Newly discovered / described species 2020

Newly discovered / described species 2020

I would like to point out that all specimens of Iguana melanoderma that are currently in the pet trade have an illegal origin; there are no CITES export permits from the Saba authorities registered in the CITES database, and the Saba CITES Authority as confirmed this. This should be remembered when anyone would consider adding this species to their zoo.

In order to reduce the occurrence of future illegal trade ahead of species descriptions, Bruce Weissgold and myself have written a manuscript with recommendations. This is freely available at the bioXriv ahead of publication in a scientific journal, see here Illegal trade of morphological distinct population prior to taxonomic assessment and elevation, with recommendations for future prevention
 
Carribean iguanas seperated into new species

https://phys.org/news/2020-05-iguana-species-plain-sight.html

This actually seems to be a different one,then the one I mentioned if I read the article correctly. This new one is called Southern Antilles Iguana and I am not sure if it's described yet, the one I mentioned is the Saba Black Iguana which is also mentioned in the article. Also the blue crayfish from Ohio is not a newly described species it was described in 1905. It might be a new species for Ohio though.
 
New species of spider discovered in southwestern China. It mimics a dead leaf hanging from a tree to trick prey into getting too close.

New species of mimicking spider camouflaged like a dried-up leaf discovered in China rainforest

In Sir Lanka, herpetologists found that a species of bronze snake are actually 2 different species, with the second one being completely new to science.

http://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/...ACqLbcByXzlk3urb1Vg-7jWoIbV9utpoMsh_1Fc4je5Go

1 new genus and species of freshwater crab from the EKH (East Khasi Hills) in India.

Scientists find new genus of fresh water crab in EKH cave
 
What was thought of as one species, scientists discovered that the banded langurs are divided into 3 species, two of them being completely new to science.

New monkey species found hiding in plain sight
The paper can be read here in Nature: Faecal DNA to the rescue: Shotgun sequencing of non-invasive samples reveals two subspecies of Southeast Asian primates to be Critically Endangered species | Scientific Reports

Or here as a rough pdf if the above link becomes restricted: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/867986v1.full.pdf

My percentage of Asian primates seen in the wild keeps getting lower because they keep raising the number of species! However, in this case, while the split is into three species I have already seen two of them (the Sumatran species is the one I haven't seen).
 
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