Showing posts with label Indonesia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indonesia. Show all posts

Monday, December 23, 2024

[Crustacea • 2024] Cherax rayko & C. phing • Two New Species of Crayfish of the Genus Cherax (Decapoda: Parastacidae) from Western and Eastern Indonesian New Guinea

 

Cherax rayko
Cherax phing
 Lukhaup, Eprilurahman & von Rintelen, 2024


Abstract
Two new species of the genus Cherax are described and illustrated. Cherax rayko n. sp., endemic to the Bian River drainage basin in the Muting District, in the northern part of the Merauke Regency, South Papua, Indonesia, is described, figured, and compared with its closest relatives, Cherax alyciae, Lukhaup, Eprilurahman & von Rintelen, 2018, and Cherax peknyi Lukhaup & Herbert, 2008. The new species may be easily distinguished from both by the shape of the rostrum, the shape of the chelae, the shape of the scaphocerite, and the coloration. Cherax phing n. sp., endemic to the Kali Ombak River drainage basin in the western part of the Kepala Burung (Vogelkop) Peninsula, Southwest Papua, Indonesia, is described, figured, and compared with its closest relatives, Cherax pulcher Lukhaup, 2015a, Cherax boesemani Lukhaup & Pekny, 2008, Cherax wagenknechtae Lukhaup and Eprilurahman, 2022, and Cherax gherardii Patoka, Bláha & Kouba, 2015. The new species may be easily distinguished from the latter species by the shape of the chelae, rostrum, and body and by the coloration. A molecular phylogeny based on a mitochondrial gene fragment, 16S, supports the morphology-based description of the two new species, which can also be clearly distinguished by sequence differences.

Keywords: morphology; molecular phylogeny; freshwater; New Guinea; taxonomy

Cherax rayko n. sp. Bian River drainage basin in the Muting District, West Papua, Indonesia
(B) Holotype male (MZB Cru 5792), (C) Female, same data as holotype.

Cherax phing n. sp., Kali Ombak River drainage basin. 
(B) Paratype male color variation. (C) Paratype male color variation.


Cherax rayko n. sp.

Etymology. Cherax rayko n. sp. is named after Rayko Eloy Lukhaup, the son of the first author. Rayko was very present in the process of the description, providing love and understanding.

 Ecology. It is endemic to the Bian River drainage basin and its tributaries. One of the creeks harboring these crayfish is shallow (20–100 cm) with a moderate flow. The temperature is around 25–26 °C. In most parts, no water plants are present. The substrate of the creek is silt or sand and soil mostly covered with silt and detritus. Crayfish hide in short burrows in the riverbank, under larger rocks, or in detritus that is present in all the parts of the creek. The creek is surrounded by forest. To improve the knowledge of the distribution of this species, more field surveys will be necessary.

 Common name. As the common name for this crayfish, we propose the Tiger Crayfish, as it is already available under this name in the pet trade. 


Cherax phing n. sp.

Etymology. C. phing n. sp. is named in honor of Liauw Pauw Phing, a crayfish enthusiast, for his noteworthy contribution to the knowledge of the crayfish of Papua. His continuing effort to search and find unknown species is very needed work for our better understanding of the crayfish of this region.

Common name. As a common name for this crayfish, we propose the Green Hornet Crayfish, as it is already available under this name in the pet trade.  

  
 Christian Lukhaup, Rury Eprilurahman and Thomas von Rintelen. 2024. Two New Species of Crayfish of the Genus Cherax (Crustacea, Decapoda, Parastacidae) from Western and Eastern Indonesian New Guinea. Arthropoda. 2(4); 264-293. DOI: doi.org/10.3390/arthropoda2040019 

Sunday, December 15, 2024

[Ichthyology • 2024] Oryzias chenglongensis • A New ricefish of Genus Oryzias (Beloniformes: Adrianichthyidae) from western Taiwan


Oryzias chenglongensis 
Chen & Lai, 2024

 
Abstract
The new brackish ricefish were collected recently from western Taiwan which has been identified as the species new to science. The new species, Oryzias chenglongensis n. sp. can be well distinguished from other congeners by the following unique combination of features: (1) fin-ray counts: dorsal-fin rays 6 (6 seen in holotype); anal-fin rays 19–20 (19); pelvic-fin rays 6 (6); pectoral-fin rays 10 (10); principle caudal-fin rays i,4/5,i (i,4/5,i); (2) body compressed laterally with body depth at pelvic origin 24.0–24.3 (24.3), body depth at anal fin origin 15.5–20.4 (20.4); (3) the dorsal-fin origin inserted almost at the vertical of 14th anal-fin rays, membrane between dorsal-fin 5th and 6th rays without distinct notch in adult male; and (4) body translucent, light yellowish green or brown, scattered with minute melanophores, a narrowly dotted, longitudinal black line along the middle forward to vertical above pelvic fin; T-shape black mark of caudal fin base in male; operculum and pre-pectoral region slivery, no any silvery scales on lateral body, lip color grayish or creamy yellow and eye bluish silvery dorsally. The diagnostic characters, and comparison with related species would be also provided.

Pisces, New species, fish fauna, Oryzias, fish taxonomy, brackish, conservation, Taiwan

Oryzias chenglongensis n. sp., Chenglong wetland, Yunlin County, Taiwan.
male, NTOUP-2018-06-310; 24.8 mm SL, 
female, NTOUP-2018 -06-311, 26.6 mm SL, 

Oryzias chenglongensis new species

Diagnosis: The new species, Oryzias chenglongensis can be well distinguished from other congeners by the following unique combination of features: (1) fin-ray counts: dorsal-fin rays 6 (6 seen in holotype); anal-fin rays 19–20 (19); pelvic-fin rays 6 (6); pectoral-fin rays 10 (10); principle caudal-fin rays i,4/5,i (i,4/5,i); (2) body compressed laterally with body depth at pelvic origin 24.0–24.3 (24.3), body depth at anal fin origin 15.5–20.4 (20.4); (3) the dorsal-fin origin inserted almost at the vertical of 14th anal-fin rays, membrane between dorsal-fin 5th and 6th rays without distinct notch in adult male; and (4) body translucent, light yellowish green or brown, scattered with minute melanophores, a narrowly dotted, longitudinal black line along the middle forward to vertical above pelvic fin; T-shape black mark of caudal fin base in male; operculum and pre-pectoral region slivery, no any silvery scales on lateral body, lip color grayish or creamy yellow and eye bluish silvery dorsally.

Etymology: The specific name, chenglongensis, is referred to names of the fish holotype locality collected “Chonglong wetland”, western Taiwan although its available geographical range may from Yun-lin, Chiar-Yi, to Tai-Nan of western Taiwan.


I-Shiung CHEN and Hong-Thih LAI. 2024. A New ricefish of Genus Oryzias (Teleostei: Adrianichthyidae) from western Taiwan.  Zootaxa. 5550(1); 320-327. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5550.1.32 

Monday, December 9, 2024

[Botany • 2024] Impatiens bungeusing (Balsaminaceae) • A New species from the Northern Gayo Plateau, Sumatra, Indonesia

 

Impatiens bungeusing Mustaqim & Ruchis.,  

in Mustaqim, Arico, Jayanthi, Andini, Pratiwi et Ruchisansakun, 2024.   

Abstract
Impatiens is a diverse genus within the Balsaminaceae family, comprising over 1,120 species. The northern Gayo Plateau of Sumatra, an island in Southeast Asia, is renowned for its rich Impatiens diversity. In this paper, we described and illustrated a new species named Impatiens bungeusing from this area. This species is most similar to Impatiens vitellina Grey-Wilson but differs in having the distinct abaxial leaf venation in a dry state (vs obscure), lateral sepals falcate-oblong (vs narrowly lanceolate), lower sepals with U-shaped spur (vs straight), broadly ovate dorsal petal (vs ovate), and ovate sub-rhomboidal upper lateral united petals (vs oblong). This discovery brings the total number of known Impatiens species in Sumatra to forty-eight.

Keyword: Ericales, herbs, Impatiens tapanuliensis, Impatiens vitellina, Malesia, limestone plant, taxonomy, Uniflorae

Morphology of Impatiens bungeusing Mustaqim & Ruchis., sp. nov.
 A. Plants in habitat. B. Living plant. C. Inflorescence. D. Flower. E. Lateral sepals. F. Dorsal petals. G. Lateral united petals. H. Lower sepal. I. Pedicel and ovary. J. Fruit.
Scale: A = 4 cm, B = 3 cm, C–D = 1 cm, E = 2 mm, F = 3 mm, G–J = 5 mm. Photographs by Wendy A. Mustaqim.

Morphology of Impatiens bungeusing Mustaqim & Ruchis., sp. nov.
  
A. Plant. B. Leaves showing petiole. C. Leaves showing apex and margin. D. Inflorescence. E. Flower, frontal view. F. Flower, lateral view. G. Pedicel, lower sepal, stamens, and ovary. H. Lateral sepal. I. Dorsal petal. J. Lateral united petals.
Scale: A = 3 cm, B–D = 5 mm, E–G = 1 cm, H = 3 mm, I–J = 5 mm. 
Illustrated by Yuanito Eliazar.

Impatiens bungeusing Mustaqim & Ruchis., sp. nov. 

Type: Indonesia. Aceh Province: Aceh Tengah Regency, Jagong Jeget, ..., 2100 m asl, 11 January 2023, Mustaqim 2577 (holotype: LGS; isotype: MEDA). 

Diagnosis: Impatiens bungeusing is similar to Impatiens vitellina Grey-Wilson. However, it differs in having the distinct abaxial leaf venation in a dry state (vs obscure), flowers with lower sepal having U-shaped spur (vs straight), broadly ovate dorsal petal (vs ovate), and ovate sub-rhomboidal upper lateral united petals (vs oblong) (Table 1).


Etymology: The specific epithet "bungeusing" is derived from the Gayo language. "Bunge" means flower, and "using" means yellow, reflecting the plant's bright yellow flowers.


Wendy A. Mustaqim, Zulfan Arico, Sri Jayanthi, Wanda R. Andini, Devi Pratiwi and Saroj Ruchisansakun. 2024. Impatiens bungeusing (Balsaminaceae), A New species from the Northern Gayo Plateau, Sumatra, Indonesia. Taiwania. 69(4); 554-559. DOI: 10.6165/tai.2024.69.554  taiwania.ntu.edu.tw/abstract/2035

Tuesday, November 26, 2024

[Botany • 2024] Alocasia roseus • A New Species of Alocasia from Aceh, Indonesia [The Araceae of Sumatra I]

 

Alocasia roseus   Asih & Yuzammi,

in Asih, Erlinawati, Yuzammi et Hadiah, 2024. 

Abstract
Alocasia roseus is described as a new species from Aceh Besar Regency, Sumatra (Indonesia). The plants found produce stunning inflorescence, leading to over-collecting in the wild. The new species is morphologically similar to A. flemingiana but differs by its greyish green adaxial leaves and pale reddish to greenish purple or pale brownish green abaxial leaves, lacking interprimary veins and sinus not naked, thecae overtopped by synconnective, and a pale pink appendix. The new species is also similar to A. arifolia, from which it differs by the glabrous and pale dull green petiole, the colour of abaxial and adaxial leaves, not forming interprimary vein, sinus not naked, and pale pink appendix. The new species is compared with other similar Indonesian taxa and an identification key to the species of Alocasia in Sumatra, supplemented with photographs, are provided.

Key words: Aceh Besar, Alocasia roseus, Indonesian flora, new taxon

Alocasia roseus: A habit B adaxial leaf C abaxial leaf D petiole E inflorescence with spathe F inflorescence with the spathe removed showing the zonation of reproductive organs G female zone (♀) H sterile interstice zone (s) I male zone (♂) J appendix (a).
 (Photographed and edited by Ni Putu Sri Asih and Julisasi Tri Hadiah).

 Alocasia roseus Asih & Yuzammi, sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis: (Table 1). Alocasia roseus is morphologically similar to A. flemingiana and A. arifolia from which it differs by having greyish green adaxial leaves and pale reddish to greenish purple or pale brownish green abaxial leaves, interprimary vein absent, sinus not naked, and pale pink appendix (vs. mid-green to dark green adaxial and green-yellowish/paler abaxial leaves, forming poorly to conspicuous interprimary vein, sinus naked up to 3 cm, and cream/pale apricot appendix).

Distribution and habitat: The species is only known from Aceh Besar, Sumatra Island. It grows on the hillside of the forest, in shade and humid areas.

Etymology: The specific epithet, roseus, is based on the pale pink appendix of the staminodes found in this new species. This color of the appendix is rarely found in the genus.


Ni Putu Sri Asih, Ina Erlinawati, Yuzammi and Julisasi Tri Hadiah. 2024. The Araceae of Sumatra I: A New Species of Alocasia from Aceh, Indonesia. PhytoKeys. 249: 223-229. DOI: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.249.133737

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

[Herpetology • 2024] Cyrtodactylus mamberamo • A New Species of Narrow-banded Cyrtodactylus (Gekkonidae) from northern New Guinea

 
 Cyrtodactylus mamberamo 
Oliver, Boothroyd, Tjaturadi, Riyanto, Iskandar & Richards, 2024
  
Mamberamo Basin Bent-toed Gecko ||  DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5506.1.4 
photo courtesy of Chien Lee.

Abstract
We describe a new species of Cyrtodactylus from the northern lowlands and foothills of mainland New Guinea. Cyrtodactylus mamberamo sp. nov. is distinguished from all other Melanesian Cyrtodactylus except C. aaroni and C. mimikanus by the combination of moderate size (max SVL <100 mm), widened subcaudals, dorsal pattern of numerous narrow light bands with dark-brown anterior borders, and a tripartite pore arrangement in males. It differs from these two most-similar species in details of colour pattern, scalation and the number of precloacal pores. Cyrtodactylus mamberamo sp. nov. occurs at elevations between 0–870 m above sea level (a.s.l.) across a wide area spanning the Mamberamo Basin and nearby regions. It co-occurs with at most one or two other congeners. Low Cyrtodactylus alpha diversity across Melanesia emphasises beta turnover as the key factor underpinning species richness in this genus. The new species brings the total number of recognised Melanesian Cyrtodactylus to 35, with the real total certain to be over 40 species.
 
Reptilia, Cyrtodactylus mimikanus, Indonesia, Mamberamo Basin, Papua New Guinea

 Cyrtodactylus mamberamo sp. nov. from Papua Province, Indonesia; 
 uncollected specimens photo courtesy of Chien Lee.

Cyrtodactylus mamberamo sp. nov. 
Mamberamo Basin Bent-toed Gecko 

Paul M. Oliver, Nicholas Boothroyd, Burhan Tjaturadi, Awal Riyanto, Djoko T. Iskandar and Stephen J. Richards. 2024. A New Species of Narrow-banded Cyrtodactylus (Gekkonidae) from northern New Guinea.  Zootaxa. 5506(1); 79-92. DOI: doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5506.1.4
Researchgate.net/publication/384201786_A_new_species_of_Cyrtodactylus_from_northern_New_Guinea
https://zenodo.org/records/13746582
https://photos.chienclee.com/image/I0000mGFYbpExJLw

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

[Herpetology • 2024] Ophiophagus hannah, O. bungarus, O. kaalinga & O. salvatana • Taxonomic Revision of the King Cobra Ophiophagus hannah Species Complex (Serpentes: Elapidae), with the Description of Two New Species


Ophiophagus hannah (Cantor, 1836) 
Ophiophagus bungarus 
(Schlegel, 1837) 

in Das, Gowri Shankar, Swamy, Williams, Lalremsanga, Prashanth, Sahoo, ... et Wüster, 2024. 

Abstract
The taxonomy of king cobras (Ophiophagus) was reevaluated using qualitative, mensural and meristic characters, based on 148 entire and five skeletal specimens, and supported by a recent molecular phylogenetic analysis. We provide nomenclatural synopses of both the genus and species-series nomina. We restrict the concept of Ophiophagus hannah s. str. to populations from eastern Pakistan, northern and eastern India, the Andaman Islands, Indo-Burma and Indo-China, south to central Thailand. The nomen Ophiophagus bungarus (Schlegel, 1837) comb. nov. is revived for the populations inhabiting the Sunda Shelf area, including the Malay Peninsula, the Greater Sunda Islands and parts of the southern Philippines. We describe two new species, Ophiophagus kaalinga Gowri Shankar, Das & Ganesh sp. nov. endemic to the Western Ghats of south-western India and Ophiophagus salvatana Gowri Shankar, Das & Wüster sp. nov., inhabiting the island of Luzon in northern Philippines. For the purpose of nomenclatural stability, we designate a neotype for Hamadryas hannah Cantor, 1836. A dichotomous identification key to the four species recognized here is provided.

Keywords: Elapidae, neotype designation, nomenclature, new species, systematics, taxonomy



Ophiophagus hannah (Cantor, 1836) s. str.
Northern king cobra

Ophiophagus bungarus (Schlegel, 1837) comb. nov.
Sunda king cobra

Ophiophagus kaalinga Gowri Shankar, Das & Ganesh sp. nov.
Western Ghats king cobra

Ophiophagus salvatana Gowri Shankar, Das & Wüster sp. nov.
Luzon king cobra

Variation in dorsal body bands in juveniles of the four species of Ophiophagus Günther, 1864 recognised in this study.
A. O. hannah (Cantor, 1836) (photo: H.T. Lalremsanga). B. O. bungarus (Schlegel, 1837) comb. nov. (photo: T. Charlton).
 C. O. kaalinga Gowri Shankar, Das & Ganesh sp. nov. (photo: P. Gowri Shankar). D. O. salvatana Gowri Shankar, Das & Wüster sp. nov. (photo: Bernard Tarun).


Indraneil Das, P. Gowri Shankar, Priyanka Swamy, Rhiannon C. Williams, Hmar Tlawmte Lalremsanga, P. Prashanth, Gunanidhi Sahoo, S.P. Vijayakumar, Jacob Höglund, Kartik Shanker, Sushil K. Dutta, S.R. Ganesh and Wolfgang Wüster. 2024. Taxonomic Revision of the King Cobra Ophiophagus hannah (Cantor, 1836) Species Complex (Reptilia: Serpentes: Elapidae), with the Description of Two New Species. European Journal of Taxonomy. 961(1), 1–51. DOI: doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2024.961.2681

 P. Gowri Shankar, Priyanka Swamy, Rhiannon C. Williams, S. R .Ganesh, Matt Moss, Jacob Höglund, Indraneil Das, Gunanidhi Sahoo, S. P. Vijayakumar, Kartik Shanker, Wolfgang Wüstere, and Sushil K. Dutta. 2021. King or Royal Family? Testing for Species Boundaries in the King Cobra, Ophiophagus hannah (Cantor, 1836), using Morphology and Multilocus DNA Analyses. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. In Press, 107300. DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2021.107300 


Tuesday, October 8, 2024

[Ichthyology • 2022] Halieutopsis echinoderma, H. kawaii, etc. • Taxonomy and Distribution of the Deep-Sea Batfish Genus Halieutopsis (Lophiiformes: Ogcocephalidae), with Descriptions of Five New Species


Halieutopsis sp.
Ho. 2022 


Abstract
The deep-sea batfish genus Halieutopsis is reviewed based on worldwide collections. Sixteen species are recognized, including five newly described species: Halieutopsis echinoderma sp. nov. from eastern Taiwan and northeastern Australia, Halieutopsis kawaii sp. nov. from Taiwan and Indonesia, Halieutopsis okamurai sp. nov. from southeastern Japan, Halieutopsis murrayi sp. nov. from the Gulf of Aden, and Halieutopsis taiwanea sp. nov. from northeastern Taiwan. These species differ from their congeners in escal morphology, squamation, and morphometric proportions. Dibranchus nasutus Alcock, 1891, a senior synonym of Halieutopsis vermicularis Smith & Radcliffe, 1912, as well as Dibranchus nudiventer Lloyd, 1909 and Coelophrys oblonga Smith & Radcliffe, 1912, are recognized as valid species in Halieutopsis. Comments on the systematics and biogeographic distributions of the species of Halieutopsis are provided, along with a key to the species.

Keywords: pisces; biodiversity; ichthyology; Lophiiformes; anglerfish




 Hsuan-Ching Ho. 2022. Taxonomy and Distribution of the Deep-Sea Batfish Genus Halieutopsis (Teleostei: Ogcocephalidae), with Descriptions of Five New Species.  J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 10(1): 34. DOI: 10.3390/jmse10010034 

Saturday, October 5, 2024

[Entomology • 2024] Talanga horakae • Re-description of the Genus Talanga Moore (Lepidoptera: Crambidae: Spilomelinae) and the Description of A New endemic Species from Indonesia

 

A, Talanga quadristigmalis; B, T. nubilosa;
C, Talanga horakae Sutrisno sp. nov. 

in Darmawan, Watung, Suwito, Narakusumo, Encilia, ... et Sutrisno, 2024. 

Highlights: 
• The usefulness of female genitalia as diagnostic character in Talanga since their signa structures are species specific.
• A new endemic species Talanga horake is a new to science.
• An identification key of Indonesian Talanga based on external morphology and female genitalia characters.

Abstract
Six species of the genus Talanga Moore 1855 are re-described based on both morphological and genitalia characters. T. tolumnialis Walker is not included due to the lack of available of material. Morphological characters such as a tapering, oblique outwardly antemedial band on the forewing and two black metallic spots externally bordered by similar minute interciliar spots on the hindwing, are proposed as the most appropriate characters to define the genus Talanga. The study also reveals that certain genitalia characters, such as a spatula-shaped uncus, a simple valva with a medial rod-like plate, a long cylindrical phallus without cornuti, a bundle of pencil hairs at the coremata base in male genitalia, and a pair of ovate or circular signa medially bearing denticles in female genitalia, are also diagnostic of this genus. The description of a new endemic species from Foja Mountain, Talanga horakae sp. nov., is presented, as well as an identification key to Indonesian species, and images of adults and genitalia of the studied species.
 
Keywords: Diagnostic characters, Genitalia, Identification key, Papua, Talanga

A, Talanga quadristigmalis; B, T. nubilosa;
C, T. horakae sp. nov. #f (holotype) 

Talanga horakae Sutrisno, sp. nov.

Diagnosis. The female of Talanga horakae, sp. nov., can be easily distinguished from allied species within the genus Talanga by the presence of a simple crown distad to the black medial band on the forewing, and a dark brown, curved, oblique line, running from the distad M1 to CuA2 on the hindwing (Fig. 2C; black arrows). Diagnostic characters of the female genitalia include a pair of ovate signa with scattered blunt denticles medially, dense sharp denticles along the margin, ...

 

Darmawan Darmawan, Jackson F. Watung, Awit Suwito, Raden Pramesa Narakusumo, Encilia Encilia, Agmal Qodri, Dhian Dwibadra, Djunijanti Peggie, Rosichon Ubaidillah and Hari Sutrisno. 2024. Re-description of the Genus Talanga Moore and the Description of A New endemic Species from Indonesia (Lepidoptera: Crambidae; Spilomelinae). Journal of Asia-Pacific Entomology. In Press. DOI: doi.org/10.1016/j.aspen.2024.102323

Thursday, September 5, 2024

[Cnidaria • 2024] Umimayanthus mirnangga, U. jebarra, U. raksasa, etc. • Museum Collections as Untapped Sources of Undescribed Diversity of Sponge-zoantharian Associations with the Description of Six New Species of Umimayanthus (Zoantharia: Parazoanthidae) from Western Australia and eastern Indonesia

 
Umimayanthus cf. aruensis (Pax, 1911) 

in Montenegro, Fromont, Richards, Kise, Gomez, Hoeksema et Reimer, 2024. 
 
Abstract
The zoantharian genus Umimayanthus consists largely of species that live in obligate symbioses with sponges. Although zoantharians have often been overlooked in field collecting campaigns and in research, sponges are usually well-collected, and many natural history museums harbor numerous sponge specimens. Thus, these sponge collections may also include previously overlooked zoantharian species. Such is the case in this research, in which we examined sponge specimens in museum collections from Western Australia and eastern Indonesia. Based on our morphological and molecular analyses, we herein describe six species of Umimayanthus new to science, and redescribe another species described over a century ago. These species can be distinguished by their sponge associations, gross polyp and colony morphology, and depth ranges. Based on these findings, it appears that the Central Indo-Pacific region of Western Australia and Indonesia can be considered a hotspot for sponge-associated zoantharian diversity. We provide a key for the identification of all formally described species in the genus, but caution that there are likely more Umimayanthus species awaiting discovery.

Keywords: Anthozoa; biodiversity; coral reefs; Porifera; species descriptions

Phylum Cnidaria Hatschek, 1888 
Subphylum Anthozoa Ehrenberg, 1831 

Class Hexacorallia Haeckel, 1896 
Order Zoantharia Rafinesque, 1815 

Family Parazoanthidae Delage & Hérouard, 1901 

Genus Umimayanthus Montenegro, Sinniger and Reimer 2015


Umimayanthus cf. aruensis (Pax, 1911) 

Umimayanthus mirnangga sp. nov. WAM Z88824 (holotype)

Umimayanthus mirnangga sp. nov. Montenegro, Kise & Reimer

Etymology. The specific epithet “mirnangga” is derived from the phoneme used to refer to a young single woman in the Wunambal language. This in reference to the fact that the colonies of U. mirnangga sp. nov. are exclusively composed of solitary polyps. “mɨrnangga binya” n., B-class young woman. Syn: munangga. See Bengmoro et al. (1971) and Boona (2022).


Umimayanthus jebarra sp. nov. Montenegro, Kise & Reimer

Etymology. The specific epithet “jebarra” is derived from the phoneme used to refer to the emu in Wunambal language. This in reference to the elongated shape of the polyps in U. jebarra sp. nov., which resemble the neck of an emu. As well, the name can act as a memorial to all the emus killed during the Great Emu Wars of 1932 in Western Australia. “jebarra anya” n., A-class. emu. Dromaius novaehollandiae. Syn: garnanganyja; jeebarra. See Mangglamarra (1991) and Karadada et al. (2011).


Umimayanthus wunanggu sp. nov. 

Umimayanthus wunanggu sp. nov. Montenegro, Kise & Reimer

Etymology. The specific epithet “wunanggu” is derived from the phoneme used to refer to the hill white gum tree in Wunambal language. This in reference to U. wunanggu sp. nov. forming colonies of white polyps connected by a thin coenenchyma that extends on a linear branching pattern over the sponge surface. “wunanggu winya” n., W-class. /wunaŋgu/. hill white gum, tropical red box, Eucalyptus brachyandra von Mueller, 1859. See Capell (1941) and Karadada (2011).

Umimayanthus discolor sp. nov. Montenegro, Kise & Reimer

Etymology. The specific epithet “discolor” means multiple colors in Latin. This is in reference to U. discolor sp. nov. forming colonies of polyps with contrasting colorations between the oral disk and the column, stolon, and coenenchyma.


Umimayanthus lynherensis sp. nov. Montenegro, Kise & Reimer  

 Etymology. The specific epithet “lynherensis” is derived from the locality where the type specimen was collected, the Lynher Bank sea country north Kimberley, Western Australia, Australia.  


Umimayanthus raksasa sp. nov. Montenegro, Kise & Reimer

Etymology. The specific epithet “raksasa”, which means “giant” or “gigantic” in Indonesian, refers to the large size of the polyps of this species in comparison to the other members of its genus.

 
 Javier Montenegro, Jane Fromont, Zoe Richards, Hiroki Kise, Oliver Gomez, Bert W. Hoeksema and James Davis Reimer. 2024. Museum Collections as Untapped Sources of Undescribed Diversity of Sponge-zoantharian Associations with the Description of Six New Species of Umimayanthus (Zoantharia: Parazoanthidae) from Western Australia and eastern Indonesia.  Contributions to Zoology. DOI: doi.org/10.1163/18759866-bja10069

Friday, August 9, 2024

[Herpetology • 2024] Zhangixalus faritsalhadii • A New Species of Tree Frog (Anura: Rhacophoridae) from Central Java, Indonesia

 

Zhangixalus faritsalhadii
 Gonggoli, Munir, Kaprawi, Kirschey & Hamidy, 2024

Farits Alhadi’s Tree Frog | Katak-pohon Farits Alhadi ||  
 Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 72

Abstract
 A new species of tree frog of the genus Zhangixalus from Central Java, Indonesia, which was previously confused with Z. prominanus, is described based on molecular and morphological evidence. Zhangixalus faritsalhadii, new species, is distinguishable from its congeners by having a genetic distance of more than 3.1% of 16s rRNA gene and the combination of morphological characters. The discovery of this new species provides the latest information on the amphibian species in Java and encourages conservation efforts in protecting the habitats of amphibians on this island. 

Key words. new species, Zhangixalus faritsalhadii, 16S rRNA, morphology, Java, Indonesia

TAXONOMY AND SYSTEMATICS 

Family Rhacophoridae Hoffman, 1932 

Zhangixalus Li, Jiang, Ren & Jiang, 2019 in Jiang et al. (2019)

Zhangixalus faritsalhadii, new species
A, male holotype in life, MZB Amph 32885; B, female paratype, MZB Amph 32887;
C, MZB Amph 32889, female paratype in ventral view; D, MZB Amph 32886 and MZB Amph 32889 in amplexus.
Photographs by Misbahul Munir (A–C) and Fajar Kaprawi (D).

 Zhangixalus faritsalhadii, new species

Diagnosis. Based on the molecular analyses, the new species is nested within the clade of the genus Zhangixalus. Zhangixalus faritsalhadii, new species, can be differentiated from its congeners using the following combination of morphological characters: (1) relatively medium-sized body (SVL 37.6–40.7 mm in males; SVL 50.7–54.5 mm in females); (2) yellowish-green dorsum colouration with numerous dark spot and irregular blotches cream; (3) surfaces of dorsum smooth, covered with small and low spicules; (4) snout in lateral view slope with ...

Etymology. The specific epithet “faritsalhadii” is an eponym, dedicated to the deceased Farits Alhadi, a herpetologist in Indonesia who collected the first known specimen of this species that is now part of the type series and the first to discover that it could possibly be a new undescribed species on Java. Suggested English common name. Farits Alhadi’s tree frog. Suggested Indonesian common name. Katak-pohon Farits Alhadi. 


Ade Damara Gonggoli, Misbahul Munir, Fajar Kaprawi, Tom Kirschey & Amir Hamidy. 2024. A New Species of Tree Frog (Amphibia, Anura, Rhacophoridae) from Central Java, Indonesia.  Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 72; 219–234. 
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Thursday, August 1, 2024

[Botany • 2023] Schoenorchis kembangleutik (Orchidaceae: Aeridinae) • A New Species from West Java, Indonesia


  Schoenorchis kembangleutik Yudistira & Mustaqim, 
   
in Yudistira et Mustaqim, 2023.  
 Photograph by Y.R. Yudistira. 

Abstract 
Schoenorchis kembangleutik Yudistira & Mustaqim described here as new to science is an orchid species currently considered endemic to West Java. It is similar to S. pachyachris (J.J.Sm.) J.J.Sm. from Sumatra and Java but differs in having flowers with midlobe of labellum orbicular (vs oblong) with horizontal and rounded (vs pointing upwards and tapering to a point) apex, the labellum side lobes white, uncinate and retrorse at the apex (vs yellow, straight and erect at apex), and in having shorter spurs with straight base (2 vs 4 mm long, with geniculate base). A morphological description, notes on distribution, habitat and ecology, an illustration, photographs and a key to the five species of Schoenorchis of Java are provided.

Keywords: Aeridinae; Malesia; Schoenorchis kembangleutik; Flora of Indonesia; taxonomy

  Schoenorchis kembangleutik Yudistira & Mustaqim.
 a. Plant; b. leaves; c. inflorescence; d. dorsal sepals; e. petals (one petal is broken); f. lateral sepals; g. labellum and column; h. anther-cap and pollinarium.
 Photographs by Y.R. Yudistira, 2022.

  Schoenorchis kembangleutik Yudistira & Mustaqim in its natural habitat.
 Photograph by Y.R. Yudistira, 2022.


Yuda Rehata Yudistira and Wendy A. Mustaqim. 2023. A New Species of Schoenorchis (Orchidaceae) from West Java, Indonesia. Blumea - Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of PlantsDOI: 10.3767/blumea.2023.68.01.07 

Saturday, July 6, 2024

[Botany • 2024] Geocharis globosa • A Recircumscription of Geocharis (Zingiberaceae) as A Result of the Discovery of A New Species in Sumatra, Indonesia


Geocharis globosa Zulaspita & Nurainas, 

in Nurainas, Zulaspita, Febriamansyah, Syamsuardi et Poulsen, 2024. 

Abstract
Recent fieldwork conducted in Sumatra resulted in unusual collections of the conspicuous ginger genus Geocharis, a genus that harbours a total of six species distributed in Sumatra, the Malay Peninsula, Borneo and the Philippines. After carefully reviewing types and protologues of existing taxa, we conclude that the recent collections represent a new species described here as Geocharis globosa, which is similar to G. aurantiaca, G. rubra and G. radicalis by the flowers spreading evenly in all directions but differs from these by the less divided labellum and by the unstructured and smooth globose fruits. We provide a detailed description and a photographic plate as well as a preliminary Red List Assessment for the new species. With the new species added to Geocharis macrostemon and G. radicalis, the number of species in Sumatra hereby increases to three. A recircumscription of the genus is provided, taking into account the unusual fruit character of the new species.

Key words: Geocharis globosa, globose fruit, Mount Marapi, taxonomy, West Sumatra, wild gingers


Geocharis globosa Zulaspita & Nurainas, sp. nov.
A habit B sheath (with tessellate pattern), ligule and base of leaf blade C inflorescence D flower dissection E infructescence F fruit G seeds with and without aril.
Photographs by T.A. Febriamansyah, edited by A.D. Poulsen.

 Geocharis globosa Zulaspita & Nurainas, sp. nov.
 
Diagnosis: The new species is similar to G. aurantiaca, G. rubra and G. radicalis by the flowers spreading in all directions from an erect flowering shoot but differs from all of these by the labellum being incised only halfway from apex (not deeply or completely divided), and having a smooth and glabrous surface to the ovary and globose fruits (Table 2).

Etymology: The epithet refers to the shape of the fruit.


 Nurainas Nurainas, Witri Zulaspita, Thoriq Alfath Febriamansyah, Syamsuardi Syamsuardi and Axel Dalberg Poulsen. 2024. A Recircumscription of Geocharis (Zingiberaceae) as A Result of the Discovery of A New Species in Sumatra, Indonesia. PhytoKeys 244: 15-22. DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.244.119306

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

[Herpetology • 2024] Hylophorbus lengguru, H. maculatus & H. monophonus • Species Delimitation and Phylogenetic Analyses of A New Guinean Frog Genus (Anura: Microhylidae: Hylophorbus) reveal many Undescribed Species and A Complex Diversification History driven by late Miocene Events

 

Hylophorbus spp.

in Ferreira, Kraus, Richards, Oliver, Günther, Trilaksono, Arida, Hamidy, Riyanto, Tjaturadi, Thébaud, Gaucher et Fouquet, 2024. 

Abstract
New Guinea is the largest tropical island in the world and hosts immense endemic biodiversity. However, our understanding of how the gradual emergence of the terrestrial ecosystems of the island over the last 40 Myr has generated this biological richness is hampered by poorly documented species diversity and distributions. Here, we address both these issues through an integrative taxonomy and biogeographical approach using Hylophorbus, a New Guinea-endemic genus of frogs with 12 recognized species. We delimited candidate species by integrating mitochondrial DNA, nuclear DNA, and bioacoustics, then investigated their evolutionary history. Our results suggest that the current taxonomy of the genus misses true species diversity by ≥3.5-fold. Nevertheless, most candidate species (27) remain unconfirmed because of missing data, whereas five were identified unambiguously as undescribed (we describe three of these formally). Time-calibrated phylogenetic analyses suggest that Hylophorbus diversification began ~9 Mya in the northern or eastern portion of New Guinea. It would appear that lineages dispersed to new terrestrial habitats in the west, notably uplifted by the central range orogeny, until eventually reaching the Bird’s Head during the Mio-Pliocene (7–5 Mya). Conversely, a past barrier appears to have prevented north–south dispersal. These data suggest that new habitat availability has primarily driven the diversification of Hylophorbus.

amphibian, biogeography, cryptic species, Indo-Pacific, 16S ribosomal RNA, island fauna, phylogeography, alpha taxonomy


Hylophorbus lengguru sp. nov.
Hylophorbus maculatus sp. nov.
Hylophorbus monophonus sp. nov.
  

Flavien Ferreira, Fred Kraus, Stephen Richards, Paul Oliver, Rainer Günther, Wahyu Trilaksono, Evy Ayu Arida, Amir Hamidy, Awal Riyanto, Burhan Tjaturadi, Christophe Thébaud, Philippe Gaucher and Antoine Fouquet. 2024. Species Delimitation and Phylogenetic Analyses of A New Guinean Frog Genus (Microhylidae: Hylophorbus) reveal many Undescribed Species and A Complex Diversification History driven by late Miocene Events. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. zlad168. DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad168
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