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      The Mosses of Crocker Range Park, Malaysian Borneo

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          Abstract

          Abstract

          This paper reports the mosses from Crocker Range Park (CRP) in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. In total, 293 species, three subspecies and eight varieties belonging to 118 genera and 36 families are reported. This represents about 40% and 47% of the species and infra-specific taxa reported from Borneo and Sabah, respectively. Out of these, six species are new records for Borneo, namely Barbella horridula , Chaetomitrium lancifolium , Distichophyllum leiopogon , Rhaphidostichum luzonense , Rosulabryum capillare and Taxiphyllum taxirameum and 12 species and one variety are new to Sabah. With these additions, the current number of mosses in Sabah and Borneo are 651 and 766, respectively. The largest family of mosses is Calymperaceae with 35 species and one subspecies, followed by Sematophyllaceae with 32 species and two varieties and Pylaisiadelphaceae with 21 species and one variety. In conclusion, CRP has a very high species richness of mosses which is the second highest in Borneo, after Mount Kinabalu.

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          New national and regional bryophyte records 25

          (2010)
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            New national and regional bryophyte records, 49

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              Eusociality: from the first foragers to the first states. Introduction to the special issue.

              People have always been social. Ethnographic evidence suggests that transfers of food and labor are common among contemporary hunter-gatherers, and they probably were common in Paleolithic groups. Archaeological evidence suggests that cooperative breeding went up as we settled down: as territory defenders became more successful breeders, their helpers' fertility would have been delayed or depressed. And written evidence from the Neolithic suggests that the first civilizations were often eusocial; emperors fathered hundreds of children, who were provided for and protected by workers in sterile castes. Papers in this issue of Human Nature look at helpers and workers across the eusociality continuum--from hard-working grandmothers and grandfathers, to celibate sisters and brothers, to castrated civil servants--from the first foragers to the first states.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                PhytoKeys
                PhytoKeys
                PhytoKeys
                PhytoKeys
                Pensoft Publishers
                1314-2011
                1314-2003
                2017
                11 October 2017
                : 88
                : 71-107
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Jalan UMS, 88400 Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia
                [2 ] Museum of Nature and Human Activities & Phylogenetic Division, Institute of Natural and Environmental Science, Hyogo Prefectural University, Yayoigaoka-6, Sanda, Hyogo 669-1546, Japan
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: Monica Suleiman ( monicas@ 123456ums.edu.my )

                Academic editor: Y. Mutafchiev

                Article
                10.3897/phytokeys.88.14674
                5672137
                eba90460-1770-4122-98e5-773513b0a111
                Monica Suleiman, Dunstan Polus Masundang, Hiroyuki Akiyama

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 23 June 2017
                : 20 September 2017
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                Plant science & Botany
                bryophytes,crp,crocker range,east malaysia,sabah
                Plant science & Botany
                bryophytes, crp, crocker range, east malaysia, sabah

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