The use of integrative taxonomy in Octocorallia (Cnidaria: Anthozoa): a literature survey

Author:

Kessel Gustav M1ORCID,Alderslade Philip2,Bilewitch Jaret P3,Schnabel Kareen E3,Gardner Jonathan P A1

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Te Toki a Rata Building L2, Victoria University of Wellington , Gate 7 Kelburn Parade, Wellington 6012 , New Zealand

2. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere , Castray Esplanade, Hobart, TAS 7000 , Australia

3. National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research Ltd (NIWA) , 301 Evans Bay Parade, Wellington 6021 , New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractOctocorals are problematic in their systematics, and the extent of their biodiversity is poorly understood. Integrative taxonomy (the use of two or more lines of evidence for the delimitation and description of taxa) is seen as a promising way to produce more robust species hypotheses and achieve taxonomic progress in this group. However, many octocoral descriptions continue to rely on morphological evidence alone, and the prevalence of integrative methods is unclear. Here, a literature survey was conducted to gain an overview of historical description rates and to examine trends in the publication of integrative descriptions between the years 2000 and 2020. We find that recent description rates are among the highest in the history of octocoral taxonomy, and although increasing, integrative taxon descriptions remain in the minority overall. We also find that integrative taxonomy has been applied unevenly across octocoral groups and geographical regions. Description rates show no signs of slowing, and no ceiling of total species richness has yet come into view. Coupled with a continued overreliance on morphological variation, particularly at the species level, this suggests that we might be adding to the workload of taxa requiring future revision faster than such instances can be resolved.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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