17 research outputs found

    Evolutionary responses of marine invertebrates to insular isolation in Galapagos

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    I examine the natural barriers to distribution and colonization that have shaped the Galapagos marine invertebrate biota. While diversity is high for some groups, such as hydroids and bryozoans, it is low for many others. Porcelain crabs and molluscs are examples with reduced or unbalanced representation in Galapagos, resulting from their dependency on dispersal of relatively short-lived planktonic larvae by ocean currents and on habitat limitations in Galapagos. Because Galapagos shorelines are predominantly rocky, without the wide expanses of silt typical of much of the Ecuadorian mainland that are favored by infaunal bivalves, gastropod diversity in Galapagos far exceeds that of bivalves. Nearly all hermatypic corals in Galapagos are members of the Panamic province; none is endemic to Galapagos. This suggests that colonization occurred by larval dispersal from there. The ahermatypic (azooxanthellate) coral fauna of Galapagos, with 43 species, is richer and more diverse than the hermatypic corals, with 29% of the shallow-water ahermatypes endemic and the remainder with Panamic, Indo-Pacific, and cosmopolitan affinities. The 73 verified species of Galapagos shallow-water echinoderms are dominated by Panamic species, with additional affinities to the Indo-Pacific and the California province; 8% are cosmopolitan and 8% endemic. With species richness roughly equivalent to that of Pacific Colombia, Galapagos echinoderm representation is not depauperate, but is sufficiently distinctive to characterize it as an isolated, insular biota. Hydroids and bryozoans, two groups with high diversity in Galapagos, accomplish long-distance transport mainly as adults on floating debris and hulls of ships, rather than by the free-swimming reproductive stage. Endemism among marine invertebrates averages 18.3 %, but varies widely among major taxa, from 0% for reef corals to 71% for gorgonians. Unlike the Galapagos terrestrial biota, in which endemic genera are common, the absence of endemic genera among marine invertebrates may be attributed to low isolation arising from greater dispersal and gene flow in the marine environment

    Preliminary survey of zooxanthellate zoanthids (Cnidaria : Hexacorallia) of the Galapagos, and associated symbiotic dinoflagellates (Symbiodinium spp.)

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    Despite their presence in almost all marine ecosystems, the zoanthids (Cnidaria: Hexacorallia: Zoantharia) are poorly studied, in large part due to a lack of useful morphological identification characters. Recent research combining morphology with DNA markers has begun to shed new light on diversity and distribution of the order Zoantharia. Here, preliminary findings on the diversity and distribution of zooxanthellate zoanthid species from the genera Zoanthus and Palythoa are presented, documenting these genera in the Galapagos for the first time. A brief description of the species found is provided. Zoanthus and Palythoa appear to be limited in the Galapagos to rocky shores in warm shallow sublittoral and infralittoral waters (minimum temperature >18°C), isolated from the colder water that dominates much of the archipelago. Preliminary results from the internal transcribed spacer region of ribosomal DNA sequences of symbiotic dinoflagellates suggest that both Zoanthus and Palythoa spp. in the Galapagos possess only Symbiodinium clade C. Brief descriptions of the zooxanthellate zoanthid species found in the Galapagos are provided

    Octocorals in the Galapagos Islands

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    The Galapagos octocorals were almost unknown until recent years. Of the three orders within the subclass Octocorallia (Anthozoa, Cnidaria), the Pennatulacea (sea pens) and Alcyonacea (soft corals and gorgonians) occur in the Galapagos. Recent collections and research bring the total known octocorallian fauna to three sea pens (Virgularia galapagensis, Ptilosarcus undulatus and Cavernulina darwini) and 15 gorgonians. Of the 13 gorgonians that we have collected, several are new species. Pacifigorgia is widely distributed in the archipelago, with four named species (P. dampieri, P. symbiotica, P. rubripunctata, and P. darwinii), three of them recently described, and two others yet to be described. The genus Muricea contains three widely distributed undescribed species, one of which appears in three chromotypes, and one deepwater species that has not been collected recently. Two species of Heterogorgia occur in the central archipelago, H. verrucosa and the recently described and widely distributed H. hickmani. The remaining gorgonians are Eugorgia daniana, Leptogorgia alba and Adelogorgia telones

    Animal diversity, 4th Ed./ Cleveland P. Hickman, Jr. ; (et al)

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    xvi, 460 hal. : ill.; 27 cm

    Animal diversity, 4th Ed./ Cleveland P. Hickman, Jr. ; (et al)

    No full text
    xvi, 460 hal. : ill.; 27 cm

    Animal diversity

    No full text
    Bostonxvi, 460 p.: fig.; 27 cm

    Shallow-Water Sea Anemones (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Actiniaria) and Tube Anemones (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Ceriantharia) of the Gala´pagos Islands.

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    v. ill. 23 cm.QuarterlyWe provide the first inventory of members of orders Actiniaria (sea anemones sensu stricto) and Ceriantharia (tube anemones) from the Gala´pagos Islands. Based on observations and collections at 48 localities throughout the archipelago that span nearly a decade, we report on eight species of actiniarians (representing families Actiniidae, Actinostolidae, Aiptasiidae, Hormathiidae, and Isophelliidae) and two of cerianthids (in families Arachnactidae and Botrucnidiferidae). We include live photographs and diagnostic features of the animals, as well as a key and map of their occurrence in the Gala´pagos. Two actiniarians and one cerianthid are resolved only to genus level; of those identified to species, three of the actiniarians and one of the cerianthids have an eastern Pacific distribution, one actiniarian appears to be endemic to the Gala´pagos Islands, and two actiniarians are broadly distributed in the Indo-West Pacific
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