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Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5082 (5) ◽  
pp. 485-493
Author(s):  
HEIKO GEBHARDT ◽  
ROGER A. BEAVER ◽  
CHRISTOPH ALLGAIER

Three new species from China (Yunnan), Scolytoplatypus costatus Gebhardt & Beaver, S. geminus Gebhardt & Beaver and S. peniculatus Gebhardt & Beaver, are described and compared with related species of the genus. The male prosternum of Asian Scolytoplatypus species shows species-specific characters, and frequently bears a pair of processes on or close to the anterior margin. We comment here for the first time on the movement of the processes and their likely functions, and survey their occurrence in Asian species of Scolytoplatypus.  


PhytoKeys ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 187 ◽  
pp. 161-176
Author(s):  
Yi-Hsuan Wu ◽  
Chih-Yun Sun ◽  
Atsushi Ebihara ◽  
Ngan Thi Lu ◽  
Germinal Rouhan ◽  
...  

Two East Asian Lomariopsis (Lomariopsidaceae, Polypodiales) species, Lomariopsis moorei and Lomariopsis longini, which were previously misidentified as L. spectabilis, are here described as new species based on evidence from morphological characters and a molecular phylogeny. The two species differ from the three other described species in East Asia by their venation, pinna shapes, and perine morphology. A phylogeny based on a combined dataset of three chloroplast regions (rbcL+ rps4-trnS + trnL-L-F) showed that L. moorei and L. longini each formed a well-supported monophyletic group which was distantly related to both L. spectabilis and the other morphologically similar East Asian species, L. boninensis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fatemeh Moein ◽  
Ziba Jamzad ◽  
Mohammadreza Rahiminejad ◽  
Jacob Brian Landis ◽  
Mansour Mirtadzadini ◽  
...  

Premise of this study: Salvia is the most species-rich genus in Lamiaceae, encompassing approximately 1000 species distributed all over the world. We sought a new evolutionary perspective for Salvia by employing macroevolutionary analyses to address the tempo and mode of diversification. To study the association of floral traits with speciation and extinction, we modeled and explored the evolution of corolla length and the lever-mechanism pollination system across our Salvia phylogeny. Methods: We reconstructed a multigene phylogeny for 366 species of Salvia in the broad sense including all major recognized lineages and numerous species from Iran, a region previously overlooked in studies of the genus. Our phylogenetic data in combination with divergence time estimates were used to examine the evolution of corolla length, woody vs. herbaceous habit, and presence vs. absence of a lever mechanism. We investigated the timing and dependence of Salvia diversification related to corolla length evolution through a disparity test and BAMM analysis. A HiSSE model was used to evaluate the dependency of diversification on the lever-mechanism pollination system in Salvia. Key Results: Based on recent investigations and classifications, Salvia is monophyletic and comprises ~1000 species. Our inclusion, for the first time, of a comprehensive sampling for Iranian species of Salvia provides higher phylogenetic resolution for southwestern Asian species than obtained in previous studies. A medium corolla length (15-18mm) was reconstructed as the ancestral state for Salvia with multiple shifts to shorter and longer corollas. Macroevolutionary model analyses indicate that corolla length disparity is high throughout Salvia evolution, significantly different from expectations under a Brownian motion model during the last 28 million years of evolution. Our analyses show evidence of a higher diversification rate of corolla length for some Andean species of Salvia compared to other members of the genus. Based on our tests of diversification models, we reject the hypothesis of a direct effect of the lever mechanism on Salvia diversification. Conclusions: Using a broader species sampling than previous studies, we obtained a well-resolved phylogeny for southwest Asian species of Salvia. Corolla length is an adaptive trait throughout the Salvia phylogeny with a higher rate of diversification in the South American clade. Our results suggest caution in considering the lever-mechanism pollination system as one of the main drivers of speciation in Salvia.


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5081 (4) ◽  
pp. 505-523
Author(s):  
ALICE WELLS ◽  
DAVID CARTWRIGHT

Several collections of adults of the caddisfly order Trichoptera were studied from Timor-Leste, the nation-state comprising the eastern region of the island of Timor. The specimens represent ten families: Hydrobiosidae (2 species), Glossosomatidae (1 species), Hydroptilidae (3 species), Philopotamidae (5 species), Hydropsychidae (3 species), Polycentropodidae (1 species), Psychomyiidae (3 species), Xiphocentronidae (1 species), Lepidostomatidae (1 species), Leptoceridae (3 species). Among the 24 species listed, 16 were identified as established Southeast Asian species. Among these are two very widespread species, one extending further east to New Guinea, northern Australia, and New Caledonia and another that was described from Fiji. An additional seven species are newly described here: Ulmerochorema hatubuilico sp. nov., Hydroptila bellisi sp. nov. and H. aileuensis sp. nov., Chimarra lawaliu sp. nov., C. multidentata sp. nov., C. sameana sp. nov. and C. timorensis sp. nov. Hitherto, the genus Ulmerochorema Mosely was believed to be an Australian endemic. A xiphocentronid specimen could be identified to genus Drepanocentron only.  


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5072 (2) ◽  
pp. 182-190
Author(s):  
SAKOL POEPETCH ◽  
TAENG-ON PROMMI ◽  
PONGSAK LAUDEE

The last instar larval stage of a Southeast Asian species Anisocentropus diana Malicky & Chantaramongkol 1994 (Trichoptera: Calamoceratidae) is described and illustrated based on Thai specimens. The larva of A. diana is different from known larvae of the other East Asian species A. kawamurai (Iwata) and A. magnificus (Ulmer) in its reddish-brown head without any patterns, the head’s large ventral apotome, and the abdominal gill arrangement.  


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akramul Hoque ◽  
Pakshirajan Lakshminarasimhan ◽  
Subir Bandyopadhyay ◽  
Debabrata Maity
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danying Cai ◽  
Shuang Jiang ◽  
Ping Sun ◽  
Xiaoyan Zheng ◽  
Xiaoyan Yue ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Pear (Pyrus L.) belongs to subtribe Malinae, tribe Maleae, family Rosaceae. According to the geography distribution, it could be divided into Oriental pear and Occidental pear. Though the phylogeny of Pyrus was complicate, previous study referring to morphology, nuclear genes and chloroplast genes made the relationships clear gradually. However, they had lower sequence divergence and less information, therefore it hardly solved the phylogeny of Pyrus. Results: A total of 100 accessions from Oriental and Occidental pears were used to elucidate the phylogeny of Pyrus by one nuclear NIA-i3 intron and two chloroplast regions (ndhC-trnV and trnR-atpA) with higher polymorphism. The Neighbor-Net phylogenetic network indicated that the phylogenetic relationships were complicate based on ndhC-trnV and trnR-atpA. Oriental pear and Occidental pear were separated in the tree of NIA-i3, P. betulaforlia, P. pashia (except P. pashia ‘P10-3’_1 and P. pashia ‘P23-4’_1) were monophyly; several P. ussuriensis were closely related with P. xerophila. However, the phylogenetic relationships of Chinese White Pear, P. pyrifolia and some P. ussuriensis still could not be well solved; West Asian species and European species were mingled together. Occidental pear P. caucasica 684,P. pyraster 989,P. elaeagrifolia 2817 might be hybrids between Oriental pear and Occidental pear.Conclusions: The phylogenetic relationships of Pyrus were still complicate because interspecies and intraspecies of Oriental pear and Occidental pear respectively were intercrossed. More genes and more accessions were needed to solve the phylogenetic relationships in Pyrus and to explore the possible parents.


2021 ◽  
Vol 439 ◽  
pp. 24-28
Author(s):  
E.I. Malikova ◽  
◽  
Yu.A. Chistyakov ◽  

Dragonfly Anax nigrofasciatus Oguma, 1915 (Odonata: Aeshnidae) was collected on a small pond in the vicinity of Vityaz settelment, Gamov Peninsula, Primorsky Krai in 2021. It is the first record of this East Asian species from Russia. A. nigrofasciatus clearly differs from A. parthenope julius Brauer, 1865, more common in the south of the Russian Far East, by body coloration and by details of morphology.


Author(s):  
T. G. Borzenkova

The problem of studying the dendroflora of cities is relevant when conducting modern ecological andbotanical research. The article presents the results of an inventory of native dendroflora of the city of Khabarovsk. Anannotated list of 116 species from 27 families was compiled, which exceeds the corresponding figures for the dendrofloraof Vladivostok and Birobidzhan. At the same time, the dendroflora of Komsomolsk-on-Amur, Blagoveshchensk,Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky is much richer in terms of plant composition. Taxonomic, general, and biomorphologicalanalyzes of the flora have been carried out. The leading botanic families have been identified: Rosaceae, Salicaceae,Betulaceae, Caprifoliaceae. Large species are: Salix, Acer, Betula, Lonicera, Ulmus, Picea, Populus, Ribes, Spiraea, Rosa,Euonymus. Among woody plants, East Asian species predominate, which corresponds to the position of the city ofKhabarovsk within the Manchurian region of the East Asian floristic region. The nemoral group is the richest in species,which is typical for broad-leaved and coniferous-broad-leaved forests of the temperate zone. Analysis of life forms andrhythms of annual development show the predominance of summer-green shrubs, evergreen and summer-green trees inthe flora of the city. There is a small number of lianas, dwarf shrubs. Dwarf forms in the dendroflora of the city are rare,they are found on the territory of the Far Eastern Forestry Research Institute‘s Arboretum. There is rare and protectedspices in the flora of the city – Taxus cuspidata.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina de Almeida Garcia ◽  
Carlos José Einicker Lamas ◽  
Maria Virginia Urso-Guimarães

AbstractAn update of the delimitation of the genus Bruggmanniella based on phylogenetic analysis using morphological data is presented. We included the seven new species of Bruggmanniella described between 2019 and 2020, and discuss some aspects of the evolutionary changes among the closely related genera Bruggmanniella, Pseudasphondylia, and Illiciomyia. Bruggmanniella is confirmed here as a monophyletic Neotropical lineage, divergent from the Asian species. The phylogenetic reconstruction hypothesized here reinforces the pertinence of the genus Odontokeros to house all species occurring in the Oriental/Palearctic region under Bruggmanniella. The delimitation of Bruggmanniella, the geographical distribution, and niche occupation are discussed.


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