taxonID	type	description	language	source
7B3AD50B77B55EE9A5EC0F768D307567.taxon	materials_examined	Holotype. BG-IBER-VER- 000010561, adult male collected on 23 April 2024 by SL, MD, DJ and CD in a water fountain at the northeastern exit of Kostino, Kardzhali Municipality, Kardzhali Province, Bulgaria (41.7039 ° N, 25.3028 ° E; elevation: 563 m a. s. l.), and curated at the Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (IBER-BAS), Sofia, Bulgaria. Measurements in mm: L. 42.7, F. 16.3, T. 17.3, Lt. c. 12.8, Sp. p. 4.8, L. o. 4.4, Sp. n. 2.4. The holotype and the type locality are depicted on Fig. 10. Paratypes. BG-NMNHS-HER- 000000000552 (L. 41.6 mm), adult male collected on 23 April 2024 by SL, MD, DJ and CD at the type locality and curated at the National Museum of Natural History of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (NMNHS-BAS), Sofia, Bulgaria; MNHN - RA- 2024.0001 (L. 46.0 mm), adult female collected on 24 April 2024 by SL, MD, DJ and CD in Lisitsite, Kardzhali Municipality, Kardzhali Province, Bulgaria (41.6108 ° N, 25.4543 ° E; elevation: 233 m a. s. l.), and curated at MNHN. NHMW 41962 (L. 39.7 mm), adult male collected on 24 April 2024 by SL, MD, DJ and CD in Panichkovo, Chernoochene Municipality, Kardzhali Province, Bulgaria (41.8565 ° N, 25.1517 ° E; elevation: 753 m a. s. l.) and curated at NHMW. These three specimens are depicted in Fig. 11.	en	Dufresnes, Christophe, Lukanov, Simeon, Gippner, Sven, Ambu, Johanna, Strachinis, Ilias, Arsovski, Dragan, Monod-Broca, Benjamin, Cayuela, Hugo, Lymberakis, Petros, Canestrelli, Daniele, Cogălniceanu, Dan, Poyarkov, Nikolay A., Litvinchuk, Spartak N., Suchan, Tomasz, Denoël, Mathieu, Jablonski, Daniel (2025): Historical biogeography and systematics of yellow-bellied toads (Bombina variegata), with the description of a new subspecies from the Balkans. Vertebrate Zoology 75: 1-30, DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e138687
7B3AD50B77B55EE9A5EC0F768D307567.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. General characteristics similar to those of the yellow-bellied toad B. variegata. It is the sister taxon of the Balkan subspecies B. v. scabra, from which it is distinguished by substantial mitochondrial, nuclear (especially phylogenomic) and morphological divergence. Specifically, B. v. rhodopensis subsp. nov. differs from B. v. scabra by 1.3 % of sequence divergence at 16 S, 1.6 % of sequence divergence at cox 1, and 2.4 % of sequence divergence at cyt b (Table 1). Based on the mitochondrial time tree, the two taxa initiated their divergence during the Early Pleistocene, either around 2.1 or 1.4 Mya, depending on the calibration (Fig. 2). On the cyt b gene, the following nucleotides distinguish B. v. rhodopensis subsp. nov. from any other B. variegata subspecies: a “ G ” in the site 469, a “ G ” in the site 726 and an “ A ” in the site 801 (positions relative to the full gene sequence). The new subspecies also features a unique combination of alleles at the nuclear genes ncx 1, rag- 1, rag- 2 and rho (Figs 3, S 3), as well as at 4759 RAD loci (Fig. 4). Externally, B. v. rhodopensis subsp. nov. differs from B. v. scabra by having on average a shorter femur, tibia, and first toe, as well as bigger eyes, noting that these rely on a small sample of B. v. rhodopensis subsp. nov. specimens (Table 2). Body sizes are on average similar (43.6 mm in B. v. rhodopensis subsp. nov. vs. 43.3 mm in B. v. scabra), with higher variation between the sexes in B. v. rhodopensis subsp. nov. (Fig. 5). From the examined specimens, the sexes appear morphologically dimorphic (Table 2, Fig. 5), as also seen in B. v. scabra (Radojičić et al. 2002; Fig. 5). Compared to B. v. scabra, B. v. rhodopensis subsp. nov. features a higher average proportion of yellow vs. dark coloration on the ventral side, although with wide overlap (Fig. 7).	en	Dufresnes, Christophe, Lukanov, Simeon, Gippner, Sven, Ambu, Johanna, Strachinis, Ilias, Arsovski, Dragan, Monod-Broca, Benjamin, Cayuela, Hugo, Lymberakis, Petros, Canestrelli, Daniele, Cogălniceanu, Dan, Poyarkov, Nikolay A., Litvinchuk, Spartak N., Suchan, Tomasz, Denoël, Mathieu, Jablonski, Daniel (2025): Historical biogeography and systematics of yellow-bellied toads (Bombina variegata), with the description of a new subspecies from the Balkans. Vertebrate Zoology 75: 1-30, DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e138687
7B3AD50B77B55EE9A5EC0F768D307567.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The name rhodopensis is a Latin toponymic adjective given in reference to the Rhodope Mountains in the southeastern part of the Balkan Peninsula (Bulgaria and Greece) where the new taxon is mostly distributed. It spotlights a rare case of Rhodope endemism in vertebrates – Rhodope endemics are so far known only from plants and invertebrates.	en	Dufresnes, Christophe, Lukanov, Simeon, Gippner, Sven, Ambu, Johanna, Strachinis, Ilias, Arsovski, Dragan, Monod-Broca, Benjamin, Cayuela, Hugo, Lymberakis, Petros, Canestrelli, Daniele, Cogălniceanu, Dan, Poyarkov, Nikolay A., Litvinchuk, Spartak N., Suchan, Tomasz, Denoël, Mathieu, Jablonski, Daniel (2025): Historical biogeography and systematics of yellow-bellied toads (Bombina variegata), with the description of a new subspecies from the Balkans. Vertebrate Zoology 75: 1-30, DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e138687
7B3AD50B77B55EE9A5EC0F768D307567.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Bombina v. rhodopensis subsp. nov. is essentially restricted to the Rhodope Mountains and their foothills (from sea level up to 1600 m a. s. l.) in southeastern Bulgaria, northeastern Greece, and the adjacent part of Turkish Thrace (Global Biodiversity Information Facility 2024). In Greece, it was documented eastward up to the National Forest Park of Dadia – Lefkimi – Soufli close to Evros (Maritsa) River which makes the border with Turkey (Petrov 2004; Valakos et al. 2008; Kret and Poirazidis 2015; Pafilis and Maragkou 2020; Strachinis 2024). In Bulgaria, population isolates exist east of the Rhodopes, namely in Sakar Mountain and perhaps Strandzha Mountain near the Black Sea (Boev et al. 2008; Stojanov et al. 2011). In Turkey, it is very rare and restricted to Karacahasan Mountain (Enez District), close to the Evros River (Kariş et al. 2017). The eastern and northern margins of B. v. rhodopensis subsp. nov. correspond to the shifts from forest hills towards open lowland habitats colonized by the fire-bellied toad (B. bombina), where they probably form hybrid zones. The southern boundary of the range follows the coastal foothills of the Rhodopes (Valakos et al. 2008). According to the mtDNA barcoding, the transition with B. v. scabra in the west might follow the Nestos (Mesta) River valley, which separates the Rhodopes from the Rila massif in the north, and from the Pirin massif in the west; the mtDNA of both subspecies were reported in the middle part of the Nestos River in Greece (Platanias-Pteleas). Nevertheless, many sampling gaps remain in the Pirin, western Rhodopes and southern Rila, so the exact subspecies boundaries shall be fine-tuned by multilocus genotyping.	en	Dufresnes, Christophe, Lukanov, Simeon, Gippner, Sven, Ambu, Johanna, Strachinis, Ilias, Arsovski, Dragan, Monod-Broca, Benjamin, Cayuela, Hugo, Lymberakis, Petros, Canestrelli, Daniele, Cogălniceanu, Dan, Poyarkov, Nikolay A., Litvinchuk, Spartak N., Suchan, Tomasz, Denoël, Mathieu, Jablonski, Daniel (2025): Historical biogeography and systematics of yellow-bellied toads (Bombina variegata), with the description of a new subspecies from the Balkans. Vertebrate Zoology 75: 1-30, DOI: 10.3897/vz.75.e138687
