Publish or perish!

At Taxon Expeditions, we engage our participants in real discoveries. Publications in scientific journals are part of the deal. Explore our published papers

Expedition to Borneo, Sept. 2017
In the “Lost World” of Maliau Basin, we discovered six new beetle species, three from leaf litter and three water beetles, which appeared in two separate publications. The staff of the field centre, together with our participants, decided to name one of them after actor and biodiversity activist Leonardo DiCaprio. This pleased him so much that he changed his Facebook profile photo to that of the new beetle–obviously something the media loved!
Grouvellinus-leonardodicaprioi

Colenisia-chungi

Expedition to Borneo, March 2018
We went to the remote forest of Borneo and found a new species of so-called “semi-slug” as well as three new species of water beetle. We named the new species of semi-slug Microparmarion exquadratus — the name was chosen at a naming and voting session during the Expedition and refers to the ‘squad’ of participants that jointly sampled this species during night-time walks in the forest.
4 nes species of water beetles
 
Expedition to Montenegro, July 2018
On our first trip to the beautiful Durmitor mountain and the Tara Canyon (2nd deepest in the world) we proved that even in Europe, the fearless explorer can still discover new species. We found several new water mites, slugs, and snails, which we will be publishing, alongside their DNA-sequences, in the near future.
Expedition to Borneo, Brunei, Sept. 2019
On our trip to the beautiful Ulu Temburong National Park in Brunei, we found several new species of beetle. A new species of flea beetle was found in the leaf litter and named Clavicornaltica belalongensis – after Belalong river in which vicinity it was found.

Clavicornaltica belalongensis

 Expedition to Durmitor, Montenegro, July 2019
We enjoyed the fantastic nature of Durmitor National Park, explored mountains, canyons, and descended into caves in search of new species. Our molecular biology team led by Massimo Delledonne with Marta Paterno and Simone Maestri performed for the first time ever, DNA sequencing in a cave! Guided by our team leader and cave biologist Iva Njunjić, our team hiked high up the mountain to reach the cave entrance and crawled through narrow passages with the portable DNA lab. We set up a complete lab in the cave and used a novel device from Oxford Nanopore Technologies, the VOLTRAX system which replaces a thermocycler, an incubator and a shaker, allowing for much easier and compact DNA library preparation. Combined with a housemade centrifuge and the MinION sequencer from Oxford Nanopore Technologies, we were able to extract and sequence DNA in a few hours in a totally hostile environment. This is certainly the first time ever this was attempted and we are very proud of this achievement. Part of the work in the “cave lab” was done by citizen scientist Mariela González. 

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