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Friday, September 6th, 2024

    Time Event
    12:16a
    [Botany • 2024] Amorphophallus samarensis (Araceae) • A New Species endemic to Samar Island, Eastern Visayas, Philippines

     Amorphophallus samarensis Fontarum-Bulawin, Medecilo-Guiang & Alejandro,

    in Fontarum-Bulawin, Medecilo-Guiang et Alejandro, 2024. 

    Abstract
    Amorphophallus samarensis is described as a new species from Paranas, Samar Island Natural Park, Samar Eastern Visayas, Philippines. A. samarensis resembles A. calcicola by having a solitary leaf, long peduncled solitary flower, cylindric female zone, ovary depressed, disk shape, slightly distant ovaries, and absence of staminode. It differs from A. calcicola by having the rachis winged at the distal part of the leaf, pale to dark maroon slightly depressed globose capitate stigma, style color, length of spadix, and truncate anther. The new species is considered Critically Endangered (CR) based on IUCN guidelines due to persistent anthropogenic activities. There are 30 individual plants encountered in the locality with less than 100 sq. km area of occupancy with an observed threat.

    Keywords: Amorphophallus calcicola, biodiversity, conservation, critically endangered, taxonomy
     


    Amorphophallus samarensis Fontarum-Bulawin, Medecilo-Guiang & Alejandro, sp. nov 

    Diagnosis: Amorphophallus samarensis has widely triangular, undulating, pale green, cream to maroon spathe, with maroon spots, an undulate to entire spathe mar-gin; cylindric female zone; spadix longer than spathe; slightly distant depressed globose ovaries; pale to dark maroon slightly depressed globose capitate stigma; elongate cylindrical male zone; truncate anther; absent of staminode; and smooth narrowly elongate cylindric appendix. A. samarensis is like A. calcicola, A. longispathaceus, and A. rostratus for having solitary leaf, spadix longer than spathe, long peduncled solitary flower, ...

     

    Norilyn Fontarum-Bulawin, Maria Melanie Medecilo-Guiang and Grecebio Jonathan D. Alejandro. 2024. Amorphophallus samarensis (Araceae), A New Species endemic to Samar Island, Eastern Visayas, Philippines. Webbia. Journal of Plant Taxonomy and Geography. 79(2),; 295-303. DOI: doi.org/10.36253/jopt-16302


    10:16a
    [Paleontology • 2024] Inabtanin alarabia • New Pterosaur remains from the Late Cretaceous of Afro-Arabia provide insight into Flight Capacity of large Pterosaurs

      Arambourgiania philadelphiae (Arambourg, 1959)
    Inabtanin alarabia
     Rosenbach, Goodvin, Albshysh, Azzam, Smadi, Mustafa, Zalmout & Mantilla, 2024
     

    ABSTRACT
    Pterosaurs were the earliest and largest vertebrates to evolve powered flight, but they are the only major volant group that has gone extinct. Attempts to understand pterosaur flight mechanics have relied on aerodynamic principles and analogy with extant birds and bats. Both lines of inquiry rely on the size, three-dimensional shape, and internal structure of flight bones, which in pterosaurs are surprisingly rare. Remarkably, two new large-bodied pterosaur individuals with three-dimensionally preserved wing elements were recently recovered from Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) horizons of Jordan. Both specimens represent azhdarchoid pterosaurs; one is referrable to the giant species Arambourgiania philadelphiae (ca. 10 m wingspan) and the second to a new, smaller species Inabtanin alarabia gen. et sp. nov. (ca. 5 m wingspan). In this study, we describe these new specimens and use high-resolution micro-computed tomography scans to reconstruct and compare the internal osteology of the humeri of these two differently sized species to that of extant birds, for which internal bone structure can be correlated with flight behavior. The humerus of Arambourgiania exhibits a series of helical ridges formed along the cortical bone, whereas Inabtanin exhibits a denser pattern of hollow struts. Variation in internal structure for these individuals likely reflects responses to mechanical forces applied on the wings of pterosaurs. Results indicate that Inabtanin has internal bone morphology similar to that of flapping birds, whereas the internal morphology of Arambourgiania is most similar to that of soaring birds.



    PTEROSAURIA Kaup, Citation1834
    PTERODACTYLOIDEA Plieninger, Citation1901
    AZHDARCHOIDEA Nesov, Citation1984


    INABTANIN ALARABIA, gen. et sp. nov.

    Etymology—Inabtanin is named for the geomorphological structure near the locality where the specimen was collected, which is called Tal Inab (“grape hill”) owing to its prominent coloration. The generic name combines the Arabic words inab, for grape, and tanin for dragon. Allusions to dragons are common in pterosaur etymology and so tanin was chosen to reflect the Arabic language of Jordan, and because of its similarity to the English word tannin, derived from the French tanin which relates to coloration. The generic name translates to both grape-dragon and grape-colored. The specific name alarabia was chosen in reference to the Arabian Peninsula.


     
    Kierstin L. Rosenbach, Danielle M. Goodvin, Mohammed G. Albshysh, Hassan A. Azzam, Ahmad A. Smadi, Hakam A. Mustafa, Iyad S. A. Zalmout and Jeffrey A. Wilson Mantilla. 2024. New Pterosaur remains from the Late Cretaceous of Afro-Arabia provide insight into Flight Capacity of large Pterosaurs. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. e2385068 DOI: doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2024.2385068 

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