European journal of taxonomy : EJT
Paris : Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle
ISSN: 2118-9773
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958:48-76
Four novel species of subgenus Russula crown clade collected from northwestern China are described based on morphological and phylogenetic evidence. Morphologically, R. griseorosea Y.Song sp. nov. (subsection Puellarinae) is characterized by its brown pileus with a grayish pink tint, basidiospores with warts often connected by fine lines, orthochromatic pileipellis with long terminal cells and septate pileocystidia; R. micangshanensis Y.Song sp. nov. (subsection Olivaceinae) is diagnosed by its large basidia, hymenial cystidia and basidiospores, and spore ornamentations with unequal crests and often twinned warts, which give the spore distinctive appearance; R. minirosea Y.Song sp. nov. (subsection Laricinae) has very small basidiocarp with pileus less than 3.3 cm in diameter, basidiospores with fine reticulum, small basidia, and septate pileocystidia; R. purpureomarginalis F.Li & Y.Song sp. nov. (subsection Xerampelinae) has large basidiospores with often isolated ornamentations, slim basidia and often septate flexuous pileocystidia. Differences between the four novel species and their closely related taxa were analyzed. Phylogenetic analyses based on both ITS and multi-locus (LSU, rpb2 and tef1) were carried out to confirm the distinct taxonomic status of the four novel species.
957
The genus Elmomorphus Sharp, 1888 is redescribed based on morphological characters. Elmomorphus bryanti Hinton, 1935, E. montanus (Grouvelle, 1913), E. prosternalis Hinton, 1935, and E. striatellus Delève, 1968 are redescribed based on type material. Elmomorphus nepalensis Satô, 1981 is redescribed based on material collected in the vicinity of the type locality. Eighteen species of Elmomorphus were known so far world-wide, and only five species have been recorded from the study area (India, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, China, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam). In the present revision, 45 new species are described: E. auratus sp. nov. (China), E. auripilosus sp. nov. (Vietnam), E. bispinosus sp. nov. (China), E. calvus sp. nov. (China, Vietnam), E. catenatus sp. nov. (China), E. comosiclunis sp. nov. (China), E. corpulentus sp. nov. (China), E. cuneatus sp. nov. (Thailand), E. curvipes sp. nov. (China, Vietnam), E. dentipes Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam), E. depressus sp. nov. (China), E. donatus Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (China, Vietnam), E. ellipticus sp. nov. (China), E. elmoides sp. nov. (Vietnam), E. fusiformis sp. nov. (China), E. glabriclunis sp. nov. (China), E. globosus sp. nov. (China), E. hamatus sp. nov. (China), E. hongkong sp. nov. (China), E. horaki Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand), E. jendeki Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (Vietnam), E. jii sp. nov. (China), E. longitarsis sp. nov. (Thailand), E. mazzoldii sp. nov. (Thailand), E. minutus sp. nov. (China), E. oblongus sp. nov. (Vietnam), E. ovalis Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (China), E. parabrevicornis sp. nov. (China), E. paradonatus Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (China), E. paramontanus Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (China, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam), E. parvulus sp. nov. (Thailand), E. punctulatus sp. nov. (China), E. reticulatus sp. nov. (China), E. sausai Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (Vietnam), E. schillhammeri sp. nov. (China), E. schoenmanni sp. nov. (China), E. siamensis Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam), E. similis sp. nov. (China, Laos, Vietnam), E. simplex sp. nov. (China), E. simplipes sp. nov. (Vietnam), E. superficialis sp. nov. (China), E. sulcatus sp. nov. (China), E. umphangicus Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (Thailand), E. vietnamensis sp. nov. (Vietnam), and E. yunnanensis Kodada, Selnekovič & Jäch sp. nov. (China). The genus Elmomorphus is recorded for the first time from Bhutan, Cambodia, Myanmar, and Laos. In China (31 spp. from Anhui, Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, Hong Kong, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Shaanxi, Yunnan, Zhejiang) and Vietnam (16 spp.), this genus is especially diverse.
948
India is a large country in Asia, and covers the transition zone between the Palaearctic and Indomalayan biogeographic realms, with influences from both. Present in India are members of the genus Andrena, an enormous bee genus distributed predominantly throughout the Holarctic, with the greatest Indian diversity in the Himalayan region due to its Palaearctic influences. Despite early studies in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, there has been almost no work on this group in India during the past century. A revision of type and non-type museum material combined with new collections has produced a revised total of 36 species of Andrena for India, including 11 species reported for the first time as well as the newly described Andrena (Melandrena) kedarnatha Wood & Gautam sp. nov. (northern India and Nepal) and Andrena (Simandrena) tungnatha Wood & Gautam sp. nov. (northern India). The true holotype of A. (Euandrena) communis Smith, 1879 is definitively located. Andrena burkelii Bingham, 1908 is synonymised with A. (Pallandrena) morosa Cameron, 1897. Lectotypes are designated for A. (Euandrena) murreensis Cockerell, 1923 and A. (incertae sedis) comberima beharica Cockerell, 1920. Further comments are made on the status of Andrena taxa described from India for which type material is and is not currently available. Thirty additional Andrena taxa suggested as present in the Indian fauna are excluded as either erroneous or lacking supporting data. These results illustrate the extent to which study of the Indian Andrena fauna has been confused, and provide a more stable taxonomic base for future studies in this country.
947:289–308
Croton maranonensis: a new species of Euphorbiaceae from the tropical inter-Andean dry valleys
(2024)
We describe Croton maranonensis Riina & Martín-Muñoz sp. nov., a species in Croton section Julocroton (Mart.) G.L.Webster from the seasonally dry tropical forests and shrublands of the inter-Andean valleys. This species is a small shrub occurring along the Marañón river valley in Peru and similar dry areas in southern Ecuador. We surveyed morpho-anatomical characters of the new species and closely related taxa. To confirm the placement of the new species in C. section Julocroton, we conducted a molecular phylogenetic analysis including three accessions of the new species and selected representatives of section Julocroton and related groups within Croton L. Micro- and macro-morphological evidence, and molecular data support C. maranonensis sp. nov. as an independent lineage within the C. section Julocroton clade. We compared the new species with morphologically similar species in the same section that also occur in the Andean region, including C. flavispicatus Rusby, C. triqueter Lam., and C. hondensis (H.Karst.) G.L.Webster.
947:175-190
Exploration of macrofungi in the Jammu and Kashmir regions, India, led to the discovery of two novel species, described herein as Lactarius indohirtipes sp. nov. and L. sharmai sp. nov. This paper presents detailed morphological descriptions and illustrations, as well as a phylogenetic analysis based on nrITS sequences. A comparative analysis with related species is also included.
947:109-129
Five new species of the spider genus Heteropoda Latreille, 1804 (Araneae: Sparassidae) from China
(2024)
Five new species of Heteropoda (Araneae, Sparassidae, Heteropodinae) are described from China: H. bawanglingensis sp. nov. (female; Hainan), H. dulongensis sp. nov. (male, female; Yunnan), H. hainanensis sp. nov. (male, female; Hainan), H. longa sp. nov. (female; Guizhou), and H. vaginalis sp. nov. (female; Yunnan). We provide descriptions and illustrations for each species as well as a distribution map in the current paper.
943:154–178
The genus Tekellina Levi, 1957 is currently composed of ten species, six of which are Neotropical. They are small-sized spiders (0.9 to 1.5 mm), with a wide distribution, with a great diversity in the Neotropical Region and well represented in Brazil. In this article, males and females of the species Tekellina bella Marques & Buckup, 1993 and T. crica Marques & Buckup, 1993 are redescribed and illustrated. The female of Tekellina minor Marques & Buckup, 1993 is described and illustrated for the first time. New records are included for Neotropical species. Tekellina guaiba Marques & Buckup, 1993 is synonymized with T. pretiosa Marques & Buckup, 1993. Three new species are described for Brazil: Tekellina picurrucha Rodrigues & Estol sp. nov. (São Paulo, Paraná and Rio Grande do Sul), Tekellina miuda Rodrigues & Estol sp. nov. (São Paulo and Paraná) and Tekellina miudinha Rodrigues & Estol sp. nov. (São Paulo). Distribution maps with new records and an identification key of the Neotropical species are also presented.
943:127–143
Four new species of the genus Catonidia Uhler, 1896, C. triangula sp. nov., C. saccata sp. nov., C. trilobata sp. nov. and C. uncinata sp. nov. from China (Fujian, Guizhou, Yunnan and Hainan provinces), are described and illustrated, giving the genus 14 species in total. A checklist and key to all known species of Catonidia are provided, as well as a map of their geographic distributions.
943:144–153
Nerillids are small marine annelids, once placed at the artificial group ‘Archiannelida’, which contained all families of the exclusively interstitial polychaetes. Nerillidae is the most species rich family among them, with 71 species grouped into 15 genera, and represents an important component of the interstitial fauna, occupying a wide bathymetric range. Despite its problematic placement among the ‘Archiannelida’ families, the group per se is considered monophyletic. Currently, only two species of Paranerilla are valid, both being reported from the northern hemisphere. It is presented herein as the first description of a species of Paranerilla from tropical waters, named as Paranerilla schiavettii sp. nov., which is also considered as a unique record by the presence of a modified acicular spine in noto- and neuropodia from chaetiger 3–7, not mentioned in its congeners descriptions. Hence, we also propose an emendation on the genus diagnosis to embrace the presence of acicular spines within Paranerilla. So, the presented information complements the current knowledge about the group’s taxonomy and expands its distribution to South Atlantic waters.
943:80-126
Four new species of the genus Catonidia Uhler, 1896, C. triangula sp. nov., C. saccata sp. nov., C. trilobata sp. nov. and C. uncinata sp. nov. from China (Fujian, Guizhou, Yunnan and Hainan provinces), are described and illustrated, giving the genus 14 species in total. A checklist and key to all known species of Catonidia are provided, as well as a map of their geographic distributions.