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1. Vicars in the desert: Substrate specialisation and paleo-erosion underpin cryptic speciation in an Australian arid-zone lizard lineage (Diplodactylidae: Diplodactylus)

2. Two new species of torrent-breeding treefrogs (Anura: Pelodryadidae: Litoria) from hill forests on the southern edge of New Guinea’s Central Cordillera

3. Gold in the mountains: Striking new species of Papuascincus (Sphenomorphini: Scincidae) from New Guinea

4. 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)

5. A new species of insular treefrog in the Litoria thesaurensis species group from the Nakanai Mountains, New Britain, Papua New Guinea

6. Melanesia holds the world’s most diverse and intact insular amphibian fauna

7. The living heart: Climate gradients predict desert mountain endemism

8. Phylogenetic partitioning of the third-largest vertebrate genus in the world, Cyrtodactylus Gray, 1827 (Reptilia; Squamata; Gekkonidae) and its relevance to taxonomy and conservation

9. On and off the rocks: persistence and ecological diversification in a tropical Australian lizard radiation

10. Oligo-Miocene radiation within South-west Pacific arc terranes underpinned repeated upstream continental dispersals in pigeons (Columbiformes)

11. Crypsis and convergence: integrative taxonomic revision of the Gehyra australis group (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from northern Australia

12. Karstic Landscapes Are Foci of Species Diversity in the World’s Third-Largest Vertebrate Genus Cyrtodactylus Gray, 1827 (Reptilia: Squamata; Gekkonidae)

15. Distributional modelling, megafires and data gaps highlight probable underestimation of climate change risk for two lizards from Australia’s montane rainforests

16. Mountain colonisation, miniaturisation and ecological evolution in a radiation of direct-developing New Guinea Frogs (Choerophryne, Microhylidae)

17. Morphological and genetic evidence for a new karst specialist lizard from New Guinea (Cyrtodactylus: Gekkonidae)

19. Disparate origins for endemic bird taxa from the ‘Gondwana Rainforests’ of Central Eastern Australia

20. Multiple trans-Torres Strait colonisations by tree frogs in the

21. The living heart: Climate gradients predict desert mountain endemism

22. Phylogenetic partitioning of the third-largest vertebrate genus in the world, Cyrtodactylus Gray, 1827 (Reptilia; Squamata; Gekkonidae) and its relevance to taxonomy and conservation

23. Young relicts and old relicts: a novel palaeoendemic vertebrate from the Australian Central Uplands

24. Correction: Independent transitions between monsoonal and arid biomes revealed by systematic revison of a complex of Australian geckos (Diplodactylus; Diplodactylidae).

25. Cryptic extinction risk in a western Pacific lizard radiation

26. Whos your daddy? On the identity and distribution of the paternal hybrid ancestor of the parthenogenetic gecko Lepidodactylus lugubris (Reptilia: Squamata: Gekkonidae)

27. The other side of the Sahulian coin: biogeography and evolution of Melanesian forest dragons (Agamidae)

28. Independent Transitions between Monsoonal and Arid Biomes Revealed by Systematic Revison of a Complex of Australian Geckos (Diplodactylus; Diplodactylidae).

30. Ecologically diverse island-associated lizard radiation shows idiosyncratic trait diversification shifts and homogenous speciation dynamics

31. The global diversity and distribution of lizard clutch sizes

32. Oligocene divergence of frogmouth birds (Podargidae) across Wallace's Line

33. Extinct, obscure or imaginary: The lizard species with the smallest ranges

34. Cryptic lineage diversity, body size divergence, and sympatry in a species complex of Australian lizards ( Gehyra )

35. Origins and patterns of endemic diversity in two specialized lizard lineages from the Australian Monsoonal Tropics ( Oedura spp.)

36. At the end of the line: independent overwater colonizations of the Solomon Islands by a hyperdiverse trans-Wallacean lizard lineage (Cyrtodactylus: Gekkota: Squamata)

37. Crypsis and convergence: integrative taxonomic revision of the

38. No Signs of Genetic Erosion in a 19th Century Genome of the Extinct Paradise Parrot (Psephotellus pulcherrimus)

39. On and off the rocks: persistence and ecological diversification in a tropical Australian lizard radiation

40. A return-on-investment approach for prioritization of rigorous taxonomic research needed to inform responses to the biodiversity crisis

41. Karstic Landscapes Are Foci of Species Diversity in the World’s Third-Largest Vertebrate Genus Cyrtodactylus Gray, 1827 (Reptilia: Squamata; Gekkonidae)

42. A novel hotspot of vertebrate endemism and an evolutionary refugium in tropical Australia

43. Stripes, jewels and spines: further investigations into the evolution of defensive strategies in a chemically defended gecko radiation ( Strophurus , Diplodactylidae)

44. The Knight and the King: two new species of giant bent-toed gecko (Cyrtodactylus, Gekkonidae, Squamata) from northern New Guinea, with comments on endemism in the North Papuan Mountains

45. Crypsis and convergence: integrative taxonomic revision of the Gehyra australis group (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from northern Australia

46. Real‐world conservation planning for evolutionary diversity in the Kimberley, Australia, sidesteps uncertain taxonomy

47. Diversification across biomes in a continental lizard radiation

48. Insular biogeographic origins and high phylogenetic distinctiveness for a recently depleted lizard fauna from Christmas Island, Australia

49. Mountain colonisation, miniaturisation and ecological evolution in a radiation of direct-developing New Guinea Frogs (Choerophryne, Microhylidae)

50. Mountain colonisation, miniaturisation and ecological evolution in a radiation of direct developing New Guinea Frogs (Choerophryne, Microhylidae)

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