilia ,Squamata ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Agamidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Species of the agamid genus Bronchocela Kaup, 1827 in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands are reassessed based on newly collected specimens from different parts of the Nicobar Archipelago. An assessment based on morphology and distribution of the identified groups reveal two new, unnamed populations, one allied to B. cristatella and the other allied to B. danieli. These two populations are described as new species, and Bronchocela cristatella is redescribed based on Sundaic specimens. The remaining species, B. danieli and B. rubrigularis are redescribed. Distributions of all of these four species are mapped and recommendations on their conservation status are suggested.
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- 2023
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28. A new species of Gracixalus (Anura, Rhacophoridae) from northwestern Vietnam
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Tung Thanh Tran, Anh Van Pham, Minh Duc Le, Nam Hai Nguyen, Thomas Ziegler, and Cuong The Pham
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Sarcopterygii ,Asteraceae ,Gracixalus ,Amphibia ,Magnoliopsida ,taxonomy ,Gnathostomata ,morphology ,Animalia ,16S rRNA ,Chordata ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Son La Province ,Rhacophoridae ,Asterales ,Gracixalus truongi sp. nov ,Biota ,Arctium ,Tracheophyta ,Osteichthyes ,Carduoideae ,Dien Bien Province ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Rag1 ,Anura ,Rhacophorinae - Abstract
A new species of small tree frog is described from northwestern Vietnam based on morphological differences and molecular divergence. Gracixalus truongisp. nov. is distinguishable from its congeners and other small rhacophorid species on the basis of a combination of the following characters: size relatively small, SVL 32.2–33.1 mm in males, 37.6–39.3 mm in females; head slightly wider than long; vomerine teeth absent; snout round and long RL/SVL 0.17–0.19 in males, 0.16–0.17 in females; spines on upper eyelid absent; supratympanic fold distinct; tympanum distinct; dorsal skin smooth; throat smooth and venter granular; tibiotarsal projection absent; webbing of fingers rudimentary, toes with moderately developed webbing; dorsum moss-green, with an inverse Y-shaped dark green marking extended from interorbital region to posterior region of dorsum; external vocal sac absent in males; males with a nuptial pad on finger I. In the molecular analyses, the new species has no clear sister taxon and is at least 4.5% divergent from other congeners based on a fragment of the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene.
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- 2023
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29. First record of Hoplobatrachus litoralis Hasan, Kuramoto, Islam, Alam, Khan & Sumida, 2012 (Anura, Dicroglossidae) from China
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Shuo Liu, Mian Hou, Dingqi Rao, and Song Li
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Sarcopterygii ,western Yunnan ,Asteraceae ,Baoshan ,Amphibia ,Magnoliopsida ,Hoplobatrachus litoralis ,Gnathostomata ,Hoplobatrachus ,distribution ,Animalia ,Dicroglossinae ,16S rRNA ,Chordata ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Asterales ,Longling ,Biota ,Dicroglossidae ,Arctium ,Tracheophyta ,Osteichthyes ,Carduoideae ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Anura - Abstract
We report the first record of Hoplobatrachus litoralis Hasan, Kuramoto, Islam, Alam, Khan & Sumida, 2012 from China based on seven specimens from Baoshan City, western Yunnan. Morphologically, the specimens from China mostly agree with the original description of H. litoralis and phylogenetically show a small genetic distance (1.7%) in the 16S rRNA gene with the specimens (including one paratype) of H. litoralis from its type locality in Bangladesh. Our work increased the species number of the genus Hoplobatrachus Peters, 1863 in China to two. This record is the easternmost distribution of this species at present. Furthermore, we found that the species H. salween Thongproh, Chunskul, Sringurngam, Waiprom, Makchai, Cota, Duengkae, Duangjai, Hasan, Chuaynkern & Chuaynkern, 2022 recently described from north-western Thailand is morphologically and genetically very similar to H. litoralis and, therefore, we discuss the validity of H. salween as a separate species.
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- 2023
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30. DNA barcoding of the genus Alburnoides Jeitteles, 1861 (Actinopterygii, Cyprinidae) from Anatolia, Turkey
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Halim Canoglu, Ismail Aksu, Davut Turan, and Yusuf Bektas
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Vertebrata ,Actinopterygii ,mtDNA ,Cyprinidae ,Biota ,COI ,Cypriniformes ,Spirlin ,species delimitation ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,Animalia ,Chordata ,Alburnoides ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The present study investigated the ability of DNA barcoding to reliably identify the endemic freshwater species in Turkey, known as biodiversity hotspots. The barcode region (652 bp) of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) was used to barcode 153 individuals from 13 morphologically identified species of the genus Alburnoides. Based on the Kimura two-parameter (K2P) evolution model, the average interspecific distance (0.0595) was 31-fold higher than the average intraspecific distance (0.0019). There was a clear-cut barcode gap (0.0158–0.0187) between maximum intraspecific distance (A. tzanevi and A. velioglui) and minimum nearest-neighbour distance (A. freyhofi and A. kurui) for Anatolian Alburnoides species and a common genetic threshold of 0.0158 sequence divergence was defined for species delimitation. The multiple species delimitation methods (ABGD, ASAP, GMYC and bPTP) revealed a total of 11 molecular operational taxonomic units (MOTUs) for 13 morphospecies. Neighbour-joining (NJ), Maximum Likelihood (ML) and Bayesian Inference (BI) tree analysis indicated that all haplotypes were clustered into two major clades, which corresponded to eleven Alburnoides species clusters, with strong bootstrap support. Furthermore, all the specimens clustered in concurrence with the morpho-taxonomic status of the species, except for two species (A. coskuncelebii and A. emineae) that were morphologically differentiated, but showed overlap in variation for COI-based DNA barcode data with other species. Overall, present results identified that COI-based DNA barcoding is effective for species identification and cataloguing of genus Alburnoides in Turkey.
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- 2023
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31. A new cave population of Astyanax mexicanus from Northern Sierra de El Abra, Tamaulipas, Mexico
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Ramsés Miranda-Gamboa, Luis Espinasa, María de los Angeles Verde-Ramírez, Jorge Hernández-Lozano, Jean Louis Lacaille, Monika Espinasa, and Claudia Patricia Ornelas-García
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Vertebrata ,regressive evolution ,Actinopterygii ,Characidae ,Soil Science ,Biota ,Gnathostomata ,cavefish ,Osteichthyes ,Astyanax mexicanus ,repeated evolution ,Sierra de El Abra ,Astyanax ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Characiformes ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
The Astyanax genus represents an extraordinary example of phenotypic evolution, being their most extreme examples the blind and depigmented morphs, which have evolved from independent surface-dwelling lineages. Among cave organisms, Astyanax cavefish is a prominent model system to study regressive evolution. Before this study, 34 cave populations were known for the Astyanax genus to be inhabited by the cave morph. The majority of those cave populations are distributed in Northeast México, at the Sierra Madre Oriental (32 cavefish), in three main areas: Sierra de Guatemala, Sierra de El Abra, and Micos, and two in the Balsas basin in the state of Guerrero, Mexico. In the present study, we describe a new cave population found 4.5 km Southward of Pachón cave, the most northern cave population known for the Sierra de El Abra limestone. El Refugio cave is a resurgence with a mixed population of fish with different levels of troglomorphism, and surface fish, resembling other hybrid populations within the Sierra de El Abra. Based on a mitochondrial DNA characterization of the 16S ribosomal DNA sequence, we could identify the mitochondrial lineage of this population, which was placed closely related to the “New Lineage”, sharing haplotypes with the surface (i.e. Arroyo Lagartos) and Pachón populations, instead of with the cave populations from Central Sierra de El Abra (e.g. Tinaja cave). El Refugio cave population gives additional evidence of the intricate history of this system, where migration, drift, and selection have shaped the evolution of the cave morphs through the independent episodes of the Astyanax mexicanus history.
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- 2023
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32. Novel data support validity of Phoxinus chrysoprasius (Pallas, 1814) (Actinopterygii, Leuciscidae)
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Nina G. Bogutskaya, Oleg A. Diripasko, and Anja Palandačić
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Cypriniformes ,Actinopterygii ,Cyprinidae ,Animalia ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
The common minnow species Cyprinus chrysoprasius, previously synonymised to Phoxinus phoxinus, was originally described from the Crimean Peninsula (Black Sea – Sea of Azov basin). A genetic analysis of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxydase 1 in the context of a phylogenetic study of European Phoxinus showed that it represents a distinct genetic clade and potentially a valid species. In the present study, we approach the issue following a broader, both genetic and morphological, study in order to check and support the validity of native Crimean Phoxinus under the earliest available name of the species: P. chrysoprasius. Our data demonstrate a reliable genetic distance of this minnow from geographically neighbouring clades and species, and a certain morphological distinctiveness. In order to determine the taxonomic concept of P. chrysoprasius, as a species involved in a genetically well-differentiated, but phenotypically poorly structured complex of east-European Phoxinus, a neotype for the species, based on topotypical material, is herein described and designated. The original type locality of the species is also clarified.
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- 2023
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33. Systematics of Trimeresurus popeiorum Smith, 1937 with a revised molecular phylogeny of Asian pitvipers of the genus Trimeresurus Lacépède, 1804 sensu lato
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Zeeshan A. Mirza, Editorial office H. T. Lalremsanga, Harshal Bhosale, Gaurang Gowande, Harshil Patel, Sabira S. Idiatullina, and Nikolay A. Poyarkov
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Asia ,Sarcopterygii ,Trimeresurus sabahi ,synonymy ,Amniota ,Biota ,subgenus ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,Trimeresurus popeiorum ,Insect Science ,Squamata ,Viperidae ,Animalia ,Trimeresurus ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chordata ,systematics ,Crotalinae ,molecular phylogeny ,Popeia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The pit viper snake genus Trimeresurus Lacépède, 1804 sensu lato, is a diverse group of nocturnal serpents comprising over 61 species. The genus is morphologically heterogeneous and has been divided into several subgenera. We present an updated phylogeny of Asian pitvipers and propose a revised classification. Additionally, we revise the taxonomy of T. popeiorum Smith, 1937 and propose taxonomic changes with support from molecular and morphological data. We restrict T. popeiorumsensu stricto to northeastern India, Bangladesh, southern China, and northern Myanmar; populations beyond these areas require further assessment. We also synonymize T. yingjiangensisChen et al., 2019 with T. popeiorum based on overlapping morphological characters, molecular data, and distribution. The findings shed new light on the taxonomy of T. popeiorum, warranting the need for assessing the population of T. popeiorum from southeast Asia.
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- 2023
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34. Chromatic polymorphism in Trichomycterus albinotatus (Siluriformes, Trichomycteridae), a mountain catfish from south-eastern Brazil and the role of colouration characters in trichomycterine taxonomy
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Wilson J. E. M. Costa, José Leonardo O. Mattos, Pedro F. Amorim, Beatrizz O. Mesquita, and Axel M. Katz
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Vertebrata ,Actinopterygii ,Trichomycterus ,Trichomycteridae ,mountain biodiversity ,Trichomycterus albinotatus ,Biota ,Trichomycterinae ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,Atlantic Forest ,Animalia ,Chordata ,colouration ontogenetic change ,Siluriformes ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Colouration is an important tool for systematists inferring species limits and phylogenetic relationships of teleost fishes, but the use of colouration variation in trichomycterine catfish systematics has generated some controversy. We first report and describe the occurrence of four, geographically disjunct colour morphs inTrichomycterus albinotatus, endemic to south-eastern Brazil, as well as ontogenetic colouration change in each morph. A phylogenetic analysis using a cytb fragment (1098 bp) for 23 specimens representing all colour morphs and four outgroups did not support any correlation between colour morphs and lineages, with different colour morphs sharing identical haplotypes. This study indicated that young adult specimens found in lighter habitats had white and brown to black spots on the flank, whereas similar-sized specimens inhabiting darker habitats had white spots inconspicuous or absent and dark brown or black spots expanded. Individuals above about 65 mm SL of all populations had flank white marks less conspicuous or absent and cryptic habits during daylight, contrasting with smaller individuals with white marks and actively swimming above the substrate. Literature data indicate that ontogenetic colouration and habit changes occur in different trichomycterid lineages. Our data thus show that colouration may be problematic in taxonomical studies, although often being consistently used to diagnose species and clades. We conclude that colouration should not be discarded a priori as evidence of trichomycterine relationships and species limits, but should be used with caution in systematic studies, being necessary additional evidence, such as osteological characters or molecular data.
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- 2023
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35. Species delimitation, molecular phylogeny and historical biogeography of the sweetlips fish (Perciformes, Haemulidae)
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Ehsan Damadi, Faezeh Yazdani Moghaddam, and Mehdi Ghanbarifardi
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Vertebrata ,Actinopterygii ,Plectorhinchus ,Biota ,Perciformes ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,Animalia ,Haemulidae ,Chordata ,mito-nuclear ,biogeography ,molecular systematics ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The subfamily Plectorhinchinae (sweetlips) is composed of poorly-known species with high commercially and ecologically values that exhibit phenotypic plasticity and various morphologies. Few studies have assessed the validity of sweetlips, intergeneric relationships and evolutionary survey in this subfamily, which have not yet been resolved. This study investigated the DNA sequences of (1) the mitochondrial COI gene to delimit species, and (2) two mitochondrial (COI and Cyt b), and one nuclear (RAG1) markers to infer phylogenetic relationships and evolutionary and biogeographic history. The molecular results could differentiate Diagramma punctatum from the other species, but failed to distinguish D. labiosum as a distinct species with considerably lower genetic distances for the COI (0.53%) and Cyt b (0.51%) markers. However, additional taxonomic investigations are required to shed light on this issue. All previously described nominal species of sweetlips in the northwest Indian Ocean were found to be well supported. The monophyly of Plectorhinchus is not supported and Diagramma pictum and D. punctatum should be assigned to the genus Plectorhinchus. The biogeographic history of Plectorhinchinae likely originated in the Indo-Pacific ca. 34 Ma (30–39 Ma; late Eocene/ middle Oligocene) and subsequently colonised the Western Indian Ocean and the Central Indo-Pacific. Maximum diversification within the subfamily occurred from the middle Miocene to Pliocene, coinciding with dispersal and vicariance events. Diversification was probably driven by both biological and geographical factors.
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- 2023
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36. A new glassfrog species of the genus Centrolene (Amphibia, Anura, Centrolenidae) from Cordillera del Cóndor, southern Ecuador
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Paul Székely, María Córdova-Díaz, Daniel Hualpa-Vega, Santiago Hualpa-Vega, and Diana Székely
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Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Sarcopterygii ,Ceramiales ,Florideophyceae ,ADN ,Centrolenidae ,filogenética ,Asteraceae ,Anfibios ,vocalizaciones ,Amphibia ,Amphibians ,Centroleninae ,Magnoliopsida ,Gnathostomata ,renacuajos ,Caraboidea ,Animalia ,tropical Andes ,Stenolophini ,Chordata ,Plantae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,vocalizations ,Centrolene ,Stenolophus ,Rhodomelaceae ,Asterales ,Bostrychia ,DNA ,Biota ,Harpalinae ,Arctium ,phylogenetics ,Tracheophyta ,Osteichthyes ,tadpoles ,Rhodophyta ,Carduoideae ,Eurhodophytina ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Carabidae ,Anura ,Andes tropicales - Abstract
Based on an integrative taxonomical approach, using molecular, morphological, and bioacoustics data, a new species of glassfrog of the genus Centrolene is described from Refugio de Vida Silvestre El Zarza, southern Ecuador. Centrolene zarzasp. nov. is a medium sized species, easily distinguished from all other glassfrogs by its unique combination of characters, such as a shagreen dorsum with elevated warts corresponding to white spots, an evident tympanum, half or more than half of the upper parietal peritoneum covered by iridophores, iridophores absent on all visceral peritonea, including the pericardium, a lobed liver lacking iridophores, males with small projecting humeral spines, the outer edges of forearms and tarsus with a row of enameled warts that often continue into the external edges of Finger IV and/or Toe V, and white or yellowish white iris with thick black reticulations. The new species is closely related to a currently undescribed species and superficially resembles C. condor, C. pipilata, C. solitaria, C. altitudinalis, and C. daidalea. The tadpole and advertisement and courtship calls are described, and the threats to the species survival, mainly represented by habitat loss and contamination due to mining activities, are briefly discussed.
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- 2023
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37. New records of two roughy fish species of Hoplostethus and a confirmed record of H. crassispinus Kotlyar, 1980 (Trachichthyiformes, Trachichthyidae) from Taiwan
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Yo Su, Hsiu-Chin Lin, and Hsuan-Ching Ho
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Vertebrata ,Beryciformes ,Actinopterygii ,ichthyofauna ,Hoplostethus ,Biota ,taxonomy ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,distribution ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chordata ,Trachichthyidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biodiversity - Abstract
Two rarely caught species of the roughy fish genus Hoplostethus have been identified for the first time in the fish collections of Taiwan. The first, H. grandperrini Roberts & Gomon, 2012 was previously known only from two type specimens collected in the Southern Hemisphere off the coast of New Caledonia. Its distribution is now extended to the Northern Hemisphere off the coast of Pingtung, southern Taiwan. Our specimen represents the only record of this species since its initial description. The second, H. robustispinus Moore & Dodd, 2010 was originally described from a single specimen collected in the Philippines and was only known from the type locality and a single record off the Paracel Islands, South China Sea. This specimen represents the third record of the species since its original description. A single specimen of H. crassispinus Kotlyar, 1980, whose name has long appeared in the ichthyological literature of Taiwan and adjacent areas, was also identified as the first specimen-based record for Taiwan. Detailed descriptions of these species are provided and compared with available data of respective type specimens and related species, with intraspecific variations also discussed. Also included is a dichotomous key to all known species of the subgenus Hoplostethus in Taiwan.
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- 2023
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38. Taxonomic status of the enigmatic Natrix sexcarinata Wagler, 1824 (Serpentes: Colubridae: Colubrinae)
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Paulo Passos and Leonardo Victor Lopes
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Reptilia ,Squamata ,Colubridae ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Wagler described Natrix sexcarinata through a specimen collected on the banks of the Amazon River in Brazil, without citing a specific location. The species was later transferred to different Neotropical genera (Chironius, Herpetodryas, Phrynonax, and Pseustes) currently allocated in the Family Colubridae. The taxonomic instability of Natrix sexcarinata is probably due to its brief original description in combination with its supposedly inaccurate illustration. Despite the holotype being lost during World War II, some authors have pointed out that its description is somewhat similar to the widespread concept of Pseustes poecilonotus. More recently, a molecular study proposed the synonymy of the genera Pseustes with Spilotes, resurrecting the Phrynonax genus to allocate Ph. poecilonotus and Ph. polylepis. However, the taxonomic positioning of Natrix sexcarinata remains unsatisfactory with respect to the cis-Andean taxa placed in Phrynonax or even Spilotes throughout the Amazon. Considering the taxonomic and nomenclatural problems mentioned above, we investigated how many Phrynonax species occur along the Amazon Basin and what would be their applicable name. We examined the external morphology (meristic, morphometric, and color pattern data) of 118 Phrynonax specimens and prepared the hemipenes of seven specimens to understand geographic, sexual, and ontogenetic variability parameters. Our result suggests the synonymy of Ph. polylepis and N. sexcarinata under the combination Phrynonax sexcarinatus. Based on available evidence, we reinforce that Phrynonax sexcarinatus is the only congener that occurs along the Amazon Basin. We have also designated a Natrix sexcarinata neotype to stabilize its complex nomenclature.
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- 2023
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39. Occurrence of the milk-eye catshark Apristurus nakayai (Carcharhiniformes: Pentanchidae) from the South China Sea
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SHING-LAI NG, KWANG-MING LIU, and SHOOU-JENG JOUNG
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Scyliorhinidae ,Carcharhiniformes ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Chordata ,Chondrichthyes ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
The milk-eye catshark Apristurus nakayai Iglésias, 2012 was known from three specimens in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. Six specimens were recently collected from the South China Sea. It belongs to the brunneus group, and superficially resembles A. platyrhynchus Tanaka, 1909. Apristurus nakayai differs from A. platyrhynchus by the following characters: iris shiny white when fresh; body brownish black to black; second dorsal-fin insertion above or slightly in front of the anal-fin insertion; denticles absent inside mouth; and maturing at about 400 mm TL in both sexes. The occurrence of Apristurus nakayai from the South China Sea represents the first record in the northern Hemisphere, and a substantial distributional range extension (ca. 4665 km).
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- 2023
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40. Revealing anole diversity in the highlands of the Northern Andes: New and resurrected species of the Anolis heterodermus species group
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Rafael A. Moreno-Arias, Miguel A. Méndez-Galeano, Iván Beltrán, and Mario Vargas-Ramírez
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,high altitude lizards ,Sarcopterygii ,mtDNA ,Iguania ,Amniota ,South America ,Biota ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,morphology ,Squamata ,Dactyloidae ,nDNA ,Animalia ,Anolis ,Anolis heterodermus ,Chordata ,integrative taxonomy ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Anole species complex - Abstract
The Anolis heterodermus group comprises eight big-headed and short-legged lizard species from the highlands of the northernmost South American Andes. Recent studies revealed unknown lineages within this group that had previously been categorized as a species complex. By widely sampling and applying an integrative taxonomic framework, we (1) assessed the species diversity of the group using a molecular dataset (two mitochondrial and one nuclear markers) along with an inclusive morphological study (scalation, scale configuration and ornamentation, morphometrics, and dewlap and body colour patterns); and (2) we inferred the evolutionary relationships within this species group. Our analyses confirmed the formerly reported differentiation between populations of those high-altitude lizards, and we identified several unknown evolutionary lineages. Our results provided evidence for the existence of nine distinct, independently evolving evolutionary lineages in the heterodermus group. As a result, we described two morphologically and genetically highly distinct lineages as species new to science (A. quimbayasp. nov. and A. tequendamasp. nov.). We redescribed A. heterodermus and erected as a valid species Anolis richteri, a previously described synonym of A. heterodermus. A taxonomic key for the identification of species of the Phenacosaurus clade was presented. The identification of two additional poorly-known lineages suggested that the diversity of this group of lizards is still unknown; therefore, it is necessary to establish measurements for the group´s conservation, as well as to perform fieldwork and revision of herpetological collections to identify possible hidden diversity within the group.
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- 2023
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41. Trophic ecology of the Atlantic Forest endemic tree frog Boana bischoffi (Boulenger, 1887) (Anura, Hylidae)
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Gabriela de Araujo Pereira, Célio F. B. Haddad, and Marcelo José Sturaro
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Hylidae ,Sarcopterygii ,Asteraceae ,Amphibia ,Magnoliopsida ,Gnathostomata ,Animalia ,Boana ,Chordata ,Plantae ,Boana bischoffi ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Cophomantinae ,trophic ecology ,amphibians ,Asterales ,Biota ,Arctium ,Tracheophyta ,Osteichthyes ,sexual dimorphism ,Carduoideae ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Anura ,diet - Abstract
Studies of natural history are important to accumulate knowledge about aspects of diet, reproduction, and habitat use, which can assist the conservation biology for endangered groups, such as amphibians. Here we evaluated the trophic ecology and sexual size dimorphism of Boana bischoffi, a widely distributed and endemic tree frog species of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. We analysed 80 individuals, covering the distribution of the species and combined our data-set with data from the literature. Gastrointestinal items were separated, accounted, and identified to the highest possible taxonomic resolution. Subsequently, the size and mass of prey items were measured. Afterwards, we calculated rates of relative importance for each prey category. The items of greatest relative importance were beetles (Coleoptera), termites (Isoptera), crickets (Orthoptera) but also harvestmen (Opiliones). We did not find a relation between female snout-vent length, mouth width and length with prey length. In males, the mouth length and width are related to prey length. We found a sexual dimorphism in size typical for hylid frogs, with females being larger than males. Our data expand the knowledge about the alimentary biology of B. bischoffi, but further research focusing on other aspects of the natural history such as possible intersexual dietary divergence and food niche overlapping, environmental prey availability and selection is still needed.
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- 2023
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42. A new species of the genus Liotyphlops Peters, 1881 (Serpentes, Anomalepididae) from Colombia and the synonymization of Liotyphlops beui (Amaral, 1924) with Liotyphlops ternetzii (Boulenger, 1896)
- Author
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Fidélis Júnio Marra Santos
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Liotyphlops ,Sarcopterygii ,Scolecophidia ,Liotyphlops palauophis sp. nov ,Amniota ,Biodiversity ,Liotyphlops ternetzii ,Biota ,reptiles ,taxonomy ,Gnathostomata ,neotropics ,Osteichthyes ,Squamata ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Liotyphlops beui ,Chordata ,Anomalepididae ,Typhlopoidea ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A new species of Liotyphlops Peters, 1881, Liotyphlops palauophissp. nov., is described from the neighborhoods of Bogota, Colombia from a previous syntype of L. anops, and a lectotype is designated for the latter species. The new species is readily distinguished from congeners by having the frontal scale divided (vs single), and a central foramen in the parabasisphenoid (vs foramen absent). High-resolution x-ray computed tomography (HRXCT) was used to study and present data on the skull of the holotype of the new species, the lectotype of L. anops, and the holotype of L. ternetzii. Additionally, extensive study of skull characters and external morphology failed to find diagnostic characters to differentiate L. beui and L. ternetzii, and the former is here considered a junior synonym of L. ternetzii, which is also redescribed.
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- 2023
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43. A new species of Dipsas (Serpentes, Dipsadidae) from central Panama
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Julie M. Ray, Paola Sánchez-Martínez, Abel Batista, Daniel G. Mulcahy, Coleman M. Sheehy III, Eric N. Smith, R. Alexander Pyron, and Alejandro Arteaga
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Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Sarcopterygii ,Boiga angulata ,Boiga ,Amniota ,Elapoidea ,phylogeny ,Lycaeninae ,snail-eating snake ,Colubroidea ,Gnathostomata ,Squamata ,Animalia ,Chordata ,systematics ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,new species ,Dipsas temporalis ,Dipsadinae ,Colubridae ,Chrysozephyrus ,Lycodryas ,Lycodryas granuliceps ,Papilionoidea ,Dipsadini ,Pseudoxyrhophiidae ,Biota ,Lycodryas maculatus ,Lepidoptera ,Osteichthyes ,Lycaenidae ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Colubrinae ,Dipsas - Abstract
A new species of Dipsas Laurenti, 1768, from Central Panama is described based on molecular analyses, hemipenial morphology, and external characters. This is the sixth species of Dipsas to be described for the country; the snake has been suspected to exist since 1977 and has not been thoroughly studied until now. Additionally, morphological comparations including scale counts are done with other species within the genus, and the current geographic distribution of Dipsas temporalis (Werner, 1909), the sister species, is updated. Finally, a key to the species of Dipsas currently known from Middle America is presented.
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- 2023
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44. A new species of torrent-breeding treefrog (Pelodryadidae: Litoria) from the mountains of Papua, Indonesia, with new records and observations of Litoria dorsivena (Tyler, 1968)
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Paul M. Oliver, Djoko T. Iskandar, and Stephen J. Richards
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Ranoidea ,New Guinea ,Sarcopterygii ,Litoria ,Pelodryadidae ,sexual size dimorphism ,Biota ,Amphibia ,Pelodryadinae ,taxonomy ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,Cryptic extinction risk ,Animalia ,Litoriinae ,Ranoidea dorsivena ,Anura ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The mountains of New Guinea are home to species-rich but poorly understood communities of stream or torrent-breeding pelodryadid treefrogs. Here we describe a new species of moderately sized torrent-breeding Litoria from the mountains of Papua Province, Indonesia. The new species is most similar to Litoria dorsivena but differs from that species in aspects of body size, skin texture and especially the shape of the snout. Based on recent collections, we also present new data on the distribution and colour in life of L. dorsivena. Both species show marked sexual size dimorphism when compared to most other pelodryadid treefrogs, and the colour pattern of the new species may also vary between males and females. The torrent-breeding treefrogs of New Guinea remain poorly known and, given declines of ecologically similar pelodryadids in Australia, should be a priority group for taxonomic research and population monitoring.
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- 2023
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45. Liparis tianchiensis (Orchidaceae), a new species from Gansu, China
- Author
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Liu, Xiao-juan and Sun, Xue-gang
- Subjects
Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Liliopsida ,Asparagales ,Plant Science ,Noctuoidea ,Scorpaeniformes ,Gnathostomata ,Liparis ,morphology ,Animalia ,Chordata ,Plantae ,Orchidaceae ,Wenxian County ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebrata ,Lymantriinae ,new species ,Actinopterygii ,Erebidae ,Biota ,Liparidae ,Lepidoptera ,Malaxideae ,Tracheophyta ,Osteichthyes ,Penthophera - Abstract
Liparis tianchiensis (Orchidaceae, Epidendroideae), a new species from Wenxian County, Gansu Province, China, is described and illustrated, based on morphological characters. Liparis tianchiensis is morphologically similar to L. damingshanensis, L. pauliana and L. mengziensis with erect, lax flowered-inflorescences, small persistent floral bracts, small greenish-purple flowers, spreading sepals, free reflexed and linear petals, a lip with 2 calli near the base and an arcuate column. Liparis tianchiensis differs from L. pauliana by the single and much smaller leaf, shorter sepals and petals, smaller and reflexed oblong lip. It differs from L. mengziensis by having fewer and larger flowers and not connate lip apex. The novelty mostly resembles L. damingshanensis, but can be readily identified by having longer sepals and a reflexed oblong lip. Liparis tianchiensis only occurs in evergreen broad-leaved forest around a mountain lake in Wenxian County, Gansu Province, China.
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- 2023
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46. A new deep-sea eelpout of the genus Pyrolycus (Teleostei: Zoarcidae) associated with a hydrothermal seep on the Pacific margin of Costa Rica
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BENJAMIN W. FRABLE, CHARLOTTE A. SEID, ALLISON W. BRONSON, and PETER RASK MØLLER
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Costa Rica ,Evolutionary Biology ,Actinopterygii ,Jac? Scar ,Reducing ecosystem ,Fishes ,Biodiversity ,methane seep ,Perciformes ,Lycodinae ,Zoarcoidei ,Animals ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Jacó Scar ,Chordata ,Zoology ,Zoarcidae ,Ecosystem ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
A new species of the zoarcid genus Pyrolycus Machida & Hashimoto, 2002, Pyrolycus jaco sp. nov., is described from a hydrothermal seep environment named Jacó Scar in the eastern Pacific of Costa Rica. Four specimens were collected in 2018 between 1746–1795 m among tubeworm colonies around the seep. The new species is differentiated from its two western Pacific congeners by having a shorter head, snout, jaw, and pectoral fins. It is further diagnosed by having three postorbital pores and two occipital pores. Molecular sequences of the cytochrome c oxidase I gene are provided and are the first for the genus. The character states indicating miniaturization in this species are discussed. This is the first vertebrate species known from this composite reducing ecosystem and is the fourth hydrothermally-associated zoarcid from the eastern Pacific.
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- 2023
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47. On the taxonomic validity of Boiga whitakeri Ganesh et al., 2021 with new insights on Boiga dightoni (Boulenger, 1894) (Reptilia: Squamata: Colubridae)
- Author
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Surya Narayanan, Sandeep Das, Y. Muhammed Anvar, Frank Tillack, Pratyush P. Mohapatra, David J. Gower, K. P. Rajkumar, and V. Deepak
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Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,Sarcopterygii ,Boiga dightoni ,Boiga ceylonensis complex ,Colubridae ,synonymy ,India ,Boiga ,Amniota ,Biota ,Tamil Nadu ,Boiga whitakeri ,Kerala ,taxonomy ,Colubroidea ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,Squamata ,Animalia ,Chordata ,Colubrinae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Colour polymorphism has been previously reported in several colubrid snakes including Boiga spp. In this paper, we report colour variations within the poorly known southern Indian Boiga dightoni, provide the first molecular data for this species, from two localities (including the type locality) and compare them with data from other congeners. Additionally, we provide detailed dentition and hemipenis descriptions for B. dightoni. Molecular data for B. dightoni show very little difference (0.2–0.4% 16S; 0.9–1.2% cyt b) to the recently described Boiga whitakeri, also from southern India. We have re-examined and present new information on the pholidosis of the type specimens of B. whitakeri and reconsider its taxonomic status. On the basis of molecular data and overlapping morphological characteristics, we argue that Boiga whitakeri and Boiga dightoni are conspecific, and place B. whitakeri under the subjective synonymy of the latter. Furthermore, we show that colour polymorphism in B. dightoni is a gender-independent character and that both colour morphs are found in high as well as low elevations and partly in sympatry. A revised key to the Boiga ceylonensis complex is provided.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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48. New specimens and supplementary descriptions of two rare dragonfishes, Photonectes klepadloae and P. litvinovi, with comments on the distribution of P. filipendulus (Teleostei: Stomiidae: Melanostomiinae)
- Author
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Prokofiev, Artem M. and Frable, Benjamin W.
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Actinopterygii ,Animalia ,Stomiidae ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Stomiiformes ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Supplementary descriptions based on new specimens of two rare dragonfish species, Photonectes klepadloae and P. litvinovi, formerly known by the holotypes only, are presented. The presence of a bulbous swelling at the tip of the terminal filament of the mental barbel is documented for P. klepadloae, and its absence in some specimens of that species, including the holotype, is likely an artifact of preservation. The presence of blue luminous tissue is documented for P. litvinovi, which was formerly believed to lack it due to skin abrasion in the holotype. A key for the species is corrected based on the new diagnostic characters of P. litvinovi. Incorrect mapping of the distribution of P. filipendulus provided in the original description is improved and a map showing the known distribution of all three aforementioned species is presented.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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49. Molecular systematic analysis demonstrates that the threatened southern bell frog, Litoria raniformis (Anura: Pelodryadidae) of eastern Australia, comprises two sub-species
- Author
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JUDIT VÖRÖS, SKYE WASSENS, LUKE PRICE, DAVID HUNTER, STEVEN MYERS, KYLE ARMSTRONG, MICHAEL J. MAHONY, and STEPHEN DONNELLAN
- Subjects
Amphibia ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Pelodryadidae ,Anura ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
In south-eastern Australia, the pelodryadid Litoria aurea Group (sensu Tyler & Davies 1978) comprises three species: Litoria aurea (Lesson, 1829), Litoria raniformis (Keferstein, 1867), and Litoria castanea (Steindachner, 1867). All three species have been subject to declines over recent decades and taxonomic uncertainty persists among populations on the tablelands in New South Wales. We address the systematics of the Group by analysing mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences to assess divergence in the Litoria raniformis from across its current range in New South Wales (NSW), Victoria, South Australia (SA) and Tasmania. We also included samples of Litoria castanea from a recently rediscovered population in the southern tablelands of NSW. Our phylogenetic and population genetic analyses show that Litoria raniformis comprises northern and southern lineages, showing deep mitochondrial DNA sequence divergence (7% net average sequence divergence) and can be diagnosed by fixed allelic differences at more than 4,000 SNP loci. Samples of the northern lineage were collected from the Murray-Darling Basin while those of the southern lineage were collected from south-eastern South Australia, southern and south-eastern Victoria and Tasmania. Analysis of the morphology and bioacoustics did not unequivocally delineate the two lineages. The presence of a hybrid backcross individual in western Victoria at the northern margin of the southern lineage, leads us to assign sub-species status to the two lineages, L. r. raniformis for the northern lineage and L. r. major for the southern lineage. Our data do not unequivocally resolve the taxonomic status of L. castanea which will require molecular genetic analyses of museum vouchers from those parts of the range where L. castanea and L. raniformis are no longer extant. Our data also suggest that human mediated movement of frogs may have occurred over the past 50 years. Our genotyping of vouchers collected in the 1970s from the Mount Lofty Ranges in South Australia detected mitochondrial haplotypes of both sub-species and SNP analysis showed that a single Tasmanian specimen was a backcross with L. r. raniformis ancestry. Movement of L. r. raniformis into Tasmania and both sub-species into the Mount Lofty Ranges are not likely due to passive movements of animals through agricultural commerce, but due to the attractiveness of the species as pets and subsequent escapes or releases, potentially of the larval life stage.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A new species of jupati, genus Metachirus Burmeister 1854 (Didelphimorphia, Didelphidae) for the Brazilian Amazon
- Author
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Cleuton Lima Miranda, Mario da Silva Nunes, Arielli Fabrício Machado, Izeni Pires Farias, Fernando Heberson Menezes, Natalia Carneiro Ardente, Manoel Dos Santos-Filho, Yennie Katarina Bredin, and Maria Nazareth F. da Silva
- Subjects
Didelphidae ,Mammalia ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biodiversity ,Didelphimorphia ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Taxonomy - Abstract
The brown or pouchless four-eyed opossums or jupatis represent the genus Metachirus with a wide geographical range in the Neotropics. Recent studies show distinct monophyletic clades with high genetic divergence and recognized two species, Metachirus nudicaudatus and Metachirus myosuros. Nevertheless, there is a need for systematic revision with multiple sources of evidence on the taxonomy of Metachirus, which has never been fully revised. Here we describe a new species of Metachirus for the Brazilian Amazon from the Xingu/Tocantins interfluve using the unification of concepts and evolutionary significant units, morphological, genetic, and geographic data. Our analysis reveals a new species within Metachirus as a differentiated Amazonian clade from the Serra dos Carajás region and the Caxiuanã National Forest, both in the Xingu endemism centre. This new species can be distinguished from the type species, M. nudicaudatus and from M. myosuros through discrete external morphological characters, including cranium and dentition, and molecular data with an average degree of divergence, but ancient divergence time for the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. The Amazon River delimits the distribution of the new species, which also occurs in areas under strong anthropogenic pressure, reinforcing the importance to guide conservation strategies for the region.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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