“…Starting in the first decades of the 19 th century, the research was at its peak of intensity at the turn of the 19 th and the 20 th century, to be intensified again in the 1950s and 1960s, followed by the almost complete lack of any bryological work until 2009 (Alegro et al, 2012). Thenceforward, during the last decade, 58 new taxa were discovered as new for Croatia, mainly owing to cooperation between the Hungarian Natural History Museum and the University of Zagreb, (Blockeel et al, 2009, Ellis et al, 2012a, 2012b, 2015, 2016Papp & Sabovljević, 2009;Köckinger et al, 2012;Papp et al, 2013aPapp et al, , 2013bPapp et al, , 2013cAlegro et al, 2014Alegro et al, , 2015Alegro et al, , 2018aAlegro et al, , 2018bAlegro et al, , 2019Sabovljević et al, 2018).…”