Poriferans rift apart: molecular demosponge biodiversity in Central and French Polynesia and comparison with adjacent marine provinces of the Central Indo-Pacific
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Published:2023-05-10
Issue:7
Volume:32
Page:2469-2494
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ISSN:0960-3115
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Container-title:Biodiversity and Conservation
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biodivers Conserv
Author:
Galitz Adrian,Ekins Merrick,Folcher Eric,Büttner Gabriele,Hall Kathryn,Hooper John N. A.,Reddy Maggie M.,Schätzle Simone,Thomas Olivier P.,Wörheide Gert,Petek Sylvain,Debitus Cécile,Erpenbeck Dirk
Abstract
AbstractThe distribution of marine sponges in the tropical Southwest Pacific Ocean is largely unexplored despite the vital ecological role of sponges in coral reefs and their value as sources of metabolites for drug design. Several collection campaigns to the French Polynesian archipelagos (Society, Marquesas, Tuamotu, Gambier, and Austral) were conducted to assess the bio- and chemodiversity of the island groups. In the course of these scientific expeditions, more than 200 identified sponge specimens were acquired, for which we were able to assign 102 Molecular Operational Taxonomic Units (MOTUs). Based on these MOTUs, we assessed, in the largest analysis of its kind for this area to date, the sponge composition and faunistic overlaps of the marine province Southeast Polynesia with Marquesas and Central Polynesia. We also compared the sponge fauna of these Eastern Indo-Pacific provinces with marine provinces of the adjacent Central Indo-Pacific realm. Our findings corroborate that sponge faunal similarity within marine realms is higher than among realms, and follows the marine barriers to gene flow observed for other taxa. We detected high levels of provincial endemism for marine sponges, consistent with findings from other Indo-Pacific regions. At the level of province, geographical distance and ocean surface currents influence faunal similarity, and constitute the primary factors for the connectivity of sponge faunas between the disjunct and remote island groups in the tropical Southwest Pacific Ocean.
Funder
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle
Flotte Océanographique Française
LabexMER
Wallis and Futuna Environment Service
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
1 articles.
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