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Diversity, Volume 13, Issue 12

December 2021 - 78 articles

Cover Story: Mongolia is located in the mid-latitudes, between Russia and China, covering approximately 1.6 million km2, roughly equivalent to the size of western and central Europe. Mongolia constitutes a significant proportion of the temperate grasslands and semi-arid desert, which cover approximately 80% of the country’s area. In this study, we revised and updated the checklist of endemic plants comprising 102 endemic taxa (3% of total flora) from 43 genera and 19 families in Mongolia. The most endemic taxa-rich families were the Fabaceae (29 taxa) and Asteraceae (21 taxa). The majority of endemic taxa were distributed in western and central Mongolia. Furthermore, most of the taxa’s type specimens, including holotype, paratype, and isotype specimens, were accessioned at the herbarium of the Komarov Botanical Institute of RAS (LE) and Moscow State University (MW). View this paper
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Articles (78)

  • Article
  • Open Access
8 Citations
3,086 Views
13 Pages

16 December 2021

The simple thalloid liverwort Apopellia endiviifolia is a widespread Holarctic species belonging to the family Pelliaceae. European populations of this species comprise two distinct evolutionary lineages named “species A”, known also as w...

  • Article
  • Open Access
3 Citations
3,224 Views
12 Pages

16 December 2021

Appendicularians are important but remain poorly studied groups of zooplankton in polar regions. The present research is based on samples collected in Admiralty Bay (King George Island) during a year-long period. Six larvacean species were noted, amo...

  • Article
  • Open Access
6 Citations
3,599 Views
18 Pages

Plecoptera (Insecta) Diversity in Indiana: A Watershed-Based Analysis

  • Evan A. Newman,
  • R. Edward DeWalt and
  • Scott A. Grubbs

15 December 2021

Plecoptera, an environmentally sensitive order of aquatic insects commonly used in water quality monitoring is experiencing decline across the globe. This study addresses the landscape factors that impact the species richness of stoneflies using the...

  • Article
  • Open Access
16 Citations
7,570 Views
20 Pages

The Role of Citizen Science in the Research and Management of Invasive Lionfish across the Western Atlantic

  • Kaylin R. Clements,
  • Philip Karp,
  • Holden E. Harris,
  • Fadilah Ali,
  • Alli Candelmo,
  • Sara Juliana Rodríguez,
  • Cristina Balcázar-Escalera,
  • Alexander Q. Fogg,
  • Stephanie J. Green and
  • Jennifer N. Solomon

15 December 2021

Managing invasive Indo-Pacific lionfish (Pterois volitans and P. miles) in the Western Atlantic Ocean is beyond the capacity of natural resource organizations alone. In response, organizations have mobilized members of the public and citizen scientis...

  • Article
  • Open Access
21 Citations
6,794 Views
50 Pages

Taxonomic Revision of Eastern Part of Western Palaearctic Cordulegaster Using Molecular Phylogeny and Morphology, with the Description of Two New Species (Odonata: Anisoptera: Cordulegastridae)

  • Thomas Schneider,
  • Andy Vierstraete,
  • Ole Müller,
  • Gert Jan van Pelt,
  • Max Caspers,
  • Dietmar Ikemeyer,
  • Nataly Snegovaya and
  • Henri J. Dumont

15 December 2021

Taxonomy of the genus Cordulegaster Leach in Brewster, 1815 in the Eastern part of the Western Palaearctic is poorly resolved. A two-step approach was applied: sequences of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA fragments were used to sort specimens; poorly k...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4 Citations
4,574 Views
25 Pages

Integrative Taxonomy of Two Peruvian Strains of Brachionus plicatilis Complex with Potential in Aquaculture

  • Pedro Pablo Alonso Sánchez-Dávila,
  • Giovanna Sotil,
  • Araceli Adabache-Ortiz,
  • Deivis Cueva and
  • Marcelo Silva-Briano

15 December 2021

Two Peruvian strains of the genus Brachionus were isolated from impacted coastal wetlands. With an integrative taxonomic view, we described their taxonomic status, morphological characters, productive parameters, and phylogenetic position. In the cas...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
4,016 Views
11 Pages

Chromosomal-Level Assembly of Antarctic Scaly Rockcod, Trematomus loennbergii Genome Using Long-Read Sequencing and Chromosome Conformation Capture (Hi-C) Technologies

  • Euna Jo,
  • Seung Jae Lee,
  • Jeong-Hoon Kim,
  • Steven J. Parker,
  • Eunkyung Choi,
  • Jinmu Kim,
  • So-Ra Han,
  • Tae-Jin Oh and
  • Hyun Park

14 December 2021

Trematomus species (suborder Notothenioidei; family Nototheniidae) are widely distributed in the southern oceans near Antarctica. There are 11 recognized species in the genus Trematomus, and notothenioids are known to have high chromosomal diversity...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5 Citations
4,856 Views
17 Pages

Component Endoparasite Communities Mirror Life-History Specialization in Syntopic Reed Frogs (Hyperolius spp.)

  • Ulrich Sinsch,
  • Carsten Balczun,
  • Patrick Scheid and
  • Jonas Maximilian Dehling

14 December 2021

Most of our knowledge on the processes structuring parasite communities in amphibians originate from temperate-zone taxa, whereas Afrotropical communities have been neglected so far. We found evidence that ecological fitting of the hosts and, probabl...

  • Article
  • Open Access
7 Citations
3,846 Views
15 Pages

14 December 2021

A novel Gram-negative, aerobic, motile, lemon-yellow-colored, and non-spore-forming rod-shaped bacterium designated strain NZ-12BT was isolated in February 2021 from a sponge species (Crateromorpha) collected at the southern Kermadec Ridge, Pacific O...

  • Interesting Images
  • Open Access
2 Citations
4,675 Views
3 Pages

Unusual Morphotypes of the Giant Barrel Sponge off the Coast of Barbados

  • Joseph R. Pawlik,
  • Denise C. Manker,
  • James S. Evans,
  • Patrick M. Erwin and
  • Susanna López-Legentil

12 December 2021

Giant barrel sponges (GBSs) belong to a cryptic species complex (Xestospongia spp.) and are found on tropical reefs worldwide. Over their range, including most of the Caribbean, GBSs have a cylindrical shape, with variation in height, diameter and su...

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Diversity - ISSN 1424-2818