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            <title>Latest Articles from Zoosystematics and Evolution</title>
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		    <title>A new species of crayfish of the genus Cherax from Indonesian New Guinea (Crustacea, Decapoda, Parastacidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/94753/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 411-425</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.94753</p>
					<p>Authors: Christian Lukhaup, Rury Eprilurahman</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new species of the genus Cherax is described and illustrated. Cherax wagenknechtae sp. nov., endemic to the Beraur and Klasabun River drainages in the western part of the Kepala Burung (Vogelkop) peninsula, West Papua, Indonesia, is described, figured and compared with its closest relatives, Cherax pulcher Lukhaup, 2015. The new species may be easily distinguished from Cherax pulcher by the shape of the chelae, rostrum and body, and coloration.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 24 Oct 2022 10:16:59 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new species of New Guinea Worm-Eating Snake (Serpentes, Elapidae, Toxicocalamus Boulenger, 1896) from Western Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/90520/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 399-409</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.90520</p>
					<p>Authors: Jackson R. Roberts, Bulisa Iova, Christopher C. Austin</p>
					<p>Abstract: We describe a new species of New Guinea Worm-Eating Snake (Elapidae: Toxicocalamus) from a specimen in the reptile collection of the Papua New Guinea National Museum and Art Gallery. Toxicocalamus longhagen sp. nov. can be easily distinguished from other species of this genus by the presence of paired subcaudals, a preocular scale unfused from the prefrontal scale, a prefrontal distinct from the internasal scale that contacts the supralabials, a single large posterior temporal and two postocular scales. The new taxon is currently known only from one specimen, which was collected from Mt. Hagen Town in Western Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea in 1967. The new species was originally identified as T. loriae, but the unique head scalation and postfrontal bone morphology revealed through micro-computed tomography scanning easily distinguish the new species from T. loriae sensu stricto. This is the first species of this genus described from Western Highlands Province.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 5 Oct 2022 09:20:28 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Multigene phylogeny of the Indo–West Pacific genus Enosteoides (Crustacea, Decapoda, Porcellanidae) with description of a new species from Australia</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/90540/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 387-397</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.90540</p>
					<p>Authors: Alexandra Hiller, Bernd Werding</p>
					<p>Abstract: The porcellanid genus Enosteoides Johnson, 1970, currently containing six species, was raised in the 1970s to contain aberrant Indo–West Pacific forms of the diverse and cosmopolitan genus Porcellana Lamarck, 1801. Here, we describe the most aberrant form as Enosteoides spinosus sp. nov., from the northeast and northwest coasts of Australia and present results on phylogenetic reconstructions of the genus, based on an 1,870 bp alignment of concatenated DNA sequences of three mitochondrial and one nuclear gene. The new species is peculiarly spiny and has a higher morphological affinity to the type species of the genus, E. ornatus (Stimpson, 1858), than to the other congeneric species. Our molecular results indicate that Enosteoides is not monophyletic. The new species and E. ornatus are encompassed in a clade, which does not share immediate common ancestry with the clade containing the other species of Enosteoides. This clade is more closely related to species of Porcellana and Pisidia. Relatively large interspecific genetic distances between and within the two clades, as compared to distances estimated in American pairs of species on each side of the Panama Isthmus, suggest ancient divergence, probably followed by extinction events or low speciation rate. Relatively large intraspecific distances between Australian populations of the new species of Enosteoides from geographically distant locations suggest some level of phylogeographic structure.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 4 Oct 2022 17:53:13 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>An unexpected occurrence: discovery of the genus Cybaeopsis Strand, 1907 in Europe with the description of a new species from Italy (Arachnida, Araneae, Amaurobiidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/90858/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 377-385</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.90858</p>
					<p>Authors: Francesco Ballarin, Paolo Pantini</p>
					<p>Abstract: We report on the unexpected finding of a new species of the genus Cybaeopsis Strand, 1907, C. lodovicii sp. nov. from the Northern Apennine Mountains in Italy. This is the first documented record of a Cybaeopsis species in Europe. Other currently known species of this genus have been previously recorded in North America, the Russian Far-East and Japan. The new species is illustrated and described based on both sexes. Another species from Portugal, Cybaeopsis theoblicki (Bosmans, 2021) comb. nov., recently described in the genus Callobius Chamberlin, 1947, is hereby transferred to Cybaeopsis on the basis of morphological characters. An updated key to the European genera of Amaurobiidae is provided.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 20 Sep 2022 18:29:50 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Phylogenetic position of the relict South American genus Idiopyrgus Pilsbry, 1911 (Gastropoda, Truncatelloidea), with the description of two new cave species</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/90797/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 365-375</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.90797</p>
					<p>Authors: Rodrigo B. Salvador, Fernanda S. Silva, Maria E. Bichuette</p>
					<p>Abstract: Idiopyrgus is a relict genus of freshwater snails from Brazil traditionally classified in the family Pomatiopsidae. Herein, we use molecular data from newly acquired specimens to test that classification through Bayesian inference phylogenetic analysis. We conclude that Idiopyrgus belongs in the Gondwanan family Tomichiidae, together with the African genus Tomichia and the Australian genus Coxiella. Furthermore, we reassess currently synonymized genus- and species-level names in Idiopyrgus. The genera Hydracme and Aquidauania are considered synonymous with Idiopyrgus. The species I. brasiliensis and I. pilsbryi are restored as accepted species; I. walkeri is considered a taxon inquirendum. Two new species from caves in Bahia state are described herein: Idiopyrgus adamanteus sp. nov. and Idiopyrgus minor sp. nov.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 2022 10:58:27 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new rock gecko in the Cnemaspis siamensis group (Reptilia, Gekkonidae) from Kanchanaburi Province, western Thailand</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/89591/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 345-363</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.89591</p>
					<p>Authors: Attapol Rujirawan, Siriporn Yodthong, Natee Ampai, Korkhwan Termprayoon, Akrachai Aksornneam, Bryan L. Stuart, Anchalee Aowphol</p>
					<p>Abstract: We describe a new species of the gekkonid genus Cnemaspis from Erawan National Park in Kanchanaburi Province of western Thailand. Molecular phylogenetic analyses, based on the mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 gene and flanking tRNAs, revealed that Cnemaspis auriventralis sp. nov. is nested within the C. siamensis group and is closely related to C. huaseesom, but has uncorrected pairwise genetic divergences of 12.12–27.92% from all other species in the C. siamensis group. The new species is also distinguished from other species in the C. siamensis group by having the combination of snout-vent length 36.7–38.6 mm in males (N = 3), 32.9–36.9 mm in females (N = 2); eight to ten supralabials; seven to nine infralabials; ventral scales smooth; six or seven precloacal pores in males; 16–17 paravertebral tubercles linearly arranged; tubercles on the lower flanks present; lateral caudal furrows present; no caudal tubercles in the lateral furrows; ventrolateral caudal tubercles present anteriorly; caudal tubercles not encircling tail; subcaudals smooth bearing a single median row of enlarged smooth scales; two postcloacal tubercles on each side; no shield-like subtibial scales; subtibial scales smooth; no enlarged submetatarsal scales; 23–27 subdigital lamellae on the fourth toe; sexually dimorphic for dorsal and ventral colour pattern; prescapular marking absent; gular marking absent; and yellow colouration in life of all ventral surfaces of head, body and tail in adult males. The new species is currently known only from upland karst habitat at its type locality.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 2022 10:57:09 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Redefinition of Heptapterus (Heptapteridae) and description of Heptapterus carmelitanorum, a new species from the upper Paraná River basin in Brazil</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/89413/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 327-343</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.89413</p>
					<p>Authors: Gabriel de Carvalho Deprá, Gastón Aguilera, Dario R. Faustino-Fuster, Axel M. Katz, Valter M. Azevedo-Santos</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new diagnosis and a new classification of Heptapterus are provided and a new species, H. carmelitanorum, is described. Heptapterus is diagnosed by the following character combination: adipose fin confluent with the caudal fin; non-bifurcate caudal fin; anal-fin insertion posterior to vertical through adipose-fin insertion; 10–23 anal-fin rays; anal fin not confluent with caudal fin; and extremely elongate body, with a head length of 16.1–24.9%SL. Species included in Heptapterus are H. borodini, H. carmelitanorum, H. carnatus, H. exilis, H. hollandi, H. mandimbusu, H. mbya, H. mustelinus, H. ornaticeps, and H. qenqo. Some of the character states diagnosing H. carmelitanorum among its congeners are the anal-fin insertion less than one eye diameter posterior to a vertical through the adipose-fin insertion (vs. more than one eye diameter in all congeners); the isognathous mouth (vs. slightly to moderately retrognathous, except H. borodini); and the keel formed by ventral procurrent caudal-fin rays shallow, far from reaching anal-fin base (vs. keel formed by ventral procurrent caudal-fin rays deep, continuing almost to the anal-fin base, except in H. borodini and H. hollandi).</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 8 Sep 2022 10:46:06 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿A new genus of Pseudospirobolellidae (Diplopoda, Spirobolida) from limestone karst areas in Thailand, with descriptions of three new species</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/90032/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 313-326</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.90032</p>
					<p>Authors: Piyatida Pimvichai, Henrik Enghoff, Somsak Panha, Thierry Backeljau</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new genus of the millipede family Pseudospirobolellidae, Siliquobolellus gen. nov., is described from limestone mountains in Thailand, based on three new species, viz. Siliquobolellus amicusdraconis gen. et sp. nov. from Uthaithani Province, Siliquobolellus constrictus gen. et sp. nov. from Prachuap Khiri Khan Province and Siliquobolellus prasankokae gen. et sp. nov. (type species) from Lampang Province. The descriptions are based on gonopod morphology and mitochondrial DNA data (COI barcodes). The COI barcodes grouped the three new species in a well-supported Siliquobolellus gen. nov. clade. The mean interspecific COI sequence divergence among the three new species was 12% (range: 8–15%). The mean intergeneric COI sequence divergence between Siliquobolellus gen. nov., Coxobolellus Pimvichai, Enghoff, Panha &amp; Backeljau, 2020, and Pseudospirobolellus Carl, 1912 was 19% (range: 14–23%). Three conspicuous gonopodal synapomorphies differentiate Siliquobolellus gen. nov. from other pseudospirobollellid genera: (1) the telopodital part of the posterior gonopod forms a deep concavity, (2) the telopodite of the anterior gonopod is directed distad and does not reach the tip of the coxal part of the anterior gonopod, and (3) the tip of the anterior gonopod coxa is narrowed, curving mesad. As such, the monophyly of the new genus is well supported by both morphological and mitochondrial DNA data. A distribution map and an identification key to the species are provided.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 19 Aug 2022 11:09:44 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿Pycnogonida (Arthropoda) from Museu de Ciências Naturais, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/83671/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 305-312</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.83671</p>
					<p>Authors: Rudá Amorim Lucena, Martin Lindsey Christoffersen</p>
					<p>Abstract: Five species were identified in the studied collection: Colossendeis megalonyx Hoek, 1881, first record for Uruguay, Ascorhynchus corderoi du Bois-Reymond Marcus, 1952 and Pallenopsis candidoi Mello-Leitão, 1949, with extended ranges, Pallenopsis patagonica (Hoek, 1881), a species complex recently analysed with molecular data and Ammothea tetrapoda, recorded previously for Uruguayan waters. Our study clarifies records based on morphology, provides new data on distributions and species ranges and correlates species with ecological conditions.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 20 Jul 2022 13:23:54 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Two new species of the genus Floresorchestia (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Talitridae) from Amphawa Estuary, Samut Songkhram Province, Thailand</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/83749/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 285-303</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.83749</p>
					<p>Authors: Anotai Suklom, Tosaphol Saetung Keetapithchayakul, Azman Abdul Rahim, Koraon Wongkamhaeng</p>
					<p>Abstract: Two new species of Floresorchestia (Crustacea: Amphipoda) are described from Amphawa Estuary, Samut Songkhram Province, Thailand. Floresorchestia amphawaensis sp. nov. is a riparian-hoppers living near agricultural and urban areas, being distinguished by the following character states: left mandible lacinia mobilis 4-dentate; gnathopod 2 palm reaching about 34%; telson as broad as long, with four robust setae per lobe. Floresorchestia pongrati sp. nov. are described as riparian-hoppers living in the moist area near Mae Klong canal banks with a unique left mandible lacinia mobilis 5-dentate; gnathopod 2 palm reaching 30% and telson with seven robust setae per lobe. The status and the problem of diagnostic character states of the genus Floresorchestia are discussed.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 15 Jul 2022 17:37:31 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>On the edge of the Shivaliks: An insight into the origin and taxonomic position of Pakistani toads from the Duttaphrynus melanostictus complex (Amphibia, Bufonidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/79213/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 275-284</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.79213</p>
					<p>Authors: Daniel Jablonski, Rafaqat Masroor, Sylvia Hofmann</p>
					<p>Abstract: The common Asian toad Duttaphrynus melanostictus (Schneider, 1799) complex has a wide distribution ranging from western foothills of the Himalaya to the easternmost range of the Wallacea, with the evidence of human-mediated introductions to some other areas. In the entire distribution range, the complex is formed by several evolutionary clades, distributed mostly in South-East Asia with unresolved taxonomy. In the northwestern edge of its distribution (Pakistan), the name D. melanostictus hazarensis (Khan, 2001) has been assigned to local populations but its biological basis remained, so far, understudied and unvalidated. Therefore, we re-evaluated the available genetic data (mitochondrial and nuclear) to show the relationships between Pakistani populations (including the type locality of D. m. hazarensis) and others from across the range. Our results showed that Pakistani populations are associated with one, deeply diverged, well-supported and widely distributed clade (so-called Duttaphrynus sp. 1 according to 16S, or clade B based on tRNAGly-ND3), that has already been detected in previous studies. This clade is further distributed in India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Singapore, and Indonesia and is characterized by a low level of genetic variability. This further suggests that both natural, as well as potential human-mediated dispersal, might have played an important role in setting up the current phylogeographic and distribution pattern of this clade. The clade is deeply divergent from other clades of the complex and represents a taxonomically unresolved entity. We here argue that the clade Duttaphrynus sp. 1/B represents a distinct species for which the name Duttaphrynus bengalensis (Daudin, 1802) comb. nov. is applicable, while the description of D. m. hazarensis does not satisfy the rules of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 13 Jul 2022 16:17:13 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Mitochondrial characteristics of Pseudohynobius flavomaculatus a protected salamander in China, and biogeographical implications for the family Hynobiidae (Amphibia, Caudata)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/66578/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 263-274</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.66578</p>
					<p>Authors: Yu Zhang, Meng Wang, Ruli Cheng, Yang Luo, Yingwen Li, Zhihao Liu, Qiliang Chen, Yanjun Shen</p>
					<p>Abstract: Pseudohynobius flavomaculatus a provincially-protected salamander species, inhabits mountainous areas of Chongqing and surrounding provinces in China. In the present study, the complete mitochondrial genome of P. flavomaculatus was sequenced and analyzed. The mitogenome is 16,401 bp in length and consisted of 13 protein-coding genes, 2 ribosomal RNA genes, 22 transfer RNA genes, and a control region. We performed a novel phylogenetic analysis, which demonstrated a sister relationship between P. flavomaculatus and P. jinfo. The 95% confidence interval around our new divergence date estimate suggest that Hynobiidae originated at 101.62–119.84 (mean=110.87) Ma. Species within Hynobiidae diverged successively in the Cenozoic era, and hynobiid speciation coincides primarily with geologic events. Our biogeographical inference demonstrates that nearly all early hynobiids divergences correspond to geological estimates of orogeny, which may have contributed to the notably high dN/dS ratio in this clade. We conclude that orogeny is likely a primary, dynamic factor, which may have repeatedly initiated the process of speciation in the family Hynobiidae.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 13 Jul 2022 16:16:36 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Rediscovery after 25 years – first photographic documentation and DNA barcoding of the deep-sea pycnogonid species Ascorhynchus hippos Turpaeva, 1994 (Chelicerata, Pycnogonida, Ascorhynchidae) from the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/84864/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 257-262</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.84864</p>
					<p>Authors: Lisa Wolf, Roland R. Melzer, Tobias Lehmann</p>
					<p>Abstract: The female specimen of Ascorhynchus hippos Turpaeva, 1994 was collected in 2015 during the Russian-German deep-sea expedition SokhoBio (Sea of Okhotsk Biodiversity Studies) at the abyssal western slope of the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench at a depth of 4469 m using a camera-epibenthic sledge. It is the first record of this species since the discovery of one female holotype and one male paratype in 1990. Ascorhynchus hippos is easily distinguishable from its congeners by the two prominent tubercles above the chelifore insertions, the absence of the eye tubercle and eyes, and the tubercles on the mid-dorsal trunk segments and the lateral processes. Here we present the first photographic documentation of all three known specimens of A. hippos and the COI barcode of the new specimen is also provided.</p>
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		    <category>Short Communication</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 6 Jul 2022 16:38:50 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new brackish tanaidacean, Sinelobus kisui sp. nov. (Crustacea, Peracarida, Tanaidacea), from Japan, with a key to Sinelobus species and barcode information from two loci</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/84818/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 245-256</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.84818</p>
					<p>Authors: Kyoko Hirano, Keiichi Kakui</p>
					<p>Abstract: We describe the new brackish tanaidid species Sinelobus kisui sp. nov. from Hagi, Yamaguchi, Japan. Sinelobus kisui is similar to S. barretti and S. vanhaareni in having antennal article 2 with one outer distal seta, the dorsodistal crotchet on pereopods 2 and 3 carpi shorter than half propodus length, and pereopodal carpi 2–6 with five distal crotchets, but differs from them in having (1) the inner of two ventro-subdistal circumplumose setae on the maxillipedal endite longer than the outer; (2) the maxillipedal endite with one mid-inner spiniform seta; (3) the pereopod-1 propodus with one middle setulate seta; and (4) the pleopod-1 protopod lacking inner plumose setae. Our study confirmed that character states of the chelipeds in strongly dimorphic males are useful in Sinelobus taxonomy. We determined partial sequences for the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI; cox1) and 18S rRNA (18S) genes in S. kisui for future DNA barcoding and phylogenetic analyses. Morphological and/or molecular data reveal that S. kisui also occurs in Kagawa and Osaka, Japan. A key to species in Sinelobus is provided.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2022 14:18:21 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Addition to the known diversity of Chinese freshwater planarians: integrative description of a new species of Dugesia Girard, 1850 (Platyhelminthes, Tricladida, Dugesiidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/83184/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 233-243</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.83184</p>
					<p>Authors: Yi Liu, Xiao-Yu Song, Zhong-Yin Sun, Wei-Xuan Li, Ronald Sluys, Shuang-Fei Li, An-Tai Wang</p>
					<p>Abstract: The present paper describes a new species of freshwater flatworm of the genus Dugesia from Guizhou province, China, based on an integrative approach, combining morphological, histological and molecular information. This new species, Dugesia gemmulata Sun &amp; Wang, sp. nov., is characterized by the ventral part of the most posterior section of the bursal canal being provided with a voluminous, ellipsoidal muscular swelling; sac- or egg-shaped seminal vesicle situated near the ventral body surface in anterior portion of the penis bulb; postero-dorsal wall of seminal vesicle communicating with a narrow duct that first runs almost vertically but then shows a postero-dorsally directed loop before connecting with a small diaphragm; an ejaculatory duct opening terminally or subterminally; an asymmetrical penis papilla, with its dorsal lip being provided with a bump; oviducts opening asymmetrically into female copulatory apparatus, with the left oviduct opening into the common atrium and the right oviduct opening into the vaginal section of the bursal canal. Molecular phylogenetic analyses revealed that the new species belongs to a clade comprising species from the Australasian and Oriental regions, while it shares a sister-group relationship with D. umbonata Song &amp; Wang, 2020, a species characterized by a muscular swelling on the dorsal side of its bursal canal.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2022 14:17:31 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿Rediscovery, redescription and identity of Pristimantis nebulosus (Henle, 1992), and description of a new terrestrial-breeding frog from montane rainforests of central Peru (Anura, Strabomantidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/84963/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 213-232</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.84963</p>
					<p>Authors: Jörn Köhler, Ernesto Castillo-Urbina, César Aguilar-Puntriano, Miguel Vences, Frank Glaw</p>
					<p>Abstract: The taxonomic status of the strabomantid frog species Pristimantis nebulosus (Henle, 1992), originating from the southern Cordillera Azul in central Peru, is investigated based on examination of the holotype and its comparison with freshly collected topotypic material. Following current standards, we provide a redescription of the holotype. It is in a rather poor state and exhibits certain damages and preservation artifacts, conditions that have hampered an allocation of this nominal taxon to any known living population of Pristimantis in the past. Our detailed specimen-to-specimen comparison provided morphological evidence for the conspecifity of the holotype and freshly collected topotypes. Molecular phylogenetic analysis, based on the mitochondrial 16S gene fragment places P. nebulosus in the P. conspicillatus species group, being closely related to P. bipunctatus and an undescribed candidate species from the Cordillera de Carpish. From both, P. nebulosus differs by considerable divergence in the 16S gene (p-distance 4.1–6.2%). Based on the specimens available, we provide an updated diagnosis for P. nebulosus, compare it to other species in the P. conspicillatus group and describe its advertisement call. In addition, we describe and name the closely related candidate species from the Cordillera de Carpish. It is sister to P. bipunctatus and P. nebulosus, but differs from both mainly by its tuberculate dorsal skin (versus shagreen) and divergence in the 16S gene (3.3–4.1%). We briefly discuss cryptic species diversity in the P. conspicillatus and P. danae species groups and provide justification for the description of a singleton species.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 24 Jun 2022 18:43:53 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>          Paracapoeta, a new genus of the Cyprinidae from Mesopotamia, Cilicia and Levant (Teleostei, Cypriniformes)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/81463/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 201-212</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.81463</p>
					<p>Authors: Davut Turan, Cüneyt Kaya, İsmail Aksu, Yusuf Bektaş</p>
					<p>Abstract: The molecular and morphological studies carried out within the scope of this study revealed that the scrapers, known as the Mesopotamian group, belong to a different genus. The Paracapoeta gen. nov., from the Mesopotomia and Levant, is distinguished from Capoeta and Luciobarbus species by the presence of a strong ligament between the base of the last simple and the first branched rays of the dorsal-fin (vs. no or a very weak ligament). The Paracapoeta further differs from Capoeta by the last simple dorsal-fin ray strongly ossified in adult specimens (more than 75%, vs. less than 75%). The Paracapoeta further differs from Luciobarbus by the lower lip with horny layer (vs. fleshy lips). The molecular phylogeny based on the combined dataset (COI + Cytb, 1312 bp.) showed that the genus Paracapoeta was recovered from the other groups in the subfamily Barbinae with high bootstrap and posterior probability values (BP: 94%, PP: 0.96). Also, Paracapoeta and Capoeta are well differentiated by an average genetic distance of 8.02±0.78%. The morphological and molecular findings have largely overlapped each other. Besides, Capoeta turani is treated as a synonym of Capoeta erhani.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 21 Jun 2022 17:02:35 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿Taxonomy of the genus Cyrtogrammomma Pocock, 1895 (Araneae, Mygalomorphae, Theraphosidae) with a description of a new species from Brazil</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/85212/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(2): 181-199</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.85212</p>
					<p>Authors: Hector Manuel Osorio Gonzalez-Filho, Rafael Fonseca-Ferreira, Antonio Domingos Brescovit, José Paulo Leite Guadanucci</p>
					<p>Abstract: The genus Cyrtogrammomma Pocock, 1895 was proposed based on specimen samples from Monte Roraima, Guyana, and allocated in the family Barychelidae. However, the most recent cladistic analysis transferred Cyrtogrammomma to Theraphosidae. Herein, we amended the diagnosis and description of C. monticola, providing a redescription of the male, and new illustrations, including the description of a new cuticular structure consisting of thick and stiff setae on dorsal metatarsi I and II of females. Moreover, we diagnose, describe and illustrate a new species of Cyrtogrammomma from northeastern Brazil: C. frevo sp. nov. In addition, we provide an identification key, new distribution records of the genus in the states of Alagoas, Bahia, Pará, and Pernambuco, in Brazil, and the first record for the genus in caves.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 17 Jun 2022 12:49:59 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿A new Leptobrachella species (Anura, Megophryidae) from South China, with comments on the taxonomic status of L. chishuiensis and L. purpurus</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/73162/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 165-180</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.73162</p>
					<p>Authors: Jian Wang, Shuo Qi, Ke-Yuan Dai, Zhi-Tong Lyu, Zhao-Chi Zeng, Hong-Hui Chen, Yuan-Qiu Li, Yong-You Zhao, Yun-Ze Wang, Ying-Yong Wang</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new species of Leaf Litter Toad, Leptobrachella shimentaina sp. nov., is described from the Shimentai and Luokeng nature reserves of northern Guangdong Province, southern China. The new taxon can be distinguished from all recognized congeners by a combination of discrete morphological character state differences relating to its small body size (SVL 26.4–28.9 mm in six adult males, 30.1 and 30.7 mm in two adult females); a number of apparently fixed color pattern character differences (including eye coloration and color pattern features from dorsal, ventral, and dorsolateral surfaces of its head, body, limbs, and ventrum); the morphological and discrete characteristics of the external phenotype (the skin texture of dorsum and ventrum, the presence of supra-axillary and ventrolateral glands, the wide dermal fringes and rudimentary webbing on toes, and the uninterrupted longitudinal ridges under toes). Two samples of this new species previously were proposed as representing a new, unnamed species. We now substantiate this claim by providing diagnostic comparisons of discrete character differences. In addition, we also discuss taxonomic uncertainty surrounding the identity of two congeners, L. chishuiensis and L. purpurus, which we interpret as indicative of taxonomic inflation in the species-rich subfamily Megophryidae.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 3 Jun 2022 08:45:37 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Phylogenetic relationships of a new catfish of the genus Trichomycterus (Siluriformes, Trichomycteridae) from the Brazilian Cerrado, and the role of Cenozoic events in the diversification of mountain catfishes</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/83109/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 151-164</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.83109</p>
					<p>Authors: Wilson J. E. M. Costa, José Leonardo O. Mattos, Wagner M. S. Sampaio, Patrícia Giongo, Frederico B. de Almeida, Axel M. Katz</p>
					<p>Abstract: The Brazilian Cerrado highlands shelter the headwaters of the three largest South American hydrographic basins, where a great species diversity is concentrated, but some biological groups are still insufficiently known. The focal taxa of this study are trichomycterid catfishes of the subgenus Cryptocambeva, genus Trichomycterus, endemic to mountain areas of south-eastern Brazil. The primary objective of this study is to test through a molecular phylogeny if a new species collected in streams of the upper Rio Paraná basin draining the Serra da Canastra is sister to T. macrotrichopterus, endemic to the upper Rio São Francisco at another facet of the Serra da Canastra, as suggested by morphological data. The analysis corroborated sister group relationships between these two species, besides supporting four main clades in Cryptocambeva, each of them endemic to distinct mountain regions. A time-calibrated analysis supported the divergence timing between the new species and T. macrotrichopterus at the Pliocene, which is chronologically compatible with the final period of intense fluvial configuration re-arrangement, when São Francisco headwater streams were captured by the Paraná basin. The new species herein described is similar to T. macrotrichopterus and distinguished from all other species of Cryptocambeva by having a long pectoral-fin filament. These two species are distinguished from each other by characteristics of the latero-sensory system, colour pattern and bone morphology.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 23 May 2022 12:07:58 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Clarifying the type locality of Liotyphlops wilderi (Garman, 1883) (Serpentes, Anomalepididae), with comments on other reptiles from São Cyriaco, Minas Gerais</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/80418/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 129-136</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.80418</p>
					<p>Authors: Henrique C. Costa</p>
					<p>Abstract: The snake species Typhlops wilderi (today Liotyphlops wilderi) was described in 1883 based on specimens from São Cyriaco, in Minas Gerais, Brazil. The name of this type locality has been cited in different ways in the literature, making its geographic location confusing. Solving this question is an important issue for future taxonomy and systematic studies. After searching for information on the collector of the type series of L. wilderi (John Casper Branner) using the Google Scholar database, I found that São Cyriaco was a gold mining company located in the current municipality of Alvorada de Minas. Besides elucidating the type locality of L. wilderi, I searched for reptile specimens collected by Branner, deposited in collections registered at the VertNet Portal and SpeciesLink, and personally examined the extant material from Minas Gerais.</p>
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		    <category>Short Communication</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 5 May 2022 16:45:20 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new genus of Australian orb-weaving spider with extreme sexual size dimorphism (Araneae, Araneidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/82649/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 137-149</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.82649</p>
					<p>Authors: Volker W. Framenau, Pedro de S. Castanheira</p>
					<p>Abstract: The new Australian orb-weaving spider genus Mangrovia in the family Araneidae Clerck, 1757 is described. It is characterised by extreme sexual size-dimorphism (eSSD) with females (total length 8–10 mm) ca. 3 to 5 times larger than males (2.5–3 mm). Whilst Mangrovia shares with the informal Australian ‘backobourkiine’ clade a single seta on the male pedipalp patella, the genus is probably more closely related to the ‘zealaraneines’ or associated genera. In addition to eSSD and the single patellar spine, the genus is characterised by a distinct subterminal embolus branch in males. The new genus includes two species: the type species Mangrovia albida (L. Koch, 1871) comb. nov. (= Epeira fastidiosa Keyserling, 1887, new syn.) from Queensland and Mangrovia occidentalis sp. nov. from Western Australia. Both species are apparently coastal and occur in mangroves, but also in riparian woodland. Spiders were found resting in rolled-up leaves adjacent to their orb-web.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 5 May 2022 13:36:28 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Taxonomy and natural history of Cavernocypris hokkaiensis sp. nov., the first ostracod reported from alpine streams in Japan</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/80442/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 117-127</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.80442</p>
					<p>Authors: Mizuho Munakata, Hayato Tanaka, Keiichi Kakui</p>
					<p>Abstract: We describe the cypridoidean ostracod Cavernocypris hokkaiensis sp. nov. from riverbed sediments in an alpine stream at an elevation of ca. 1850 m in the Taisetsu Mountains, Hokkaido, Japan. This species differs from congeners in having (1) the outer surface of the carapace smooth, with sparse, tiny setae, but without shallow pits; (2) the carapace elongate rather than triangular in lateral view; (3) the antennula consisting of seven podomeres; (4) first palpal podomere of maxillula with five dorsodistal and one ventro-subdistal setae; (5) the fifth limb lacking setae b and d; and (6) the fifth limb lacking a vibratory plate. We provided the key to the Cavernocypris species. We determined partial sequences for the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI; cox1) and 18S rRNA (18S) genes in C. hokkaiensis. Our sample contained only females, and we obtained a partial 16S rRNA sequence for the endosymbiotic bacterium Cardinium from C. hokkaiensis, indicating the possibility that this ostracod species reproduces parthenogenetically. Our field survey and observations of captive individuals suggested that C. hokkaiensis may be endemic to the Taisetsu Mountains, with a low population density, narrow distributional range, and slow maturation to sexual maturity.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 5 Apr 2022 14:27:25 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new neotenous genus and species, Deltanthura palpus gen. et sp. nov. (Isopoda, Anthuroidea, Paranthuridae) from Japan, with a revised key to the genera in Paranthuridae</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/81772/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 109-115</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.81772</p>
					<p>Authors: Shoki Shiraki, Michitaka Shimomura, Keiichi Kakui</p>
					<p>Abstract: We describe a new paranthurid isopod genus and species, Deltanthura palpus gen. et sp. nov., collected from a depth of 805–852 m off the southern coast of Mie prefecture, Japan. Deltanthura is similar to Pseudanthura Richardson, 1911 in having a triangular pleotelson, acute mandible with a 3-articulate palp, a maxillipedal endite, and a tapering uropodal exopod, but differs in having eyes and neotenous characters (reduced pereonite 7 and pereopods 7 lacking). Deltanthura and four paranthurid genera (Califanthura Schultz, 1977, Colanthura Richardson, 1902, Cruranthura Thomson, 1946, and Cruregens Chilton, 1882) share neotenous characters, but in Deltanthura the mandible is acute, with a 3-articulate palp and maxillipedal endites are present. Califanthura minuta Kensley &amp; Heard, 1991 may belong in Deltanthura as they share the triangular pleotelson and tapering uropodal exopod, but we refrain from transferring it to Deltanthura as its description lacks the other diagnostic characters of Deltanthura. We provide a revised key to all genera in Paranthuridae Menzies &amp; Glynn, 1968.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 31 Mar 2022 08:30:11 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿Gobiobotia lii, a new species of gudgeon (Teleostei, Gobionidae) from the middle Chang-Jiang Basin, central China, with notes on the validity of G. nicholsi Bănărescu &amp; Nalbant, 1966</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/80547/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 93-107</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.80547</p>
					<p>Authors: Xiao Chen, Man Wang, Liang Cao, E Zhang</p>
					<p>Abstract: Gobiobotia lii is described from the Qi-Shui, a stream tributary on the northern bank of the middle Chang-Jiang mainstem in Hubei Province and Lake Dongting in Hunan Province, central China. The new species is distinguished from all other congeneric species by possessing a combination of the following characters: a naked region of the abdomen adjacent to the ventral mid-line extending to the vent and the vertebral count (4+31–32). The validity of G. lii is confirmed by its monophyletic nature recovered in a phylogenetic analysis, based on the cyt b gene and its significant sequence divergence with sampled congeneric species. Critical notes were given on the species recognition of historically documented eight-barbel gudgeons co-existing in Lake Dongting. Gobiobotia nicholsi Bănărescu &amp; Nalbant, 1966 should be a valid species distinct from G. filifer (Garman, 1912) and both G. pappenheimi Kreyenberg, 1911 and G. boulengeri (=Xenophysogobio boulengeri (Tchang, 1929)) have an erroneous record from the Lake.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 29 Mar 2022 09:27:56 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new genus name for pygmy lorises, Xanthonycticebus gen. nov. (Mammalia, primates)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/81942/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 87-92</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.81942</p>
					<p>Authors: K. Anne-Isola Nekaris, Vincent Nijman</p>
					<p>Abstract: Lorisiformes are nocturnal primates from Africa and Asia with four genera, with two (Arctocebus and Loris), three (Perodicticus) and nine (Nycticebus) recognised species. Their cryptic lifestyle and lack of study have resulted in an underappreciation of the variation at the species and genus level. There are marked differences between the pygmy slow loris Nycticebus pygmaeus and the other Nycticebus species and, in the past, several authors have suggested that these may warrant recognition at the generic level. We here combine morphological, behavioural, karyotypical and genetic data to show that these contrasts are, indeed, significantly large and consistent. We propose Xanthonycticebus gen. nov. as a new genus name for the pygmy slow lorises and suggest a common name of pygmy lorises. Based on analysis of complete mitochondrial DNA sequences, we calculate the divergence of pygmy from slow lorises at 9.9–10.0%. The median date, calculated for the divergence between Xanthonycticebus and Nycticebus, is 10.5 Mya (range 4.9–21.0 Mya). Xanthonycticebus differs from Nycticebus by showing sympatry with other slow loris species, by habitually giving birth to twins, by showing seasonal body mass and whole body coat colour changes (absent in other species living at similar latitudes) and a multi-male, multi-female social system. Pygmy lorises are easily recognisable by the absence of hair on their ears and more protruding premaxilla. Xanthonycticebus is threatened by habitat loss and illegal trade despite legal protection across their range and all slow lorises are listed on appendix 1 of CITES. The suggested nomenclatural changes should not affect their legal status.</p>
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		    <category>Short Communication</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 23 Mar 2022 17:19:04 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new species of Phalotris (Serpentes, Colubridae, Elapomorphini) from Paraguay</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/61064/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 77-85</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.61064</p>
					<p>Authors: Paul Smith, Jean-Paul Brouard, Pier Cacciali</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new species of Phalotris from the nasutus group, Phalotris shawnella sp. nov., is described. It can be distinguished from the other members of the group by having the following combination of characters: 1) fifth supralabial in contact with parietal, 2) vertebral stripe present, 3) yellowish nuchal collar (2 or 3 dorsal scales long), 4) dull reddish color of head, 5) broad, solidly or near solidly dark, lateral bands, 6) red-orange ventral scales lightly and irregularly spotted with black mainly on the posterior half of the body and 7) a bilobed, extremely asymmetrical hemipenis, with enlarged, curved, lateral spines. The species is only known from a recent specimen collected in the Cerrado zone of northeastern Paraguay at Rancho Laguna Blanca, San Pedro department, and two photographic records of live specimens from this and an additional locality. Limited ecological data based on observations of a captive individual, and a wild record, are provided, and a conservation assessment is performed for this extremely limited range Paraguayan endemic snake.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 7 Mar 2022 17:06:58 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿Pliocene-Pleistocene dispersal bring along low inter species diversity between Vimba species based on multilocus analysis</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/76937/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 65-75</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.76937</p>
					<p>Authors: Gökhan Kalaycı</p>
					<p>Abstract: This study investigates phylogenetic and phylogeographic relationships of Vimba species using mitochondrial cytochrome b (cyt b) (1023 bp) and cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) barcoding region (652 bp) genes. Ninety-one samples from 36 populations for the cyt b gene and 67 samples from 20 populations for the COI were analyzed. We identified 29 haplotypes and calculated overall haplotype diversity as Hd: 0.907 ± 0.015 for cyt b. We also identified 13 COI haplotypes and calculated overall haplotype diversity as 0.826 ± 0.026 for this marker. The phylogenetic analysis of Vimba species reveals the presence of four clades, based on concatenated cyt b and COI sequences. The first and second clade consist of Vimba vimba Western lineage, and Vimba vimba Caspian lineage, while the third and fourth clade consist of Vimba mirabilis and Vimba melanops. Based on haplotype network analyses and phylogeographic inferences, the Vimba genus is monophyletic, and its species dispersed in the Pleistocene era.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 25 Feb 2022 10:04:28 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿New records and a new cave-dwelling species of Agoristenidae (Arachnida, Opiliones) from Colombia</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/78202/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 55-63</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.78202</p>
					<p>Authors: Andrés F. García, Alex González Vargas, Miguel Gutiérrez Estrada</p>
					<p>Abstract: Three species of Avima are recorded for the first time from Colombia (La Guajira department): A. venezuelica Soares &amp; Avram, 1981, A. troglobia (Pinto-da-Rocha, 1996), and A. wayuunaiki Sp. nov. Complementary and new descriptions of the species are offered and scanning electron microscopy photographs of the male genitalia of A. troglobia are given.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 16 Feb 2022 14:08:36 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿A historical specimen of the Fishing Cat, Prionailurus viverrinus (Bennett, 1833) (Carnivora, Felidae) from Singapore in the zoological collection of the Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/76940/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 43-53</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.76940</p>
					<p>Authors: Wan F. A. Jusoh, Marcus A. H. Chua, Piet A. J. Bakker, Pepijn Kamminga, Danièle Weiler, Kees Rookmaaker, Martyn E. Y. Low</p>
					<p>Abstract: The Fishing Cat is not a species known to inhabit Singapore. However, a historical specimen stated to have come from Singapore in 1819 and attributed to Pierre-Médard Diard (RMNH.MAM.59688) is now housed at Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden, the Netherlands. Two hundred years after it was obtained, the mounted skin and skull of this specimen, including specimen labels, were photographed and digitally catalogued. Four sets of annotations from labels and a document detailing records and a receipt of specimens sent by Diard to Leiden are presented to ascertain the specimen’s identity, followed by a historical account of Diard based on a reconstruction of the timeline of key events of Singapore’s natural history. Subsequently, the specimen is examined to confirm its taxonomic identity using comparative morphometrics with other museum specimens, and data associated with the specimen are analysed to determine the origins of this specimen. We conclude that the current evidence does not allow confirmation of the specimen’s status as having been collected in Singapore or being obtained from the pet trade. If the specimen was an imported specimen, it would point towards a trade in rare and large animals in Singapore and the region from as early as 1819. Presently, the specimen remains one of the few extant zoological specimens obtained in Singapore in 1819 and the only one currently known outside of England.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2022 10:32:25 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new slippery frog (Amphibia, Conrauidae, Conraua Nieden, 1908) from the Fouta Djallon Highlands, west-central Guinea</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/76692/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 23-42</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.76692</p>
					<p>Authors: Karla Neira-Salamea, Joseph Doumbia, Annika Hillers, Laura Sandberger-Loua, N’Goran G. Kouamé, Christian Brede, Marvin Schäfer, David C. Blackburn, Michael F. Barej, Mark-Oliver Rödel</p>
					<p>Abstract: We describe a new species of the genus Conraua from the Fouta Djallon Highlands in Guinea. The species is recognised as distinct from nominotypical C. alleni, based on morphological evidence and is supported by a recent species delimitation analysis, based on DNA sequence data. The new species is distinguished from its congeners by the unique combination of the following characters: medium body size, robust limbs, only one instead of two palmar tubercles, the first finger webbed to below the first subarticular tubercle, presence of a lateral line system, indistinct tympanum, two subarticular tubercles on fingers III and IV, venter in adults white with dark brown spots or dark brown with grey or whitish spots. The new species differs from all congeners by more than 6% in the DNA sequence of mitochondrial ribosomal 16S. We discuss isolation in Pliocene and Pleistocene forest refugia as a potential driver of speciation in the C. alleni complex. We also emphasise the importance of conserving the remaining forest fragments in the Fouta Djallon Region for the preservation of both its unique biodiversity and its valuable water sources for local people.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 19 Jan 2022 16:43:44 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿A new catfish of the genus Trichomycterus from the Rio Paraíba do Sul Basin, south-eastern Brazil, a supposedly migrating species (Siluriformes, Trichomycteridae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/72392/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 13-21</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.72392</p>
					<p>Authors: Wilson J. E. M. Costa, Axel M. Katz</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new species of the catfish genus Trichomycterus is described from the Rio Paraíba do Sul, south-eastern Brazil. This species exhibits some morphological character states that are unique amongst congeners, including a robust opercle and a long interopercle with numerous odontodes (50–60 opercular and 90–100 interopercular), a black bar on the basal portion of the caudal fin and a dark brown flank with a well delimited dorsal yellow stripe. It also exhibits some morphological traits that are uncommon amongst congeners, such as the presence of nine pectoral-fin rays. The presence of a shallow hyomandibular outgrowth and a ventrally expanded pre-opercular ventral flap suggests that this species is closely related to T. melanopygius, T. pradensis and T. tete. The new species also differs from T. melanopygius, T. pradensis and T. tete by having an emarginate caudal fin and a single median supra-orbital pore S6. Anecdotal evidence suggests that T. largoperculatus and T. pradensis have migratory habits, a condition not previously reported for eastern South American trichomycterines.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 14 Jan 2022 11:05:05 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>          Grismadox gen. nov., a new Neotropical genus of ant-resembling spiders (Araneae, Corinnidae, Castianeirinae), including the description of two new species from Bolivia and Paraguay</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/76677/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 98(1): 1-11</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.98.76677</p>
					<p>Authors: Brogan L. Pett, Gonzalo D. Rubio, Robert Perger</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new genus and two new species of ant-resembling castianeirine spiders are described from the Neotropics. Grismadox gen. nov. comprises four species: Grismadox baueri sp. nov., and Grismadox mazaxoides (Perger &amp; Duperré, 2021) comb. nov. from Bolivia, and Grismadox karugua sp. nov. (type species) and Grismadox mboitui (Pett, 2021) comb. nov. from Paraguay. All species are diagnosed and the new species are described and illustrated. Available ecological data suggests that all four species are primarily epigeal and inhabit Grassland and savannah type habitats.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 7 Jan 2022 13:25:55 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿A fantastic new species of secretive forest frog discovered from forest fragments near Andasibe, Madagascar</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/73630/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 483-495</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.73630</p>
					<p>Authors: Carl R. Hutter, Zo F. Andriampenomanana, Ginah Tsiorisoa Andrianasolo, Kerry A. Cobb, Jary H. Razafindraibe, Robin K. Abraham, Shea M. Lambert</p>
					<p>Abstract: We describe a fantastic new species of forest frog (Mantellidae: Gephyromantis: subgenus: Laurentomantis) from moderately high elevations in the vicinity of Andasibe, Madagascar. This region has been surveyed extensively and has a remarkably high anuran diversity with many undocumented species still being discovered. Surprisingly, by exploring areas around Andasibe that lacked biodiversity surveys, we discovered a spectacular and clearly morphologically distinct species, previously unknown to science, Gephyromantis marokoroko sp. nov., documented for the first time in 2015. The new species is well characterised by a very rugose and granular dorsum, dark brown skin with bright red mottling, sparse light orange to white spots on the ventre, vibrant red eyes and femoral glands present only in males that consist of eight medium-sized granules. Bioacoustically, the new species has a quiet advertisement call that differs from related species by having a moderate call duration, 2–4 strongly pulsed notes and a slow note repetition rate. Furthermore, it has substantial differentiation in mitochondrial DNA, with pairwise distances of 7–9% to all other related species in sequences of the mitochondrial 16S rRNA marker. Additional evidence is given through a combined four mitochondrial markers and four nuclear exons concatenated species tree, strongly supporting G. striatus as the sister species of the new species in both analyses. The discovery of this new species highlights the need for continued inventory work in high elevation rainforests of Madagascar, even in relatively well-studied regions.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 2 Dec 2021 12:13:50 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>Contribution to the trout of Euphrates River, with description of a new species, and range extension of Salmo munzuricus (Salmoniformes, Salmonidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/72181/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 471-482</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.72181</p>
					<p>Authors: Davut Turan, İsmail Aksu, Münevver Oral, Cüneyt Kaya, Esra Bayçelebi</p>
					<p>Abstract: In an effort to reveal the Euphrates trout taxonomy, the Karasu River, which is one of the eastern drainages of the river, was investigated and three independent populations were identified. Result revealed that two populations belonged to Salmo munzuricus, which was known only in Munzur River, while the other population belonged to an unnamed species. Salmo baliki, a new species, is described from the Murat River, a drainage of Euphrates River. It differs from Salmo species in adjacent water by the combination of the following characters: a grayish body; commonly one, rarely two pale black spots behind eye and on cheek; two to seven black spots on opercle; a few black spots on back and upper part of flank, missing on predorsal area; few to numerous large irregular-shaped red spots in median, upper and lower part of flank, surrounded by a large irregular-shaped white ring; the number of black and red spots not increasing in parallel with size; maxilla short and narrow; adipose-fin medium size, no or rarely one or two red spot its posterior edge; 107–118 lateral line scales; 24–28 scales rows between dorsal-in origin and lateral line; 18–22 scale rows between lateral line and anal–fin origin; maxilla length 7.7–9.1% SL in males, 8.2–9.6 in females. Finally, the genetic study of the Cyt b mitochondrial gene confirmed the morphological data, suggesting the separation of S. baliki from other Salmo species.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 18 Oct 2021 11:41:23 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Lost, forgotten, and overlooked: systematic reassessment of two lesser-known toad species (Anura, Bufonidae) from Peninsular India and another wide-ranging northern species</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/61770/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 451-470</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.61770</p>
					<p>Authors: Karan Bisht, Sonali Garg, A. N. D. Akalabya Sarmah, Saibal Sengupta, S. D. Biju</p>
					<p>Abstract: We rediscovered two species of toads, Bufo stomaticus peninsularis and Bufo brevirostris, which were described from Peninsular India 84 and 101 years ago, respectively, but have not been reported since. Because the name-bearing types of both species are either damaged or lost, we provide detailed redescriptions, morphological comparisons, and insights into phylogenetic relationships with closely related members of the genus Duttaphrynus sensu lato, based on new material from the type locality of each species. We clarify and validate the identity of D. brevirostris, which was rediscovered from multiple localities in the Malenadu and adjoining coastal regions of Karnataka. We also demonstrate that Bufo stomaticus peninsularis, which was considered a synonym of Duttaphrynus scaber, is a distinct species. Bufo stomaticus peninsularis differs from Duttaphrynus scaber morphologically and genetically, and is more closely related to members of the Duttaphrynus stomaticus group. We also clarify the identity of the namesake species of the Duttaphrynus stomaticus group, which is reported widely in India and neighbouring countries, but lacks sufficient taxonomic information due to its brief original description and reportedly untraceable type material. We located and studied the complete syntype series of D. stomaticus, probably for the first time in over a century, and we report on the status of available specimens, provide detailed description of a potential type, compare it to related species, and clarify the species’ geographical range. Our molecular analyses suggest that D. stomaticus is minimally divergent from, and possibly conspecific with, D. olivaceus. Our analyses also clarify its relationship to the closely-related D. peninsularis comb. nov., with which it was previously confused. Finally, our study provides other insights into the phylogenetic relationships and genetic differentiation among various species of Duttaphrynus toads.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 21 Sep 2021 19:26:11 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A type catalogue of the reed frogs (Amphibia, Anura, Hyperoliidae) in the collection of the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (ZMB) with comments on historical collectors and expeditions</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/68000/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 407-450</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.68000</p>
					<p>Authors: Frank Tillack, Ronald de Ruiter, Mark-Oliver Rödel</p>
					<p>Abstract: We present a commented catalogue of the type specimens of the Afro-Malagasy frog family Hyperoliidae at the herpetological collection of the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (ZMB). In current publications and databases, many names based on ZMB primary types are listed as synonyms of other species, the types often declared as lost. Consequently, the respective names are often no longer considered in current taxonomic work. We traced 146 nominal taxa of the family Hyperoliidae in the ZMB collection of which currently 130 are presented by primary types (88 holotypes, 10 lectotypes and 32 taxa based on syntype series); 50 of these taxa are currently considered as valid. Primary types of nine taxa could not be located during our inventory of the collection holdings. Seven taxa are exclusively represented by secondary types (paratypes). Many of these types comprise taxa where types have been thought to be lost. As a further service to the community, we provide important details about collectors and their travel routes, as well as respective documents stored in the collection of the Department of Historical Research at ZMB. This should make it easier to potentially compare the ZMB types in future taxonomic revisions.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 10 Aug 2021 14:49:21 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Review of the Australian and New Zealand orb-weaving spider genus Novakiella (Araneae, Araneidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/67788/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 393-405</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.67788</p>
					<p>Authors: Volker W. Framenau, Cor J. Vink, Nikolaj Scharff, Renner L. C. Baptista, Pedro de S. Castanheira</p>
					<p>Abstract: The orb-weaving spider genus Novakiella Court &amp; Forster, 1993 (family Araneidae Clerck, 1757) is reviewed to include two species, N. trituberculosa (Roewer, 1942) (type species, Australia and New Zealand) and N. boletus sp. nov. (Australia). Novakiella belongs to the informal, largely Australian ‘backobourkiine’ clade and shares with the other genera of the clade a single macroseta on the male pedipalp patella and a median apophysis of the male pedipalp that forms an arch over the radix. The proposed genus synapomorphies are the presence of a large basal conductor lobe expanding apically over the radix and the shape of the median apophysis, which extends into a basally directed, pointy projection. Males have an apico-prolateral spur on the tibia of the second leg that carries a distinct spine. Females have an epigyne with triangular base plate bearing transverse ridges and an elongate triangular scape, which is almost always broken off. The humeral humps of the abdomen are distinct. Novakiella trituberculosa build characteristic dome-shaped webs; however, the foraging behaviour and web-shape of N. boletus sp. nov., currently only known from museum specimens, are not known.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 26 Jul 2021 18:32:53 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Three new species of the spider genus Nopsma (Araneae, Caponiidae, Nopinae) from Colombia</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/69089/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 383-392</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.69089</p>
					<p>Authors: Alexander Sánchez-Ruiz, Leonel Martínez, Alexandre B. Bonaldo</p>
					<p>Abstract: Three new Colombian species of the spider genus Nopsma Sánchez-Ruiz, Brescovit &amp; Bonaldo, 2020 are described and illustrated: Nopsma leticia sp. nov. (male) from Amazonas department, Nopsma macagual sp. nov. (male) from Caquetá department and Nopsma paya sp. nov. (male and female) from Putumayo department. The collection data of the holotype of Nopsma florencia Sánchez-Ruiz, Brescovit &amp; Bonaldo are corrected. Additionally, an updated identification key for all species of the genus and a distribution map for the Colombian species are included.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 13 Jul 2021 08:15:44 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>          Idiomysis bumbumiensis sp. nov., a new mysid species (Mysida, Mysidae, Anisomysini) from Southeast Asia</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/68486/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 345-354</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.68486</p>
					<p>Authors: Ja’afar Nurshazwan, Shozo Sawamoto, Azman bin Abdul Rahim</p>
					<p>Abstract: We provide a detailed description, including illustrations, of a new species of mysid belonging to the genus Idiomysis W. M. Tattersall, 1922 from Pulau Bum Bum, Sabah, Malaysia. The presence of two segments of antennal scale, a shorter endopod of uropod than the exopod and a pair of minute spines at the apex of the telson distinguishes Idiomysis bumbumiensis sp. nov. from all other species in the genus. The present species is the seventh member of the genus Idiomysis and it is the first described in Southeast Asia. It is also the third species of tribe Anisomysini discovered in Malaysian waters. We include an updated dichotomous key of all Idiomysis species.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 9 Jul 2021 16:35:18 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Description of six new species of Xenorhina Peters, 1863 from southern Papua New Guinea (Amphibia, Anura, Microhylidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/59696/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 355-382</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.59696</p>
					<p>Authors: Rainer Günther, Stephen Richards</p>
					<p>Abstract: We describe six new species of the microhylid frog genus Xenorhina from the southern slopes of Papua New Guinea’s central cordillera and adjacent lowlands, based on a combination of morphological (including osteology) and bioacoustic features. All of the new species are fossorial or terrestrial inhabitants of tropical rainforest habitats and belong to a group of Xenorhina having a single, enlarged odontoid spike on each vomeropalatine bone. Advertisement calls and habitat preferences are described for each species, one of which is amongst the smallest hitherto members of the genus. Description of these six species brings the total number of Xenorhina known to 40 and emphasises the importance of the high-rainfall belt that extends along the southern flanks of New Guinea’s central cordillera as a hotspot of Melanesian amphibian diversity.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 9 Jul 2021 10:06:29 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Uncovering the herpetological diversity of small forest fragments in south-eastern Madagascar (Haute Matsiatra)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/63936/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 315-343</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.63936</p>
					<p>Authors: Francesco Belluardo, Darwin Díaz Quirós, Javier Lobón-Rovira, Gonçalo M. Rosa, Malalatiana Rasoazanany, Franco Andreone, Angelica Crottini</p>
					<p>Abstract: Madagascar has historically suffered from high fragmentation of forested habitats, often leading to biodiversity loss. Neverthless, forest fragments still retain high levels of biological diversity. The Haute Matsiatra Region (south-eastern Madagascar) hosts the renowned Andringitra National Park and several surrounding isolated forest fragments embedded in a matrix of human-dominated landscape. During a herpetological survey conducted in the Region, we visited a total of 25 sites. We applied a molecular taxonomic approach to identify the collected material and generate new reference sequences to improve the molecular identification of Malagasy herpetofauna. We identified a total of 28 amphibian and 38 squamate taxa and provided a systematic account for each one of them. Nine of the identified taxa are candidate species, amongst which one was newly identified. We extended the known distributional range of 21 taxa (nine amphibians and 12 squamates). Although the largest forest fragments hold a higher number of species, we also detected a relatively high herpetological diversity in small patches. Our results highlight the importance of investigating small forest fragments to contribute to a better understanding of the patterns of diversity and distribution of the amphibians and reptiles of Madagascar.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 1 Jul 2021 09:05:25 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Molecular diagnostic based on 18S rDNA and supplemental taxonomic data of the cnidarian coelozoic Ceratomyxa (Cnidaria, Myxosporea) and comments on the intraspecific morphological variation</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/64769/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(2): 307-314</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.64769</p>
					<p>Authors: Fabricio B. Sousa, Tiago Milanin, André C. Morandini, Luis L. Espinoza, Anai Flores-Gonzales, Ana L.S. Gomes, Daniele A. Matoso, Patrick D. Mathews</p>
					<p>Abstract: Ceratomyxa amazonensis           is a cnidarian myxosporean originally described with strongly arcuate crescent-shaped myxospores, absence of vegetative stages and infecting Symphysodon discus, an important Amazonian ornamental fish in the aquarium industry. As part of a long-term investigation concerning myxosporeans that infect discus fish Symphysodon spp. from different rivers of the Amazon Basin, thirty specimens of S. discus collected from Unini River were examined. Plasmodial vegetative stages therefrom were found freely floating in the bile of gall bladders from eighteen fish. Mature myxospores were slightly crescent-shaped, measuring 4.72 ± 0.1 (4.52–4.81) μm in length, 24.2 ± 0.4 (23.9–25.3) μm in thickness with polar capsules 2.31 ± 0.1 (2.29–2.33) μm in length and 2.15 ± 0.1 (2.13–2.17) μm in width. Strong morphological differences were observed between the newly isolated myxospores obtained and the previously described C. amazonensis; however, molecular assessment, based on 18S rDNA, revealed a high similarity (99.91%), with only a single nucleotide base change. This study provides new data, expanding the original description of the species with a discussion on differences in myxospore-morphology in the context of intraspecific morphological plasticity.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 10 Jun 2021 16:15:16 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Integrative descriptions of two new Macrobiotus species (Tardigrada, Eutardigrada, Macrobiotidae) from Mississippi (USA) and Crete (Greece)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/65280/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 281-306</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.65280</p>
					<p>Authors: Matteo Vecchi, Daniel Stec</p>
					<p>Abstract: In this paper, we describe two new Macrobiotus species from Mississippi (USA) and Crete (Greece) by means of integrative taxonomy. Detailed morphological data from light and scanning electron microscopy, as well as molecular data (sequences of four genetic markers: 18S rRNA, 28S rRNA, ITS-2 and COI), are provided in support of the descriptions of the new species. Macrobiotus annewintersae sp. nov. from Mississippi belongs to the Macrobiotus persimilis complex (Macrobiotus clade B) and exhibits a unique egg processes morphology, similar only to Macrobiotus anemone Meyer, Domingue &amp; Hinton, 2014, but mainly differs from that species by the presence of eyes, granulation on all legs, dentate lunulae on legs IV, and of bubble-like structures within the tentacular arms that are present on the distal portion of the egg processes. Macrobiotus rybaki sp. nov. from Crete belongs to the Macrobiotus clade A and is most similar to Macrobiotus dariae Pilato &amp; Bertolani, 2004, Macrobiotus noemiae Roszkowska &amp; Kaczmarek, 2019, Macrobiotus santoroi Pilato &amp; D’Urso, 1976, and Macrobiotus serratus Bertolani, Guidi &amp; Rebecchi, 1996, but differs from them mainly in the morphological details of its egg processes and chorion reticulation, but also by a number of morphometric characters. In light of the specific morphology of the egg processes of Macrobiotus annewintersae sp. nov. and Macrobiotus anemone, that are equipped with tentacular arms instead of proper terminal disc, we also provide an updated definition of the Macrobiotus persimilis complex.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 19 May 2021 11:20:32 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>          Myrmecotypus mazaxoides sp. nov. – a new ground-dwelling, carpenter ant-resembling sac spider species from the Bolivian orocline, with indirect evidence for species-specific mimicry (Araneae, Corinnidae, Castianeirinae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/64766/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 273-280</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.64766</p>
					<p>Authors: Robert Perger, Nadine Dupérré</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new ant-resembling spider species of the subfamily Castianeirinae, Myrmecotypus mazaxoides sp. nov., from the Sub-Andean area of the Bolivian orocline is described. Adults of M. mazaxoides sp. nov. resemble the carpenter ant Camponotus cf. melanoticus Emery, 1894 and were observed on the ground of savanna-like habitats close to the entrances of formicaries of this ant. This study is the first to report a ground-dwelling species of Myrmecotypus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1894; all the other species are arboreal.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2021 14:53:37 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Lizards of a different stripe: phylogenetics of the Pedioplanis undata species complex (Squamata, Lacertidae), with the description of two new species</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/61351/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 249-272</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.61351</p>
					<p>Authors: Jackie L. Childers, Sebastian Kirchhof, Aaron M. Bauer</p>
					<p>Abstract: The lacertid genus Pedioplanis is a moderately speciose group of small-bodied, cryptically-colored lizards found in arid habitats throughout southern Africa. Previous phylogenetic work on Pedioplanis has determined its placement within the broader context of the Lacertidae, but interspecific relations within the genus remain unsettled, particularly within the P. undata species complex, a group largely endemic to Namibia. We greatly expanded taxon sampling for members of the P. undata complex and other Pedioplanis, and generated molecular sequence data from 1,937 bp of mtDNA (ND2 and cyt b) and 2,015 bp of nDNA (KIF24, PRLR, RAG-1) which were combined with sequences from GenBank resulting in a final dataset of 455 individuals. Both maximum likelihood and Bayesian analyses recover similar phylogenetic results and reveal the polyphyly of P. undata and P. inornata as presently construed. We confirm that P. husabensis is sister to the group comprising the P. undata complex plus the Angolan sister species P. huntleyi + P. haackei and demonstrate that P. benguelensis lies outside of this clade in its entirety. The complex itself comprises six species including P. undata, P. inornata, P. rubens, P. gaerdesi and two previously undescribed entities. Based on divergence date estimates, the P. undata species complex began diversifying in the late Miocene (5.3 ± 1.6 MYA) with the most recent cladogenetic events dating to the Pliocene (2.6 ± 1.0 MYA), making this assemblage relatively young compared to the genus Pedioplanis as a whole, the origin of which dates back to the mid-Miocene (13.5 ± 1.8 MYA). Using an integrative approach, we here describe Pedioplanis branchi sp. nov. and Pedioplanis mayeri sp. nov. representing northern populations previously assigned to P. inornata and P. undata, respectively. These entities were first flagged as possible new species by Berger-Dell’mour and Mayer over thirty years ago but were never formally described. The new species are supported chiefly by differences in coloration and by unique amino acid substitutions. We provide comprehensive maps depicting historical records based on museum specimens plus new records from this study for all members of the P. undata complex and P. husabensis. We suggest that climatic oscillations of the Upper Miocene and Pliocene-Pleistocene era in concert with the formation of biogeographic barriers have led to population isolation, gene flow restrictions and ultimately cladogenesis in the P. undata complex.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 23 Apr 2021 08:05:12 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>A new species of Cybaeus L. Koch, 1868 (Araneae, Cybaeidae) with simple genitalia from central Japan is the sister species of C. melanoparvus Kobayashi, 2006 with elongated genitalia</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/64473/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 223-233</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.64473</p>
					<p>Authors: Yusuke Sugawara, Yoh Ihara, Takafumi Nakano</p>
					<p>Abstract: Spiders of the genus Cybaeus L. Koch, 1868 exhibit two major centers of diversity: Western North America and Japan. Several Japanese Cybaeus possess an elongated embolus in the male palp and elongated tubular spermathecae in the female genitalia. Here we describe Cybaeus koikei sp. nov. from central Honshu, Japan, which has an unelongated embolus and bulbous spermathecae. Phylogenetic analyses using nuclear and mitochondrial gene markers clearly support the monophyly of C. koikei sp. nov. and Cybaeus melanoparvus Kobayashi, 2006, a species with elongated genitalia. Both species share a similar habitus and a cluster of robust setae on the lateral surface of the male palpal patella. The latter is considered a synapomorphy for C. koikei sp. nov. and C. melanoparvus. A supplementary description of the spermathecae of C. melanoparvus is also provided.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 7 Apr 2021 17:01:22 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>          Chondrostoma smyrnae, a new nase from the Tahtalı reservoir drainage in the Aegean Sea basin (Teleostei, Leuciscidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/63691/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 235-248</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.63691</p>
					<p>Authors: Fahrettin Küçük, Yılmaz Çiftçi, Salim Serkan Güçlü, Davut Turan</p>
					<p>Abstract: Chondrostoma smyrnae, a new species, from the Tahtalı reservoir drainage is distinguished by having a slightly arched lower jaw with a well-developed keratinised edge, a deep and cylindric body, a complete lateral line with 47–52+1 total scales, 8–9 scale rows between the lateral line and the dorsal-fin origin, 4 scale rows between the lateral line and the pelvic fin-origin, and 19–23 gill rakers on the first gill arch. Moreover, molecular analyses using full cyt b (1141 bp) and partial coI (652 bp) sequences of the mitochondrial genome from specimens of the new species, C. smyrnae and specimens belonging to other Chondrostoma species from central and western Anatolia demonstrated that the C. smyrnae is easily differentiated by their high pairwise genetic distances of cyt b and coI data set (&gt;2.20 and 1.03%, respectively) and by their position in the phylogenetic trees obtained through Maximum Likelihood (ML) methodology.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 7 Apr 2021 11:27:06 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Demography reveals populational expansion of a recently extinct Iberian ungulate</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/61854/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 211-221</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.61854</p>
					<p>Authors: Giovanni Forcina, Kees Woutersen, Santiago Sánchez-Ramírez, Samer Angelone, Jean P. Crampe, Jesus M. Pérez, Paulino Fandos, José Enrique Granados, Michael J. Jowers</p>
					<p>Abstract: Reconstructing the demographic history of endangered taxa is paramount to predict future fluctuations and disentangle the contributing factors. Extinct taxa or populations might also provide key insights in this respect by means of the DNA extracted from museum specimens. Nevertheless, the degraded status of biological material and the limited number of records may pose some constraints. For this reason, identifying all available sources, including private and public biological collections, is a crucial step forward. In this study, we reconstructed the demographic history based on cytochrome-b sequence data of the Pyrenean ibex (Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica), a charismatic taxon of the European wildlife that became extinct in the year 2000. Moreover, we built a database of the museum specimens available in public biological collections worldwide and genotyped a privately owned 140-year-old trophy from the Spanish Pyrenees to confirm its origin. We found that the population of the Pyrenean ibex underwent a recent expansion approximately 20,000 years ago, after which trophy hunting and epizootics triggered a relentless population decline. Our interpretations, based on the genetic information currently available in public repositories, provide a solid basis for more exhaustive analyses relying on all the new sources identified. In particular, the adoption of a genome-wide approach appears a fundamental prerequisite to disentangle the multiple contributing factors associated with low genetic diversity, including inbreeding depression, acting as extinction drivers.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 1 Apr 2021 09:59:37 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>A new species of day gecko (Reptilia, Gekkonidae, Cnemaspis Strauch, 1887) from Sri Lanka with an updated ND2 gene phylogeny of Sri Lankan and Indian species</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/60099/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 191-209</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.60099</p>
					<p>Authors: Suranjan Karunarathna, Anslem De Silva, Dinesh Gabadage, Madhava Botejue, Majintha Madawala, Kanishka D.B. Ukuwela</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new day gecko of the genus Cnemaspis Strauch, 1887 is described from the intermediate bioclimatic zone (Haputale Forest and Idalgashinna Forest in Badulla District) of Sri Lanka. The new species belongs to the Cnemaspis kandiana clade and was recorded from granite caves and abandoned buildings within forested areas. The region in which these habitats are located, receives relatively high annual rainfall (2500–3500 mm) and has fairly cool, moist and well-shaded conditions. The new species is medium in size (30.2–32.9 mm SVL) and can be differentiated from all other Sri Lankan Cnemaspis by the presence of small subcaudals, heterogenous dorsal scales, smooth pectoral and ventral scales, 7 or 8 supralabials and infralabials, 143–159 ventral scales, 15–17 belly scales, 95–103 mid-body scales, 122–132 paravertebrals, 3 pre-anal pores, 4 or 5 femoral pores and 17 or 18 lamellae on 4th toe. The species described herein is categorised as Critically Endangered (CR) under the IUCN Red List Criteria. The major threats for the new species are habitat loss due to expansion of commercial-scale agriculture and illicit forest encroachments. Therefore, we recommend relevant authorities to take immediate conservation action to ensure the protection of these forest areas in Haputale and Idalgashinna along with the buffer zone in the near future.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2021 08:33:01 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>The discovery of a microbialite-associated freshwater fish in the world’s largest saline soda lake, Lake Van (Turkey)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/62120/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 181-189</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.62120</p>
					<p>Authors: Mustafa Akkuş, Mustafa Sarı, F. Güler Ekmekçi, Baran Yoğurtçuoğlu</p>
					<p>Abstract: Lake Van is the largest saline soda lake in the world and one of the world’s few endorheic lakes of greater than 3,000 km2 surface area. Despite its huge size, no fish species have so far been known to permanently occur in this lake due to its extreme environmental conditions. Here, we report the discovery of a fish population that permanently inhabits some of the unique microbialites of the lake, at a maximum depth of 13 m and about 500 m offshore. We tested whether this is an undescribed species or a new occurrence of a known species. A molecular and morphological examination showed that the newly discovered fish represents an isolated population of Oxynoemacheilus ercisianus, the only nemacheilid loach native to the freshwater tributaries of the Lake Van endorheic basin. Our further hypotheses on the prediction that (a) stream fishes would have a more anterior placement of fins than lake fishes were supported; but, that (b) stream fishes would be more slender bodied than their lake conspecifics was not supported. The lake dwelling population also shows very small sequence divergence (0.5% K2P distance) to its stream dwelling conspecific in the mtDNA-COI barcode region. The notable morphological difference with minute molecular divergence implies that the newly discovered population might have lost its link to freshwater during desiccation and transgressional phases of the Lake Van, and has adapted to a life on the microbialites.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 16 Mar 2021 10:29:23 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>A new chameleon of the Trioceros affinis species complex (Squamata, Chamaeleonidae) from Ethiopia</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/57297/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 161-179</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.57297</p>
					<p>Authors: Thore Koppetsch, Petr Nečas, Benjamin Wipfler</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new species of chameleon, Trioceros wolfgangboehmei sp. nov., inhabiting the northern slopes of the Bale Mountains in Ethiopia, is described. It differs from its Ethiopian congeners by a combination of the following features: presence of a prominent dorsal crest with a low number of enlarged conical scales reaching along the anterior half of the tail as a prominent tail crest, a casque raised above the dorsal crest, heterogeneous body scalation, long canthus parietalis, rugose head scalation, high number of flank scales at midbody and unique hemipenial morphology. Based on morphological characteristics, phylogenetic discordances of previous studies and biogeographical patterns, this new species is assigned to the Trioceros affinis (Rüppell, 1845) species complex. An updated comprehensive key to the Trioceros found in Ethiopia is provided.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 10 Mar 2021 17:28:20 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Filling distribution gaps: Two new species of the catfish genus Cambeva from southern Brazilian Atlantic Forest (Siluriformes, Trichomycteridae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/61006/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 147-159</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.61006</p>
					<p>Authors: Wilson J. E. M. Costa, Caio R. M. Feltrin, Axel M. Katz</p>
					<p>Abstract: The fauna and flora of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest have been intensively inventoried since the 19th century, but some components of this rich biota are still poorly known, and some areas have been poorly sampled. Recent studies on a rich collection of mountain catfishes of the genus Cambeva have revealed a high diversity of species still undescribed in the region. Here we provide formal descriptions for two of these species, found in areas inserted in a broad gap of the presently known genus distribution. The first one is endemic to small coastal river basins of Santa Catarina state, southern Brazil; it is tentatively placed in an intrageneric clade, also including C. castroi, C. davisi, C. guareiensis and C. zonata, by all sharing the presence of a flat small process on the dorsal margin of the quadrate, laterally overlapping metapterygoid and situated just posterior to the syncondrial joint between the metapterygoid and the quadrate. Phylogenetic relationships of the second new species, endemic to the Rio Itajaí-Mirim basin, are still obscure, but it shares a derived morphology of the mesethmoid with some species of the C. balios group. Although species of Cambeva have little external morphological variation when compared to other trichomycterine groups, the present study once more shows the importance of recording and using osteological characters to diagnose externally similar trichomycterine species.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 2 Mar 2021 13:27:31 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>No longer based on photographs alone: refuting the validity of golden-crowned langur Presbytis johnaspinalli Nardelli 2015 (Mammalia, Primates, Cercopithecidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/62235/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 141-145</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.62235</p>
					<p>Authors: Vincent Nijman</p>
					<p>Abstract: Increasingly, new species are being described without there being a name-bearing type specimen. In 2015, a new species of primate was described, the golden-crowned langur Presbytis johnaspinalli Nardelli, 2015 on the basis of five photographs that were posted on the Internet in 2009. After publication, the validity of the species was questioned as it was suggested that the animals were partially and selectively bleached ebony langurs Trachypithecus auratus (É. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1812). Since the whereabouts of the animals were unknown, it was difficult to see how this matter could be resolved and the current taxonomic status of P. johnaspinalli remains unclear. I present new information about the fate of the individual animals in the photographs and their species identification. In 2009, thirteen of the langurs on which Nardelli based his description were brought to a rescue centre where, after about three months, they regained their normal black colouration confirming the bleaching hypothesis. Eight of the langurs were released in a forest and two were monitored for two months in 2014. The description of their behaviour, photographs and analysis of their cytochrome b genes confirms them as ebony langurs. There is no evidence to support the notion that the golden-crowned langur represents intermediates between melanistic and erythristic ebony langurs, nor that it represents a new species. As such, Presbytis johnaspinalli Nardelli, 2015 is a junior synonym of Trachyptihecus auratus (É. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1812). This case underscores the importance of assembling a sufficiently varied amount of data prior to describing new species and studying the actual type specimens.</p>
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		    <category>Short Communication</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 11 Feb 2021 10:36:06 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>Unravelling the convoluted nomenclature of Marphysa simplex (Annelida, Eunicidae) with the proposal of a new name and the re-description of species</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/59559/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 121-139</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.59559</p>
					<p>Authors: Isabel Cristina Molina-Acevedo, Izwandy Idris</p>
					<p>Abstract: Marphysa simplex is a name that three species bear within the same genus, but each has a different authority and morphological characteristics. This homonymy condition leads to taxonomic confusion and the finite designation of name-bearing is imperative. The current study focuses on two species identified as M. simplex Crossland, 1903 and M. simplex Treadwell, 1922 and a third one, recently considered a secondary homonymy, M. simplex (Langerhans, 1884), is also assessed. The available type specimens were examined and re-described in detail using updated characters and the original descriptions. Marphysa simplex (Langerhans, 1884) is herein judged as an indeterminable species. Marphysa simplex Crossland, 1903 is confirmed as a junior synonym of M. teretiuscula (Schmarda, 1861a) because the differences are minimal. Moreover, M. teretiuscula has characteristics similar to Group B2 (Sanguinea-group; only compound spinigers), instead of the Teretiuscula-group (compound spinigers in the anterior region, subacicular limbate in all chaetigers). On the other hand, M. simplex Treadwell, 1922 is a junior primary homonym of Crossland’s species replaced by M. fijiensis nom. nov. with the chaetal arrangement similar to Group A (limbate chaetae only). In conclusion, the name M. simplex is now unacceptable. The hypothesis on species group only with limbate chaetae and the redescription on M. teretiuscula is also given.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 10 Feb 2021 10:51:51 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new hydrobiid species (Caenogastropoda, Truncatelloidea) from insular Greece</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/60254/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 111-119</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.60254</p>
					<p>Authors: Canella Radea, Paraskevi Niki Lampri, Konstantinos Bakolitsas, Aristeidis Parmakelis</p>
					<p>Abstract: Daphniola dione sp. nov., a valvatiform hydrobiid gastropod from Western Greece, is described based on conchological, anatomical and molecular data. D. dione is distinguished from the other species of the Greek endemic genus Daphniola by a unique combination of shell and soft body character states and by a 7–13% COI sequence divergence when compared to congeneric species. The only population of D. dione inhabits a cave spring on Lefkada Island, Ionian Sea.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 5 Feb 2021 08:00:23 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>Distribution pattern and phylogeography of tree rats Chiromyscus (Rodentia, Muridae) in eastern Indochina</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/57490/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 83-95</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.57490</p>
					<p>Authors: Alexander E. Balakirev, Alexei V. Abramov, Viatcheslav V. Rozhnov</p>
					<p>Abstract: The study combines available data on species distribution in eastern Indochina to investigate the phylogeographical genetic and morphological diversity of tree rats (Chiromyscus, Rodentia, Muridae) and to specify their natural ranges. We examined the diversity and distribution of tree rats over its range, based on recent molecular data for mitochondrial (Cyt b, COI) and nuclear (IRBP, RAG1 and GHR) genes. The study presents the most complete and up-to-date data on the distribution and phylogeography of the genus in eastern Indochina. As revealed by mitochondrial genes, C. langbianis splits into at least four coherent geographically-distributed clades, whereas C. thomasi and C. chiropus form two distinctive mitochondrial clades each. Chiromyscus langbianis and C. chiropus show significant inconsistency in nuclear genes, whereas C. thomasi shows the same segregation pattern as can be traced by mitochondrial markers. The Northern and Southern phylogroups of C. thomasi appear to be distributed sympatrically with northern phylogroups of C. langbianis in most parts of eastern Indochina. The mitochondrial clades discovered are geographically subdivided and divergent enough to suspect independent subspecies within C. langbianis and C. thomasi. However, due to the insufficiency of obvious morphological traits, a formal description is not carried out here. The processes of recent fauna formation, species distribution patterns, dispersion routes and possible natural history in Indochina are discussed.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 3 Feb 2021 16:05:04 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new representative of the genus Bryocyclops Kiefer, 1927 from a karst cave in north-eastern Thailand (Copepoda, Cyclopoida, Cyclopidae) and comments on the generic affinities</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/52354/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 97-109</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.52354</p>
					<p>Authors: Santi Watiroyram</p>
					<p>Abstract: The seventh Thai species of Bryocyclops Kiefer, 1927 – Bryocyclops jayabhumi sp. nov. – was found in a karst cave in the Chaiyaphum Province of north-eastern Thailand. The new species differs from all previously-known species by the absence of an inner seta on the proximal endopod of the first four swimming legs. Bryocyclops jayabhumi sp. nov. is most similar to B. maholarnensis Watiroyram, Brancelj &amp; Sanoamuang, 2015 – the monotypic species of Group VII, which was previously described from Thailand. However, the new species differs from B. maholarnensis by having the following characteristics: i) posterior margin of urosomites serrated; ii) anal operculum triangular with acute-tip; iii) P1–P4 Enp-1 without an inner seta; iv) armature on the female P2–P3 Enp-2 and P4 Enp; v) a transformed spine on the male P3 Enp-2. In this study, the generic affinity of the genus Bryocyclops Kiefer, 1927 is discussed and redefined, based on the available literature concerning its principle morphology to fill the present knowledge gap about the characteristics of the genus.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 3 Feb 2021 14:27:47 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Consequences of parallel miniaturisation in Microhylinae (Anura, Microhylidae), with the description of a new genus of diminutive South East Asian frogs</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/57968/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 21-54</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.57968</p>
					<p>Authors: Vladislav A. Gorin, Mark D. Scherz, Dmitriy V. Korost, Nikolay A. Poyarkov</p>
					<p>Abstract: The genus Microhyla Tschudi, 1838 includes 52 species and is one of the most diverse genera of the family Microhylidae, being the most species-rich taxon of the Asian subfamily Microhylinae. The recent, rapid description of numerous new species of Microhyla with complex phylogenetic relationships has made the taxonomy of the group especially challenging. Several recent phylogenetic studies suggested paraphyly of Microhyla with respect to Glyphoglossus Günther, 1869, and revealed three major phylogenetic lineages of mid-Eocene origin within this assemblage. However, comprehensive works assessing morphological variation among and within these lineages are absent. In the present study we investigate the generic taxonomy of Microhyla–Glyphoglossus assemblage based on a new phylogeny including 57 species, comparative morphological analysis of skeletons from cleared-and-stained specimens for 23 species, and detailed descriptions of generalized osteology based on volume-rendered micro-CT scans for five species–altogether representing all major lineages within the group. The results confirm three highly divergent and well-supported clades that correspond with external and osteological morphological characteristics, as well as respective geographic distribution. Accordingly, acknowledging ancient divergence between these lineages and their significant morphological differentiation, we propose to consider these three lineages as distinct genera: Microhyla sensu stricto, Glyphoglossus, and a newly described genus, Nanohyla gen. nov.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 12 Jan 2021 14:48:51 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Rock island melody: A revision of the Afroedura bogerti Loveridge, 1944 group, with descriptions of four new endemic species from Angola</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/57202/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 55-82</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.57202</p>
					<p>Authors: William R. Branch, Andreas Schmitz, Javier Lobón-Rovira, Ninda L. Baptista, Telmo António, Werner Conradie</p>
					<p>Abstract: Four new species of flat geckos in the Afroedura bogerti Loveridge, 1944 group are described from south-western and west-central Angola. The description of these new species significantly restricts the distribution range of typical A. bogerti, a morphologically very similar species, from which they differ genetically by 5.9–12% divergence for the mitochondrial 16S ribosomal RNA gene. Morphologically and genetically, Angolan Afroedura are divided into two main groups: a mostly south-western coastal group and a west-central inland/highland group. These two groups are further divisible into three and two subgroups respectively, all geographically isolated, differing by a combination of the following features: colouration, average adult size, number of mid-body scale rows, number of scale rows on dorsal and ventral surface of each tail verticil and if nostril scales are in contact or not. All five Angolan species are morphologically distinguishable and in agreement with the molecular results. An updated dichotomous key to the Afroedura transvaalica group is provided. The new discovery adds to a growing number of endemic Pro-Namib reptiles described from Angola in recent years.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 12 Jan 2021 08:56:09 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>The operculate micro land snail genus Dicharax Kobelt &amp; Möllendorff, 1900 (Caenogastropoda, Alycaeidae) in Thailand, with description of new species</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/59143/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 97(1): 1-20</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.97.59143</p>
					<p>Authors: Parin Jirapatrasilp, Barna Páll-Gergely, Chirasak Sutcharit, Piyoros Tongkerd</p>
					<p>Abstract: This study reviews the Dicharax species in Thailand. Altogether ten Dicharax species are reported, four of which are new to science and described herein. They are Dicharax borealis Jirapatrasilp &amp; Páll-Gergely sp. nov., Dicharax burchi Jirapatrasilp &amp; Páll-Gergely sp. nov., Dicharax panhai Jirapatrasilp &amp; Páll-Gergely sp. nov. and Dicharax pongrati Jirapatrasilp &amp; Tongkerd sp. nov. Alycaeus davisi Godwin-Austen, 1914 is regarded as a junior subjective synonym of Alycaeus cucullatus Theobald, 1870 (= D. cucullatus) based on a similar depressed-conical shell shape, a long sutural tube and a sharp swelling behind the peristome. Furthermore, the type locality of Alycaeus pratatensis Panha &amp; Burch, 1997 (= D. pratatensis) had to be amended. Most important characters to distinguish Dicharax species are the general shell shape and relative lengths of teleoconch regions, whereas the spiral striation of R1, the shape of swelling of R3, the outer peristome crenulation and protrusion, and the exterior opercular sculpture show large intraspecific variability.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 5 Jan 2021 09:10:13 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Survey of Stenomelania Fisher, 1885 (Cerithioidea, Thiaridae): The potential of trematode infections in a newly-recorded snail genus at the coast of Andaman Sea, South Thailand</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/59448/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 807-819</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.59448</p>
					<p>Authors: Kitja Apiraksena, Suluck Namchote, Jirayus Komsuwan, Wivichuta Dechraksa, Kampanat Tharapoom, Nuanpan Veeravechsukij, Matthias Glaubrecht, Duangduen Krailas</p>
					<p>Abstract: Stenomelania snails (Fisher 1885) have been reported from the coastal regions of the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean, spanning India to Australia. Here, the species diversity and distribution of these snails in the south of Thailand are recorded. The snails were also examined for trematode infections in 13 locations in three Provinces, viz. Krabi, Trang and Satun, along the coast of the Andaman Sea. A total of 1,551 snails were in five morphs tentatively identified as Stenomelania aspirans, S. crenulata, S. punctata, S. torulosa and the closely-related Neoradina prasongi. With 10 infected snails, the trematode infection rate was 0.64%. The cercariae were categorised into three species from two morphologically-distinguishable types, viz. parapleurolophocercous cercariae (Haplorchis taichui and Procerovum cheni) and xiphidiocercariae (Loxogenoides bicolor), through the morphological characterisation of the larval stage. These trematodes were also analysed using the internal transcribed spacer subunit II region to confirm the species identity at generic and infrageneric levels.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 30 Nov 2020 09:07:35 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>First records of Pseudozeuxidae and Metapseudinae (Metapseudidae) (Crustacea, Tanaidacea) in Southwestern Atlantic, with descriptions of two new species</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/56097/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 723-745</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.56097</p>
					<p>Authors: Juliana Lopes Segadilha, Cristiana Silveira Serejo</p>
					<p>Abstract: Based on specimens collected from eulittoral zone in rocky shores of northeast of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) on 2017, two new tanaidaceans species from two different suborders are described: Apseudomorpha brasiliensis sp. nov. (Apseudomorpha, Metapseudidae) and Pseudozeuxo fischeri sp. nov. (Tanaidomorpha, Pseudozeuxidae). Diagnostic characters of Apseudomorpha brasiliensis are mandible palp article-2 and article-3 with six and nine finely penicillate setae on inner margin, respectively; pereopod-1 carpus and propodus with two and four ventral spines, respectively; pleonites 2 and 5 with pleura having long distal seta; uropod exopod shorter than endopod articles 1–2 combined, endopod four-articled. Pseudozeuxo fischeri is characterized by pereopods 1–3 coxa with long seta about half as long as basis; pereopods 2–3 carpus with ventrodistal seta; propodus with two ventral setae; pereopods 4–6 propodus with two ventral spines and one seta; uropod endopod two- and exopod one-articled. This is the first record of the family Pseudozeuxidae and the metapseudid subfamily Metapseudinae from the Southwestern Atlantic (Brazil). Remarks on their associations with macroalgae and identification keys to world species of Apseudomorpha and Pseudozeuxo are provided.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2020 16:09:48 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Amphipods in estuaries: the sibling species low salinity switch hypothesis</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/55896/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 797-805</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.55896</p>
					<p>Authors: David J. Wildish, Adriana E. Radulovici</p>
					<p>Abstract: A novel low salinity switch hypothesis is proposed to account for the speciation of an obligate estuarine (oligohaline) amphipod, Orchestia aestuarensis, from a closely-related one, Orchestia mediterranea, found in both estuarine and marine conditions (euryhaline). The underlying genetic mechanisms could involve:        1. A dimorphic allele, or linked set of alleles, carried by the euryhaline amphipod which controls the ability to breed in low salinity conditions in estuaries and which is selected for in these conditions, producing the oligohaline amphipod.        2. A genetically-assimilated gene or genes, controlling the ability to breed in low salinity conditions in estuaries, which is/are “switched on” by low salinity conditions.        3. Allopatric speciation from a euryhaline to an oligohaline amphipod species where low salinity conditions is the selective switch.        It is possible that other estuarine, sibling, amphipod pairs have evolved by salinity switching. In the North Atlantic coastal region, this could include: Gammarus tigrinus/G. daiberi and G. salinus/G. zaddachi (Amphipoda, Gammaridae).</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Review Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2020 14:33:01 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Distribution and diversity of fish from Seyhan, Ceyhan and Orontes river systems</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/55837/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 747-767</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.55837</p>
					<p>Authors: Esra Bayçelebi</p>
					<p>Abstract: In this study, the current ichthyofauna of the Seyhan, Ceyhan and Orontes River drainages were presented and actual taxonomic positions of the species were assessed. Sixty-seven species belonging to 32 genera and 17 families of fishes were reported from these river drainages in Turkey and Syria. Acanthobrama centisquama and Tinca tinca could not be observed in the study area and Alburnus sellal and Esox lucius are recorded for the first time respectively in the Lake Gölbaşı (connected to the Ceyhan River) and Seyhan River.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2020 10:57:11 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>          Feaella (Tetrafeaella) obscura sp. nov. – a new pseudoscorpion species from the Maldives (Arachnida, Pseudoscorpiones), and an updated identification key to the subgenus Feaella (Tetrafeaella)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/56885/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 769-779</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.56885</p>
					<p>Authors: János Novák, Michelle Lorenz, Danilo Harms</p>
					<p>Abstract: The Feaellidae Ellingsen, 1906 is a small but ancient family of pseudoscorpions with 20 extant species across the Southern Hemisphere, and fossils from the Lower Cretaceous of Myanmar and the Eocoene of Europe. Here, we describe and illustrate Feaella (Tetrafeaella) obscura sp. nov. as a new species from the Maldives archipelago in the Indian Ocean. This is the first record of Feaella from a young oceanic island and may indicate a potential for long-distance dispersal in this lineage. We also elevate Feaella (T.) capensis nana Beier, 1966 to full species rank as F. (T.) nana Beier, 1966 and provide an identification key to the members of the subgenus Feaella (Tetrafeaella), thereby facilitating the identification of species.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2020 10:16:35 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>          Sympolymnia, a new genus of Neotropical ant-like spider, with description of two new species and indirect evidence for transformational mimicry (Araneae, Salticidae, Simonellini)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/55210/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 781-795</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.55210</p>
					<p>Authors: Robert Perger, Gonzalo D. Rubio</p>
					<p>Abstract: Sympolymnia, a new genus of myrmecomorph jumping spider belonging to the tribe Simonellini Peckham, Peckham &amp; Wheeler, 1889, is described. It comprises five species: the type species, Sympolymnia lucasi (Taczanowski, 1871), comb. nov., Sympolymnia lauretta (Peckham &amp; Peckham, 1892), comb. nov., Sympolymnia edwardsi (Cutler, 1985), comb. nov. and Sympolymnia shinahota sp. nov. and S. cutleri sp. nov. Sympolymnia lauretta (Peckham &amp; Peckham, 1892) is recorded from Bolivia for the first time. Ontogenetic shifts of ant-resemblance are observed: Juveniles of S. cutleri sp. nov. and S. lauretta mimic black ants of the genus Crematogaster Lund, 1831, but those of S. shinahota sp. nov. most closely resemble Pseudomyrmex ethicus (Forel, 1911). Adults of S. cutleri sp. nov., S. lauretta and S. shinahota sp. nov. resemble the ant Camponotus sanctaefidei Dalla Torre, 1892 and orange adults of S. shinahota sp. nov. are putative mimics of Camponotus latangulus Roger, 1863.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2020 09:03:50 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new species from subtropical Brazil and evidence of multiple pelvic fin losses in catfishes of the genus Cambeva (Siluriformes, Trichomycteridae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/56247/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 715-722</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.56247</p>
					<p>Authors: Wilson J. E. M. Costa, Caio R. M. Feltrin, Axel M. Katz</p>
					<p>Abstract: A third pelvic-less species of Cambeva from river basins draining the Geral mountain range in southern Brazil is described. It is distinguished from other congeners lacking pelvic fin and girdle, C. pascuali and C. tropeiro, by having six pectoral-fin rays, 20–23 dorsal procurrent caudal-fin rays, 15–20 opercular and 25–30 interopercular odontodes and a different colour pattern consisting of flank dark brownish-grey with two irregular horizontal rows of small pale yellow grey marks. Whereas available molecular evidence indicates that C. pascuali is more closely related to C. zonata, a species with well-developed pelvic fin, and C. tropeiro is more closely related to C. balios, another species also with well-developed pelvic fin; osteological data strongly suggest that the new species herein described is more closely related to C. diatropoporos than to other congeners. Therefore, this study indicates that the pelvic fin and pelvic-fin support have been lost independently in each of these three species of Cambeva, which corresponds to 11% of all describe species. This result highly contrasts with the closely-related trichomycterine genera Trichomycterus, in which only one in 50 species lost pelvic fin and girdle (0.2%) and Scleronema with all the nine included species having well-developed pelvic fin. These data suggest a stronger tendency to losing pelvic fin in Cambeva, but factors favouring this evolutionary event are still unknown.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 11 Nov 2020 08:43:16 +0200</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new species of the genus Smacigastes Ivanenko &amp; Defaye, 2004 (Tegastidae, Harpacticoida, Copepoda) from the Onnuri Vent Field in the Indian Ocean</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/54507/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 699-714</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.54507</p>
					<p>Authors: Jong Guk Kim, Jimin Lee</p>
					<p>Abstract: The genus Smacigastes Ivanenko &amp; Defaye, 2004 (Harpacticoida, Copepoda) is the most primitive genus in the family Tegastidae Sars, 1904, occurring in deep-sea chemosynthetic environments, such as hydrothermal vents, cold seeps, whale falls and wood falls. Our exploration of the Onnuri Vent Field, the sixth active hydrothermal vent system in the Central Indian Ridge, resulted in the discovery of a new species in the genus Smacigastes. A detailed morphological analysis of S. pumila sp. nov. reveals that it most resembles S. barti Gollner, Ivanenko &amp; Martínez Arbizu, 2008, described from a hydrothermal vent in the East Pacific Ridge; the new species can be distinguished from the existing species by the 8-segmented female antennule, the absence of an abexopodal seta on the antennary basis, the mandibular exopod represented by a single seta and the exopod of the first leg with five setae. This is the first record of Smacigastes in the Indian Ocean. A dichotomous key to species of the genus Smacigastes worldwide is provided.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 9 Oct 2020 11:35:04 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>New insights gained from museum collections: Deep-sea barnacles (Crustacea, Cirripedia, Thoracica) in the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, collected during the Karubar expedition in 1991</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/55733/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 649-698</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.55733</p>
					<p>Authors: Pipit Pitriana, Diana S. Jones, Laure Corbari, Kristina von Rintelen</p>
					<p>Abstract: An examination of the deep-sea barnacles (Cirripedia, Thoracica) collected by the Karubar expedition to Indonesia (1991) and deposited in the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, identified 40 species contained in three families of stalked and five families of acorn barnacles. Information on these species is presented, including descriptions, updated distributions and images to aid species identification. Thirty of the species, treated herein, are new records for the Indonesian Kei Islands and Tanimbar Island, which increases the total number of species recorded from Kei Islands, Aru Island and Tanimbar Island to 40. This study demonstrates the value of museum collections as a resource in biodiversity science.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 28 Sep 2020 09:37:48 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>A new troglobite species of Habeastrum Simone, 2019 from Brazil, and support for classification in Diplommatinidae (Mollusca, Caenogastropoda)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/53880/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 639-647</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.53880</p>
					<p>Authors: Luiz Ricardo L. Simone, Daniel Caracanhas Cavallari, Rodrigo Brincalepe Salvador</p>
					<p>Abstract: The genus Habeastrum Simone, 2019 was recently described based on empty shells, counting with two troglobite species. Conchological features allowed a preliminary classification in the caenogastropod family Diplommatinidae, but this family allocation was left open to future studies. Herein, we present a detailed anatomical study of newly acquired specimens, confirming the classification in Diplommatinidae. These new specimens, from Minas Gerais state, SE Brazil, belong to a new troglobite species described herein, Habeastrum strangei sp. nov. The present records extend the genus distribution ca. 1,100 km east-northeast.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 16 Sep 2020 09:34:40 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Corrigenda: Phylogenetic relationship of catshark species of the genus Scyliorhinus (Chondrichthyes, Carcharhiniformes, Scyliorhinidae) based on comparative morphology. Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 345–395. https://doi.org/10.3897/zse.96.52420</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/56272/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 637-637</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.56272</p>
					<p>Authors: Karla D. A. Soares, Marcelo R. de Carvalho</p>
					<p>Abstract: The genus Scyliorhinus is part of the family Scyliorhinidae, the most diverse family of sharks and of the subfamily Scyliorhininae along with Cephaloscyllium and Poroderma. This study reviews the phylogenetic relationships of species of Scyliorhinus in the subfamily Scyliorhininae. Specimens of all Scyliorhinus species were examined as well as specimens of four of the 18 species of Cephaloscyllium, two species of Poroderma, representatives of almost all other catshark (scyliorhinid) genera and one proscylliid (Proscyllium habereri). A detailed morphological study, including external and internal morphology, morphometry and meristic data, was performed. From this study, a total of 84 morphological characters were compiled into a data matrix. Parsimony analysis was employed to generate hypotheses of phylogenetic relationships using the TNT 1.1. Proscyllium habereri was used to root the cladogram. The phylogenetic analysis, based on implied weighting (k = 3; 300 replications and 100 trees saved per replication), resulted in three equally most parsimonious cladograms with 233 steps, with a CI of 0.37 and an RI of 0.69. The monophyly of the subfamily Scyliorhininae is supported as well as of the genus Scyliorhinus, which is proposed to be the sister group of Cephaloscyllium. The phylogenetic relationships amongst Scyliorhinus species are presented for the frst time. </p>
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		    <category>Corrigenda</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 4 Sep 2020 08:21:46 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>An illustrated catalogue of Rudolf Sturany’s type specimens in the Naturhistorisches Museum Wien, Austria (NHMW): more Red Sea species</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/54707/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 571-576</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.54707</p>
					<p>Authors: Paolo G. Albano, Sara-Maria Schnedl, Anita Eschner</p>
					<p>Abstract: Rudolf Sturany published a series of papers describing multiple gastropods and bivalves from the Red Sea collected during the expeditions of the vessel “Pola” between 1895 and 1898. In a less known paper, he introduced the genus Levanderia (Galeommatidae) and described three more species from the Red Sea: Drillia levanderi, Levanderia erythraeensis and Raeta jickelii. We here list and illustrate their type material, provide the original description, a translation into English and curatorial and taxonomic comments.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 1 Sep 2020 10:49:38 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>          Pseudechiniscus in Japan: re-description of Pseudechiniscus asper Abe et al., 1998 and description of Pseudechiniscus shintai sp. nov.</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/53324/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 527-536</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.53324</p>
					<p>Authors: Katarzyna Vončina, Reinhardt M. Kristensen, Piotr Gąsiorek</p>
					<p>Abstract: The classification and identification of species within the genus Pseudechiniscus Thulin, 1911 has been considered almost a Sisyphean work due to an extremely high homogeneity of its members. Only recently have several contributions made progress in the taxonomy feasible through their detailed analyses of morphology and, crucially, by the re-description of the ancient, nominal species P. suillus (Ehrenberg, 1853). Herein, we focus on the Japanese representatives of this genus: P. asper, a rare species originally described from Hokkaido, and a new species P. shintai. Both taxa belong to the widespread suillus-facettalis complex. Detailed descriptions entailing DNA barcoding of four markers and illustrations of the ventral pillar patterns are indispensable for an accurate delineation of species within this genus.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 1 Sep 2020 10:31:11 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Review of Macropodia in the Black Sea supported by molecular barcoding data; with the redescription of the type material, observations on ecology and epibiosis of Macropodia czernjawskii (Brandt, 1880) and notes on other Atlanto-Mediterranean species of Macropodia Leach, 1814 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Inachidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/48342/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 609-635</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.48342</p>
					<p>Authors: Vassily A. Spiridonov, Ulyana V. Simakova, Sergey E. Anosov, Anna K. Zalota, Vitaly A. Timofeev</p>
					<p>Abstract: Macropodia czernjawskii (Brandt, 1880), described from the Black Sea, was ignored in the regional faunal accounts for more than a century, although it was recognised in the Mediterranean. Instead, M. longirostris (Fabricius, 1775) and M. rostrata (Linnaeus, 1761) were frequently listed for the Black Sea. We selected a lectotype and redescribed the species on the basis of the type series from the Crimean Peninsula and the new material collected in the Black Sea. Historical and new collections, as well as the analysis of publications, indicate that M. czernjawskii is the only Macropodia species occurring in the Black Sea. Molecular barcode (COI gene marker) data show that M. czernjawskii is a species well-diverged from other studied species of the group. Furthermore, M. parva van Noort &amp; Adema, 1985 has very low genetic distances from M. rostrata and M. longipes A. Milne-Edwards &amp; Bouvier, 1899 is indistinguishable from M. tenuirostris (Leach, 1814), using COI sequences. The respective synonimisations, supported by morphological data, are proposed. M. czernjawskii is a Black Sea – Mediterranean endemic occurring also in the neighbouring Atlantic coastal zone of the Iberian Peninsula and occupying shallower depth, compared to other Mediterranean species of Macropodia. As an upper subtidal inshore species, it is particularly specialised in self-decoration and stimulates abundant epibiosis, providing masking and protection. The bulk of epibiosis consists of algae and cyanobacteria. Amongst the 25 autotrophic eukaryote taxa, identified to the lowest possible level, green chlorophytes Cladophora sp. and calcareous rhodophytes Corallinales gen. sp. were most commonly recorded. Non-indigenous red alga Bonnemaisonia hamifera Hariot, first officially recorded at the Caucasian coast of the Black Sea in 2015, was present in the epibiosis of M. czernjawskii in Crimea as early as 2011.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 1 Sep 2020 09:33:37 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Taxonomic assessment of genetically-delineated species of radicine snails (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Lymnaeidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/52860/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 577-608</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.52860</p>
					<p>Authors: Maxim V. Vinarski, Olga V. Aksenova, Ivan N. Bolotov</p>
					<p>Abstract: The article represents an overview of 29 biological species of the radicine snails (genera Ampullaceana Servain, 1882, Bullastra Bergh, 1901, Racesina Vinarski &amp; Bolotov, 2018, Kamtschaticana Kruglov &amp; Starobogatov, 1984, Myxas G.B. Sowerby I, 1822, Orientogalba Kruglov &amp; Starobogatov, 1985; Peregriana Servain, 1882, Radix Montfort, 1810, and Tibetoradix Bolotov, Vinarski &amp; Aksenova, 2018) recovered during our previous molecular taxonomic study (Aksenova et al. 2018a; Scientific Reports, 8: 11199). For each species, the following information is provided: scientific name, a (non-exhaustive) list of synonyms, type locality, type materials, shell and copulative apparatus morphology, distribution, and nomenclatural and taxonomic remarks. The colour images of shell(s) of each species are also given as well as illustrations of the copulatory apparatuses. We revealed a great conchological variation in the radicines, both intra- and interspecific, alongside with striking uniformity in the structure of their copulatory apparatuses. The latter was once thought to be a reliable tool for species delineation and identification in this snail group. The total of 29 species characterised here represents, probably, only a subset of the global taxonomic richness of the radicine snails, which approaches 50 species.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 1 Sep 2020 08:56:03 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Revision of the deep-water spider crab genus, Scyramathia A. Milne-Edwards, 1880, with the description of a new species from the Mediterranean and notes on Rochinia A. Milne-Edwards, 1875, and Anamathia Smith, 1885 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura, Epialtidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/48041/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 537-569</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.48041</p>
					<p>Authors: Bee Yan Lee, Bertrand Richer De Forges, Peter K. L. Ng</p>
					<p>Abstract: The taxonomy of the deep-water spider crabs of the genus Scyramathia A. Milne-Edwards, 1880, is revised and four extant species are recognised from the Atlantic and western Indian Ocean: S. carpenteri (Norman, in Thomson 1873) (type species), S. umbonata (Stimpson, 1871), S. hertwigi Doflein, in Chun 1900, and S. tenuipes sp. nov. Scyramathia tenuipes sp. nov. from the Mediterreanean is easily distinguished from its congeners by its slender and elongate ambulatory legs. All species are diagnosed and figured. The taxonomy of two allied genera from the Atlantic and Mediterranean, Rochinia A. Milne-Edwards, 1875, and Anamathia Smith, 1885, are also treated and their type species redescribed and figured.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 1 Sep 2020 08:34:08 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>A guild classification system proposed for anuran advertisement calls</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/38770/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 515-525</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.38770</p>
					<p>Authors: Mike Emmrich, Miguel Vences, Raffael Ernst, Jörn Köhler, Michael F. Barej, Frank Glaw, Martin Jansen, Mark-Oliver Rödel</p>
					<p>Abstract: Zoologists have widely acknowledged the utility of classification systems for characterising variation in anuran egg and clutch types, tadpole morphotypes, embryonic and tadpole development, amplexus types and reproductive modes. These classification systems have facilitated unambiguous communication between researchers, often working in completely different fields (e.g. taxonomy, ecology, behaviour), as well as comparisons among studies. A syntactic system, classifying anuran call guilds, is so far lacking. Based on examination of the calls of 1253 anuran species we present a simple, easy to use dichotomous key and guild system for classifying anuran advertisement calls – the call type most frequently emitted by anurans and studied by researchers. The use of only three call elements, namely clearly-defined calls, notes, and pulses, plus presence or absence of frequency modulation, allows assigning all currently known anuran advertisement calls to one of eight distinct call guilds defined here. This novel toolkit will facilitate comparative studies across the many thousand anuran species, and may help to unravel drivers of anuran call evolution, and to identify ecological patterns at the level of acoustic communities.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 1 Sep 2020 08:12:37 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Novel integrative data for two Milnesium Doyère, 1840 (Tardigrada: Apochela) species from Central Asia</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/52049/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 499-514</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.52049</p>
					<p>Authors: Witold Morek, Bartłomiej Surmacz, Łukasz Michalczyk</p>
					<p>Abstract: Tardigrada           are a phylum of microscopic animals inhabiting a variety of ecosystems, both aquatic and terrestrial, being recognised for their remarkable abilities to withstand tough environmental conditions. The order Apochela groups exclusively carnivorous species, with the vast majority representing the genus Milnesium Doyère, 1840. Representatives of this genus are characterised by simplified morphology, therefore possessing an extremely limited set of taxonomically meaningful morphological traits. Nevertheless, the taxonomy of Milnesium is mostly based on classical data: observations and measurements in light microscopy with the majority of descriptions lacking integrative data, most importantly DNA barcodes, but also scanning electron microscopy photographs and developmental variability analysis. Hence, re-descriptions that include novel integrative data are urgently needed. In this contribution, we provide new taxonomic data for two species described from Central Asia, Milnesium almatyense (a single population) and Milnesium reductum Tumanov, 2006 (five populations): morphometrics, DNA barcodes, SEM observations and description of developmental variability. As a result, we amend the description of both species and reveal phylogenetic relationships of those species and other sequenced congeners. The integrative data confirm the validity of the two species and include them in the growing set of Milnesium species associated with DNA sequences.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 4 Aug 2020 14:15:34 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Restructuring the Ancorabolidae Sars (Copepoda, Harpacticoida) and Cletodidae T. Scott, with a new phylogenetic hypothesis regarding the relationships of the Laophontoidea T. Scott, Ancorabolidae and Cletodidae</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/51349/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 455-498</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.51349</p>
					<p>Authors: Kai Horst George</p>
					<p>Abstract: Uncovering the systematics of Copepoda Harpacticoida, the second-most abundant component of the meiobenthos after Nematoda, is of major importance for any further research dedicated especially to ecological and biogeographical approaches. Based on the evolution of the podogennontan first swimming leg, a new phylogenetic concept of the Ancorabolidae Sars and Cletodidae T. Scott sensu Por (Copepoda, Harpacticoida) is presented, using morphological characteristics. It confirms the polyphyletic status of the Ancorabolidae and its subfamily Ancorabolinae Sars and the paraphyletic status of the subfamily Laophontodinae Lang. Moreover, it clarifies the phylogenetic relationships of the so far assigned members of the family. An exhaustive phylogenetic analysis was undertaken using 150 morphological characters, resulting in the establishment of a now well-justified monophylum Ancorabolidae. In that context, the Ancorabolus-lineage sensu Conroy-Dalton and Huys is elevated to sub-family rank. Furthermore, the membership of Ancorabolina George in a rearranged monophylum Laophontodinae is confirmed. Conversely, the Ceratonotus-group sensu Conroy-Dalton is transferred from the hitherto Ancorabolinae to the Cletodidae. Within these, the Ceratonotus-group and its hypothesised sister-group Cletodes Brady are combined to form a monophyletic subfamily Cletodinae T. Scott, subfam. nov. Consequently, it was necessary to restructure the Ancorabolidae, Ancorabolinae and Laophontodinae and extend the Cletodidae to include the displacement and exclusion of certain taxa. Moreover, comparison of the Ancorabolidae, Cletodidae, Laophontoidea and other Podogennonta shows that the Ancorabolidae and Cletodidae form sister-groups in a monophylum Cletodoidea Bowman and Abele, which similarly has a sister-group-relationship with the Laophontoidea T. Scott. According to the present study, both taxa constitute a derived monophylum within the Podogennonta Lang.</p>
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		    <category>Review Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 10 Jul 2020 14:26:12 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Genetic evidence for the recognition of two allopatric species of Asian bronze featherback Notopterus (Teleostei, Osteoglossomorpha, Notopteridae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/51350/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 449-454</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.51350</p>
					<p>Authors: Sébastien Lavoué, Siti Zafirah Ghazali, Jamsari Amirul Firdaus Jamaluddin, Siti Azizah Mohd Nor, Khaironizam Md. Zain</p>
					<p>Abstract: The fish genus Notopterus Lacepède, 1800 (Notopteridae) currently includes only one species, the Asian bronze featherback Notopterus notopterus (Pallas, 1769). This common freshwater species is widely distributed in the Oriental region, from the Indus basin in the west, the Mekong basin in the east and Java Island in the south. To examine the phylogeographic structure of N. notopterus across its range, we analysed 74 publicly available cytochrome oxidase I (COI) sequences, 72 of them determined from known-origin specimens, along with four newly-determined sequences from Peninsular Malaysian specimens. We found that N. notopterus is a complex of two allopatric species that diverge from each other by 7.5% mean p-distance. The first species is endemic to South Asia (from Indus basin to Ganga-Brahmaputra system), whereas the distribution of the second species is restricted to Southeast Asia. The exact limit between the distributions of these two species is not known, but it should fall somewhere between the Ganga-Brahmaputra and Salween basins, a region already identified as a major faunal boundary in the Oriental region. The name N. notopterus is retained for the Southeast Asian species, while the name Notopterus synurus (Bloch &amp; Schneider, 1801) should be applied to the South Asian species. A comparative morphological study is needed to reveal the degree of morphological differentiation between the two species.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Short Communication</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 1 Jul 2020 16:18:03 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new species of Dugesia (Platyhelminthes, Tricladida, Dugesiidae) from China, with an account on the histochemical structure of its major nervous system</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/52484/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 431-447</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.52484</p>
					<p>Authors: Xiao-Yu Song, Wei-Xuan Li, Ronald Sluys, Shu-Xin Huang, Shuang-Fei Li, An-Tai Wang</p>
					<p>Abstract: By means of an integrated approach, including molecular, morphological, anatomical and histological data, we describe a new species of freshwater flatworm of the genus Dugesia from southwest China, representing the third species recorded for the country. Morphologically, the new species, Dugesia umbonata Song &amp; Wang, sp. nov., is particularly characterised by the presence of a muscularised hump immediately antero-dorsally to a knee-shaped bend in its bursal canal and by an ejaculatory duct that opens subterminally through the dorsal side of the penis papilla. Four molecular datasets (18S rDNA; ITS-1; 28S rDNA; COI) facilitated determination of the phylogenetic position of the new species, which belongs to a clade comprising other species from the Australasian and Oriental regions. We also analysed the structure of its major nervous system by means of the acetylcholinesterase (AChE) histochemical method and compared these results with data available for three other species of Dugesia.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 26 Jun 2020 11:02:57 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A systematic revision of the bats (Chiroptera) of Honduras: an updated checklist with corroboration of historical specimens and new records</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/51059/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 411-429</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.51059</p>
					<p>Authors: Manfredo Alejandro Turcios-Casco, Hefer Daniel Ávila-Palma, Richard К. LaVal, Richard D. Stevens, Eduardo Javier Ordoñez-Trejo, José Alejandro Soler-Orellana, Diego Iván Ordoñez-Mazier</p>
					<p>Abstract: During the last century, survey efforts for mammals in Honduras have been few and most distributional and conservation assessments of bats have been based on historical records. Taxonomy of many records has changed. Moreover, a number of supposed Honduran occurrences are based on records from bordering countries without confirmation by a Honduran voucher. Therefore, the list of bats of Honduras lacks precision. Here, we update the number of species in the country, including taxonomic changes not reflected in recent works and new records based on museum specimens. The known number of species for Honduras is 113 with seven expected (Cormura brevirostris, Lampronycteris brachyotis, Mesophylla macconnelli, Molossus coibensis, M. pretiosus, Thyroptera discifera and Trinycteris nicefori), based on records in adjoining countries. We provide a new record for Honduras of Natalus lanatus. We confirm the presence of Cynomops greenhalli and Diaemus youngii and clarify the taxonomic status of Artibeus intermedius, Chiroderma gorgasi, Eumops ferox, Gardnerycteris keenani, Lasiurus frantzii, Myotis pilosatibialis, Molossus and Pteronotus species, and Tonatia bakeri. We recommend a reassessment of the conservation status of the bats of Honduras considering recent changes and that a number of species (e.g. Choeronycteris mexicana) have not been observed since their reports in historical records. This requires an update of the taxonomic identification keys for Honduras. The updated checklist below demonstrates the high biodiversity of Honduran bats but is also an example of how poorly many groups have been studied since they were first recorded in the country.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2020 16:01:10 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Punctoidea (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/53660/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 397-410</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.53660</p>
					<p>Authors: Rodrigo B. Salvador, Fred J. Brook, Lara D. Shepherd, Martyn Kennedy</p>
					<p>Abstract: A phylogenetic analysis using a combination of mitochondrial (COI, 16S) and nuclear markers (ITS2, 28S) indicated that Punctoidea, as previously interpreted, is polyphyletic. It comprises two main groups, containing northern hemisphere (Laurasian) and predominantly southern hemisphere (Gondwanan) taxa respectively, treated here as separate superfamilies. Within Punctoidea sensu stricto, Punctidae, Cystopeltidae and Endodontidae form separate monophyletic clades, but Charopidae, as currently interpreted, is paraphyletic. Most of the charopid taxa that we sequenced, including Charopa coma (Gray, 1843) and other Charopinae, grouped in a clade with Punctidae but some charopid taxa from Australia and South America grouped with Cystopeltidae. Cystopeltidae previously contained a single Australia-endemic genus, Cystopelta Tate, 1881, but our analysis suggests that it is considerably more diverse taxonomically and has a much wider distribution. For taxonomic stability, we suggest that Charopidae be retained as a family-level group for now, pending further study of the systematic relationships of its constituent taxa. A new superfamily, Discoidea, is erected here for two Northern Hemisphere families, Discidae and Oreohelicidae, which were previously assigned to Punctoidea. The North American species Radiodomus abietum, previously in Charopidae, is also here assigned to Discoidea. The phylogenetic relationships of Helicodiscidae, previously assigned to Punctoidea, were not fully resolved in our analysis, but the family is apparently closely related to Arionoidea Gray, 1840 and infraorder Limacoidei.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2020 08:22:03 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Phylogenetic relationship of catshark species of the genus Scyliorhinus (Chondrichthyes, Carcharhiniformes, Scyliorhinidae) based on comparative morphology</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/52420/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 345-395</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.52420</p>
					<p>Authors: Karla D. A. Soares, Marcelo R. de Carvalho</p>
					<p>Abstract: The genus Scyliorhinus is part of the family Scyliorhinidae, the most diverse family of sharks and of the subfamily Scyliorhininae along with Cephaloscyllium and Poroderma. This study reviews the phylogenetic relationships of species of Scyliorhinus in the subfamily Scyliorhininae. Specimens of all Scyliorhinus species were examined as well as specimens of four of the 18 species of Cephaloscyllium, two species of Poroderma, representatives of almost all other catshark (scyliorhinid) genera and one proscylliid (Proscyllium habereri). A detailed morphological study, including external and internal morphology, morphometry and meristic data, was performed. From this study, a total of 84 morphological characters were compiled into a data matrix. Parsimony analysis was employed to generate hypotheses of phylogenetic relationships using the TNT 1.1. Proscyllium habereri was used to root the cladogram. The phylogenetic analysis, based on implied weighting (k = 3; 300 replications and 100 trees saved per replication), resulted in three equally most parsimonious cladograms with 233 steps, with a CI of 0.37 and an RI of 0.69. The monophyly of the subfamily Scyliorhininae is supported as well as of the genus Scyliorhinus, which is proposed to be the sister group of Cephaloscyllium. The phylogenetic relationships amongst Scyliorhinus species are presented for the first time.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2020 08:11:17 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Taxonomic assessment and distribution of fishes in upper Kura and Aras river drainages</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/52241/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 325-344</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.52241</p>
					<p>Authors: Cüneyt Kaya, Esra Bayçelebi, Davut Turan</p>
					<p>Abstract: In the present study, the actual fish fauna of the upper Kura and Aras river drainages in Turkey were re-examined. The distribution and latest taxonomic status of the species were assessed. The study area comprises the upper part of Kura and Aras river drainages, in Turkey. Overall, 32 sampling sites were prospected between 2004–2018 to inventory fish species in the area and a total of 33 species were recognized, five of which are recorded for the first time from the Turkish part of upper Aras river drainage, namely Alburnus hohenackeri, Blicca bjoerkna, Gobio artvinicus, Neogobius fluviatilis and Rhodeus amarus.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2020 09:55:07 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Diamond frogs forever: a new species of Rhombophryne Boettger, 1880 (Microhylidae, Cophylinae) from Montagne d’Ambre National Park, northern Madagascar</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/51372/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 313-323</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.51372</p>
					<p>Authors: Mark D. Scherz</p>
					<p>Abstract: Although taxonomic progress on the frogs of Madagascar is currently proceeding at an unprecedented pace, the goal of completing the amphibian inventory of this hyper-diverse island is still far off. In part this is because more new species continue to be discovered at a high rate, in some cases within well-studied areas. Here, I describe Rhombophryne ellae sp. nov., a new species of diamond frog discovered in Montagne d’Ambre National Park in northern Madagascar in 2017. This new species is highly distinctive in having orange flash-markings on its hindlimbs (not known from any described species of Rhombophryne), and large, black inguinal spots (larger than in all other described Rhombophryne species). It is separated from all named species of Rhombophryne by a substantial uncorrected pairwise distance in the 16S rRNA mitochondrial barcode marker (&gt; 7%) and is most closely related to an undescribed candidate species from Tsaratanana in northern Madagascar. Rhombophryne ellae sp. nov. adds another taxon to the growing list of cophyline microhylids that have red to orange flash-markings, the function of which remains unknown and which has clearly evolved repeatedly in this radiation. The discovery of such a distinctive species within a comparatively well-studied park points toward the low detectability of semi-fossorial frogs and the role of inclement weather in increasing that detectability.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2020 08:27:10 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>          Squalus shiraii sp. nov. (Squaliformes, Squalidae), a new species of dogfish shark from Japan with regional nominal species revisited</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/51962/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(2): 275-311</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.51962</p>
					<p>Authors: Sarah T. F. L. Viana, Marcelo R. de Carvalho</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new species of deep-water dogfish shark, Squalus shiraii sp. nov., is described herein as endemic to the tropical waters off Southern Japan. This species has been largely misidentified with S. mitsukurii. However, morphological, meristic and morphometric evidence support it to be a separate and undescribed species. Squalus shiraii sp. nov. differs from this species by having body brown in colour dorsally, caudal fin with ventral and dorsal tips markedly tapered and broadly white, dermal denticles uniscuspidate and lanceolate and larger number of precaudal (91–94) and total vertebrae (120–123) (vs. body dark grey to black; caudal fin with ventral and dorsal tips rounded and not white in colour; denticles tricuspidate and rhomboid; 86–90 precaudal and 116–117 total vertebrae). Squalus shiraii sp. nov. is also clearly separated from other Japanese congeners which are herein revisited to include six species, based on the examination of over 150 specimens caught from Japanese waters that were available in ichthyological collections: S. mitsukurii, S. japonicus, S. acutirostris, S. brevirostris and S. suckleyi. Squalus mitsukurii, S. japonicus and S. brevirostris are re-described in detail and the neotype of S. japonicus is herein designated. Squalus acutirostris is treated as a valid species with occurrences in Japan, China and Taiwan and, thus, a provisional diagnosis is given, as well as an updated diagnosis of S. suckleyi. A key to Squalus species from the North-western Pacific Ocean is given and main morphological differences between S. shiraii sp. nov. and the closest related species are discussed.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 10 Jun 2020 10:47:53 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Frogs of the genus Platypelis from the Sorata massif in northern Madagascar: description of a new species and reports of range extensions</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/47088/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 263-274</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.47088</p>
					<p>Authors: Andolalao Rakotoarison, Mark D. Scherz, Jörn Köhler, Fanomezana M. Ratsoavina, Oliver Hawlitschek, Steven Megson, Miguel Vences, Frank Glaw</p>
					<p>Abstract: We describe a new species of arboreal microhylid frog, genus Platypelis, from northeastern Madagascar and report the expansion of distribution ranges of two other species. Platypelis laetus sp. nov. is small to medium-sized (24.3–25.6 mm snout-vent length) compared to other Platypelis, exhibits a greenish colored throat and was found in bamboo forest of the Sorata Massif. Its advertisement call consists of a single short tonal note repeated at regular intervals in long call series. Based on DNA sequences of a fragment of the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene, the new species was placed in a clade with Platypelis olgae from the Tsaratanana Massif, and with two other, unconfirmed candidate species from the Sorata Massif and from Andravory, herein named Platypelis sp. Ca12 and Ca13. Molecular divergences among these lineages were substantial, amounting to 7.6‒8.1% uncorrected 16S p-distance to the closest nominal species, P. olgae, from which the new species is also distinguished by a lack of allele sharing in the nuclear RAG-1 gene. We also provide new records of Platypelis alticola and P. tsaratananaensis from the Sorata Massif, supported by molecular analysis. This confirms a wider distribution of these two species that previously were considered to be endemic to the Tsaratanana Massif. However, their populations in Sorata were characterized by a certain degree of genetic differentiation from Tsaratanana populations suggesting they require more detailed taxonomic assessment.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 5 Jun 2020 16:58:35 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>At the edge of extinction: a first herpetological assessment of the proposed Serra do Pingano Rainforest National Park in Uíge Province, northern Angola</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/51997/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 237-262</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.51997</p>
					<p>Authors: Raffael Ernst, Thea Lautenschläger, Makaya Futuro Branquima, Monique Hölting</p>
					<p>Abstract: We systematically assess the herpetofaunal diversity of the Serra do Pingano Forest Ecosystem (SPFE) and additional localities throughout the northern Angolan province of Uíge during four independent Rapid Assessment (RA) field campaigns held between 2013 and 2019. These assessments represent the first systematic surveys of amphibians and reptiles from the province, and thus we provide the first province-wide species list. We collected data on the status and current threats to amphibians and reptiles in the proposed Serra do Pingano Rainforest National Park and were able to document 33 species of reptiles from Uíge province. Of the 33 species recorded from the province, 10 species are exclusively found in the SPFE. Amphibian surveys yielded 47 amphibian species from the province. These include 14 new country records and additional records that may represent undescribed species. This raises the amphibian count for Angola to at least 133 species, which includes 18 species exclusively found within the SPFE. Species-richness estimators indicate that more species should be detected if survey efforts are intensified. The species composition in the SPFE is unique and consists of a high proportion of forest specialists with restricted ranges and species found nowhere else in the country. This emphasizes today’s paramount importance of the SPFE, which is threatened by increasing agricultural encroachment and uncontrolled timber extraction and charcoal production. These principal factors need to be controlled and/or abandoned in already impacted areas. Conservation strategies should particularly consider the strict protection of remaining intact forests and both lentic and lotic aquatic systems. They are not only crucial for safeguarding a significant number of species that depend on these habitats for reproduction; they also provide key ecosystem services to the local population. Angola, and Uíge province in particular, is at a crossroads concerning decisions and trade-offs among utilization, conservation, and preservation of its forests and, thus, substantial parts of the country’s biodiversity. The establishment of a National Protected Area in the Serra do Pingano Ecosystem is therefore a necessary and urgently needed first step towards protecting Angola’s national biodiversity heritage.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 5 Jun 2020 10:06:54 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Small is beautiful: the first phylogenetic analysis of Bryodelphax Thulin, 1928 (Heterotardigrada, Echiniscidae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/50821/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 217-236</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.50821</p>
					<p>Authors: Piotr Gąsiorek, Katarzyna Vončina, Peter Degma, Łukasz Michalczyk</p>
					<p>Abstract: The phyletic relationships both between and within many of tardigrade genera have been barely studied and they remain obscure. Amongst them is the cosmopolitan Bryodelphax, one of the smallest in terms of body size echiniscid genera. The analysis of newly-found populations and species from the Mediterranean region and from South-East Asia gave us an opportunity to present the first phylogeny of this genus, which showed that phenotypic traits used in classical Bryodelphax taxonomy do not correlate with their phyletic relationships. In contrast, geographic distribution of the analysed species suggests their limited dispersal abilities and seems to be a reliable predictor of phylogenetic affinities within the genus. Moreover, we describe three new species of the genus. Bryodelphax australasiaticus sp. nov., by having the ventral plate configuration VII:4-4-2-4-2-2-1, is a new member of the weglarskae group with a wide geographic range extending from the Malay Peninsula through the Malay Archipelago to Australia. Bryodelphax decoratus sp. nov. from Central Sulawesi (Celebes) also belongs to the weglarskae group (poorly visible ventral plates VII:4-2-2-4-2-2-1) and is closely related to the recently described Bryodelphax arenosus Gąsiorek, 2018, but is differentiated from the latter by well-developed epicuticular granules on the dorsum. Finally, a new dioecious species, Bryodelphax nigripunctatus sp. nov., is described from Mallorca and, by the reduced ventral armature (II/III:2-2-(1)), it resembles Bryodelphax maculatus Gąsiorek et al., 2017. The latter species, known so far only from northern Africa, is recorded from Europe for the first time. A taxonomic key to the genus members is also presented.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 27 May 2020 08:16:12 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>A new genus for Pericera septemspinosa Stimpson, 1871 and Pericera heptacantha Bell, 1836 (Crustacea, Brachyura, Majoidea), based on morphology and molecular data</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/50360/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 205-216</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.50360</p>
					<p>Authors: Jessica Colavite, Amanda M. Windsor, William Santana</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new genus of majoid spider crab, Pohleus gen. nov. is established for Pericera septemspinosa Stimpson, 1871 and Pericera heptacantha Bell, 1836, based on morphology and molecular data from the partial sequences of the 12S and 16S mitochondrial genes and the 18S small subunit rRNA nuclear locus. The species are re-described and illustrated, based on material from several localities of the western Atlantic and eastern Pacific oceans. The carapace, antennal and pterygostomial spines, male thoracic sternum and first gonopods are distinctive characters, distinguishing Pohleus gen. nov. from species assigned to Macrocoeloma Miers, 1879, where P. septemspinosus and P. heptacanthus are currently included.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 20 May 2020 17:45:09 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>A new species of Pereionotus (Amphipoda, Senticaudata, Phliantidae) from Pulau Tinggi, Sultan Iskandar Marine Park, Malaysia</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/50744/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 195-203</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.50744</p>
					<p>Authors: NurFara-Syakira binti Feirulsha, Azman bin Abdul Rahim</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new species of Pereionotus Spence Bate &amp; Westwood, 1861 from Pulau Tinggi, Sultan Iskandar Marine Park (SIMP) is described and the first record of the genus from Malaysia. It was collected from Kg. Tg. Balang, Pulau Tinggi, Johor, Malaysia (2°16'59.5"N, 104°07'21.9"E) and can be distinguished by having wide and dorsally truncate carinae of pereonites 2–7, maxillipedal palp as long as the outer plate, lacking additional robust seta in the middle of propodi of pereopods 1–4, and the absence of short robust setae on the anterodistal corner of merus and carpus of pereopods 6–7. An updated identification key for the 11 known species in the genus is also presented.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2020 09:51:27 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Description of Longidorus bordonensis sp. nov. from Portugal, with systematics and molecular phylogeny of the genus (Nematoda, Longidoridae)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/49022/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 175-193</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.49022</p>
					<p>Authors: Carlos Gutiérrez-Gutiérrez, Margarida Teixeira Santos, Maria Lurdes Inácio, Jonathan D. Eisenback, Manuel Mota</p>
					<p>Abstract: The genus Longidorus currently comprises 176 species of polyphagous plant ectoparasites, including eight species that vector nepoviruses. Longidorus is one of the most difficult genera to accurately identify species because of the similar morphology and overlapping measurements and ratios among species. Sequences of ribosomal RNA (rRNA)-genes are a powerful level-species diagnostic tool for the genus Longidorus. From 2015 to 2019, a nematode survey was conducted in vineyards and agro-forest environments in Portugal. The populations of Longidorus spp. were characterized through an integrative approach based on morphological data and molecular phylogenetic analysis from rRNA genes (D2-D3 expansion segments of the 28S, ITS1, and partial 18S), including the topotype of L. vinearum. Longidorus bordonensis sp. nov., a didelphic species recovered from the rhizosphere of grasses, is described and illustrated. Longidorus vineacola, with cork oak and wild olive as hosts, is also characterized. This is the first time that L. wicuolea, from cork oak, is reported for Portugal. Bayesian inference (BI) phylogenetic trees for these three molecular markers established phylogenetic relationships among the new species with other Longidorus spp. Phylogenetic trees indicated that i) L. bordonensis sp. nov. is clustered together with other Longidorus spp. and forms a sister clade with L. pini and L. carpetanensis, sharing a short body and odontostyle length, and elongate to conical female tail, and ii) all the other species described and illustrated are phylogenetically associated, including the topotype isolate of L. vinearum.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Tue, 5 May 2020 08:25:57 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>Mitochondrial discordance in closely related Theridion spiders (Araneae, Theridiidae), with description of a new species of the T. melanurum group</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/49946/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 159-173</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.49946</p>
					<p>Authors: Marc Domènech, Luís C. Crespo, Alba Enguídanos, Miquel A. Arnedo</p>
					<p>Abstract: The incorporation of molecular data into current taxonomic practise has unravelled instances of incongruence among different data sets. Here we report a case of mitochondrial discordance in cobweb spiders of the genus Theridion Walckenaer, 1805 from the Iberian Peninsula. Morphological examination of samples from a country-wide bioinventory initiative revealed the existence of a putative new species and two nominal species belonging to the Theridion melanurum species group. The morphological delineation was supported by the molecular analysis of a nuclear marker but was at odds with the groups circumscribed by a mitochondrial marker. The causes of this discordance remained uncertain, once sample and sequencing errors and the existence of pseudogenes were discarded. The full sorting observed in the alleles of the more slowly evolving nuclear marker ruled out incomplete lineage sorting, while the geographic patterns recovered were difficult to reconciliate with ongoing hybridization. We propose that the apparent incongruence observed is most likely the result of old introgression events in a group with high dispersal abilities. We further speculate that endosymbiont-driven cytoplasmatic incompatibility could be involved in the fixation of mitochondrial haplotypes across species barriers. Additionally, we describe the new species T. promiscuum sp. nov., based on the presence of diagnostic morphological traits, backed up by the nuclear data delimitation. Our study contributes yet another example of the perils of relying on single methods or data sources to summarise the variation generated by multiple processes acting through thousands of years of evolution and supports the key role of biological inventories in improving our knowledge of invertebrate biodiversity.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 4 May 2020 10:06:51 +0300</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Guide to image editing and production of figures for scientific publications with an emphasis on taxonomy</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/49225/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 139-158</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.49225</p>
					<p>Authors: Marcus Bevilaqua</p>
					<p>Abstract: Figures for scientific publications go through various stages from the planning, to the capturing of images, to the production of finished figures for publication. This guide is meant to familiarise the reader with the main image-editing software used by professional photographers. The guide’s focus is on digital photo editing and the production of figures using Adobe Photoshop to produce publication-quality figures for scientific publications. This guide will be of fundamental use for the academic public, especially taxonomists and others who work with images. Besides, it should be useful for anyone interested in becoming familiar with the basic tools of image editing.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 4 May 2020 08:13:35 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new species of green pit vipers of the genus Trimeresurus Lacépède, 1804 (Reptilia, Serpentes, Viperidae) from western Arunachal Pradesh, India</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/48431/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 123-138</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.48431</p>
					<p>Authors: Zeeshan A. Mirza, Harshal S. Bhosale, Pushkar U. Phansalkar, Mandar Sawant, Gaurang G. Gowande, Harshil Patel</p>
					<p>Abstract: A new species of green pit vipers of the genus Trimeresurus Lacépède, 1804 is described from the lowlands of western Arunachal Pradesh state of India. The new species, Trimeresurus salazar, is a member of the subgenus Trimeresurus, a relationship deduced contingent on two mitochondrial genes, 16S and ND4, and recovered as sister to Trimeresurus septentrionalis Kramer, 1977. The new species differs from the latter in bearing an orange to reddish stripe running from the lower border of the eye to the posterior part of the head in males, higher number of pterygoid and dentary teeth, and a short, bilobed hemipenis. Description of the new species and T. arunachalensis Captain, Deepak, Pandit, Bhatt &amp; Athreya, 2019 from northeastern India in a span of less than one year highlights the need for dedicated surveys to document biodiversity across northeastern India.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 15 Apr 2020 10:09:34 +0300</pubDate>
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		    <title>A new marine tardigrade genus and species (Arthrotardigrada, Styraconyxidae) with unique pockets on the legs</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/49676/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 115-122</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.49676</p>
					<p>Authors: Shinta Fujimoto, Naoto Jimi</p>
					<p>Abstract: A marine heterotardigrade Cyaegharctus kitamurai gen. et sp. nov. (Arthrotardigrada, Styraconyxidae) is described from Daidokutsu, a submarine cave off Iejima island, Okinawa Islands, Ryukyu Archipelago, Japan. It is easily distinguished from all other styraconyxids by its pocket organs (putative sensory structures) on all legs in addition to the usual leg sensory organs. Its combination of other character states, such as the dorso-ventrally flattened body, ovoid primary clavae, conical secondary clavae, large terminal anus, internal digits with proximal pads and peduncles, external digits with developed peduncles and all digits with three-pointed claws in adult female, supports the erection of a new genus and species.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2020 15:37:38 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>An overview of the sexual dimorphism in Echiniscus (Heterotardigrada, Echiniscoidea), with the description of Echiniscus masculinus sp. nov. (the virginicus complex) from Borneo</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/49989/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 103-113</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.49989</p>
					<p>Authors: Piotr Gąsiorek, Katarzyna Vončina, Łukasz Michalczyk</p>
					<p>Abstract: Members of the genus Echiniscus C.A.S. Schultze, 1840 are mostly unisexual, with thelytokously reproducing females. Therefore, every newly described dioecious species in the genus is particularly interesting. Here, we describe Echiniscus masculinus sp. nov. from Gunung Kinabalu, the highest peak of Borneo and the entire Southeast Asia. The new species belongs in the predominantly parthenogenetic E. virginicus complex, and its females are confusingly similar to females of the pantropical E. lineatus Pilato et al., 2008, another member of this group. However, genetic evidence and noticeable sexual dimorphism clearly delineate the new species. Males of E. masculinus sp. nov. are unlike females in the body proportions, cuticular sculpturing, and appendage configuration. The new discoveries provide a justification to review the current knowledge about evolution and forms of sexual dimorphism within Echiniscus.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2020 09:09:03 +0200</pubDate>
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		<item>
		    <title>Taxonomy and distribution of enigmatic “helicoid” Polygyratia Gray, 1847 (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)</title>
		    <link>https://zse.pensoft.net/article/51047/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Zoosystematics and Evolution 96(1): 91-101</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/zse.96.51047</p>
					<p>Authors: Rodrigo Brincalepe Salvador, Daniel Caracanhas Cavallari</p>
					<p>Abstract: Herein, we present a taxonomic revision of the genus Polygyratia Gray, 1847, with a new systematic placement in Scolodontidae and containing only the species Polygyratia polygyrata (Born, 1778). We offer an updated morphological description and geographical distribution, based on museum specimens and occurrence data gathered from literature and online database iNaturalist. We synonymise P. charybdis Mörch, 1852 with P. polygyrata. The species is known only from Atlantic Forest areas in Bahia state, eastern Brazil. We exclude three other species from the genus Polygyratia, classifying them as: Systrophia (Systrophia) heligmoida (d’Orbigny, 1835) and S. (Entodina) reyrei (Souverbie, 1858), based on conchological features; and S. (E.) pollodonta (d’Orbigny, 1835), though tentatively, based on scant published data. Finally, we present the first report of S. (S.) heligmoida (d’Orbigny, 1835) from Brazil.</p>
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			]]></description>
		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2020 13:25:48 +0200</pubDate>
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