Newly discovered / described species 2016

"The modern peanut (Arachis hypogaea) is the result of the hybridization of two older types of Andean peanut. It has 20 pairs of chromosomes—the total from both old species, which have 10 chromosomes each. Scientists always thought—a suspicion now confirmed—that the "parents" of this peanut were the variants Arachis duranensis, very common in the Andean foothills between northwestern Argentina and southeastern Bolivia, and Arachis ipaensis, a species that had been reported but unconfirmed in a Bolivian town several hundred kilometers north, but thought to be extinct, until now.

Researchers at The University of Georgia (U.G.A.) and the International Peanut Genome Initiative, however, recently found a live specimen of A. ipaensis in the Bolivian Andes, and with it the answers to a mystery of how the two ancient species living so far one from each other had managed to hybridize into modern peanuts."

Source: Modern Peanut's Wild Cousin, Thought Extinct, Found in Andes - Scientific American

Extinct mouse resurfaces in state’s west

A big-eared native mouse declared extinct in NSW after not being seen for more than 80 years has been found at the UNSW Fowlers Gap Arid Zone Research Station near Broken Hill.

A big-eared native mouse declared extinct in NSW after not being seen for more than 80 years has been found at the UNSW Fowlers Gap Arid Zone Research Station near Broken Hill.

A young female of the species Pseudomys australis – commonly known as the plains mouse – was caught by UNSW scientists surveying for small mammals on the property, which is the only research station in the arid zone of NSW.

“It was very exciting to come across an animal we thought had gone for good in this state,” says UNSW biologist Dr Keith Leggett, who found the mouse with his UNSW Science honours student, Thanuri Welaratne.

“NSW has a dreadful record of extinctions of native mammals, and the reappearance of the plains mouse shows the benefit of carefully maintaining the conservation areas we have at Fowlers Gap,” says Dr Leggett, who is director of the research station.

The identity of the native mammal was confirmed by scientists including UNSW biologist Associate Professor Mike Letnic, who has caught them in the South Australian desert where they still occur in small numbers.

“The plains mouse is quite distinctive looking. It is one of the largest rodents in the arid zone and has relatively big ears and big feet,” says Associate Professor Letnic.

Native rodents play an important role in the Australian ecosystem, but since European settlement many species have declined dramatically in numbers and range, or become extinct.

“The decline is thought to be largely due to introduced predators such as red foxes and feral cats – particularly in areas where foxes flourished because they had lots of rabbits to feed on,” says Associate Professor Letnic.

“Overgrazing by sheep, cattle, kangaroos and goats has also probably contributed to the reduction in native rodents by degrading their habitats.

“The plains mouse in particular has disappeared from huge areas of the continent, so the find at Fowlers Gap is very unusual and great news.

“It may suggest they are recovering due to a decrease in the number of rabbits following the introduction of the calicivirus in the late 1990s. Fowlers Gap also has very few foxes, due to intensive controls on their numbers there,” says Associate Professor Letnic.

Dr Leggett and his colleagues have been surveying for small mammals at the research station for the past six years. Captures are recorded and then the animals are quickly released back into the wild.

Last year, a suspected male plains mouse was found in the same ungrazed conservation area of the property by UNSW Emeritus Professor Terry Dawson and Dr Steve McLeod of the NSW Department of Primary Industry, but it was not formally identified.

“This second capture and positive identification confirms their existence at Fowlers Gap, which is a pretty big deal,” says Dr Leggett.

The last recorded sighting of the plains mouse in NSW listed in the Atlas of Living Australia was in 1932, from the Liverpool Plains.

Fowlers Gap is used by scientists from UNSW and other local and international institutions for a wide range of studies on birds, kangaroos, reptiles, other flora and fauna, soil conservation and groundwater management.

Some areas of the 39,000-hectare property have been continuously monitored for 50 years, providing a unique ecological record that earned the station a place on the Register of the National Estate in 1996.

Artists are also attracted to the dramatic landscape at the station, which has several artists’ retreats.

Source: Extinct mouse resurfaces in state?s west | UNSW Newsroom

Pellegrini, Marco Octávio de Oliveira and de Almeida, Rafael Felipe. (2016). Rediscovery, identity and typification of Dichorisandra picta (Commelinaceae) and comments on the short-stemmed Dichorisandra species. Phytotaxa 245(2): 107-118. [Abstract]

Ghate, Hemant V. (2015). Rediscovery of the shieldbug Menedemus vittatus, with notes on M. hieroglyphicus (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae: Pentatominae: Sciocorini), from Pune, Maharashtra, India. Entomon 40(4): 243-248. [Abstract]
 
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Article with many nice pictures of a "recently" ( 2008 ) discribed, endangered frog-species :
Newly Described Tiger's Treefrog Is Striped and Stunning | Featured Creature

Rediscovery of a Japanese mite-species :
Rediscovery of Achipteria setulosa, with remarks on Japanese species of Achipteriidae and the proposal of species-groups (Acari, Oribatida)

Discription of a new mini-fish from Brazil :
http://www.scielo.br/pdf/ni/v14n1/1982-0224-ni-14-01-e150057.pdf

Discription of a new Corydoras-species from Brazil :
http://www.scielo.br/pdf/ni/v14n1/1982-0224-ni-14-01-e150062.pdf

Discription of 2 new Corydoras-species from Brazil :
http://www.scielo.br/pdf/ni/v14n1/1982-0224-ni-14-01-e150063.pdf
 
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Sreebha, R., Kariyappa, K. C. and Daniels, A. E. D. (2016). Rediscovery of a long-lost moss Fissidens serratus var. Serratus in the Western Ghats of India. Acta Botanica Hungarica 58(1-2): 183-186. [Abstract]

Local rediscovery of Malus hupehensis as a cultivated plant extinct in the wild there since the 1970's or later:

Iketani, Hiroyuki and Mase, Nobuko. (2015). Collection of Wild and Cultivated Rare Malus Genetic Resources in Northern Kyūshū, Japan. AREIPGR 31: 53-59.

Funez, Luís Adriano, Hassemer, Gustavo and Trevisan, Rafael. (2016). Rediscovery, typification, and conservation assessment of Saranthe ustulata (Marantaceae). Phytotaxa 255(1): 91-98. [Abstract]

Niissalo, Matti A. et al. (2016). Rediscovery in Singapore of Plocoglottis lowii Rchb.f. (Orchidaceae). Nature in Singapore 9: 41-46.
 
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3rd new mammal of 2016 - and it's also a new genus:
Gracilimus radix

Ref. 'A new genus and species of omnivorous rodent (Muridae: Murinae) from Sulawesi, nested within a clade of endemic carnivores'
Kevin C. Rowe, Anang S. Achmadi, & Jacob A. Esselstyn.
Journal of Mammalogy.

Abstract: "We document a new genus and species of rodent (Muridae) from the west-central region of Sulawesi Island, Indonesia. The new taxon is known only from the type locality at around 1,600 m elevation on Mt. Gandangdewata of the Quarles Range, in the district of Mamasa. With phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequences from 5 unlinked loci, we infer that the new taxon is sister to the Sulawesi water rat, Waiomys mamasae, and nested within a clade of rodents from Sulawesi that otherwise feed exclusively on invertebrates. The new species is distinguishable from other rodents of Sulawesi by the combination of its small, slender body; soft, gray–brown fur; small, rounded ears; long, sparsely haired tail; long, fine mystacial vibrissae; gracile cranium; short rostrum; pronounced lacrimal bone; prominent, sickle-shaped coronoid process; and pale orange enamel on labial surface of incisors. Unlike its closest relatives, the new species feeds on both plant and animal matter, and may represent a rare evolutionary reversal of traits associated with a carnivorous diet in murids."
 
4th new mammal of 2016 =
Rattus detentus

Ref. "A new species of Rattus (Rodentia: Muridae) from Manus Island, Papua New Guinea"
Robert M. Timm et al. Journal of Mammalogy.

Abstract: 'We describe a new species of Rattus, from 3 modern specimens collected on Manus Island in the Admiralty Group, Papua New Guinea, between 2002 and 2012. Subfossil specimens of early to late Holocene age from the Pamwak archaeological site on Manus Island are referred to the new species on morphological criteria; these confirm the species as a long-term resident of Manus Island. The new species is distinguished by its combination of large size; short tail; dorsal pelage that is coarse, spiny, and dark, with prominent black guard hairs; and sharply contrasting cream ventral pelage. Based on its overall body form, the species is almost certainly terrestrial. The dentition combines robust incisors with relatively small molars and the cranium displays a distinctive mélange of characters—including an elongate and anteriorly expanded rostrum and a mesopterygoid fossa that is narrow anteriorly and broadens to the rear. Sequence data from the mitochondrial control region and 3 nuclear genes place the new species as a highly divergent member of the Australo–Papuan Rattus radiation, with no identified close relative among sampled taxa.'
 

amd another article about the new frog :


New frog species discovered | Laboratory News

Discription of a new Australian mulluscan species :
A new species of Bothriembryon (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Bothriembryontidae) from south-eastern Western Australia

In the Netherlands a small population of the rare Dwarf dragonfly Nehallennia speciosa has been rediscovered. The last observations of this species in the Netherlands are dating back from 1912 and 1955 ! The exact location is being kept secret and a research is started to find out more about population-size, habitat use and conservation-actions.
 
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