Marine invertebrate biodiversity from the Argentine Sea, South Western Atlantic

The list of marine invertebrate biodiversity living in the southern tip of South America is compiled. In particular, the living invertebrate organisms, reported in the literature for the Argentine Sea, were checked and summarized covering more than 8,000 km of coastline and marine...

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Main Authors: Gregorio Bigatti, Javier Signorelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2018-10-01
Series:ZooKeys
Online Access:https://zookeys.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=22587
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spelling doaj-1290ccf21b274b87b7ef4045d88de9542020-11-24T22:36:22ZengPensoft PublishersZooKeys1313-29891313-29702018-10-01791477010.3897/zookeys.791.2258722587Marine invertebrate biodiversity from the Argentine Sea, South Western AtlanticGregorio Bigatti0Javier Signorelli1Universidad Espíritu SantoLaboratorio de Reproducción y Biología Integrativa de Invertebrados Marinos The list of marine invertebrate biodiversity living in the southern tip of South America is compiled. In particular, the living invertebrate organisms, reported in the literature for the Argentine Sea, were checked and summarized covering more than 8,000 km of coastline and marine platform. After an exhaustive literature review, the available information of two centuries of scientific contributions is summarized. Thus, almost 3,100 valid species are currently recognized as living in the Argentine Sea. Part of this dataset was uploaded to the OBIS database, as a product of the Census of Marine Life-NaGISA project. A list of 3,064 valid species, grouped into 1,662 genera distributed in 808 families and 23 phyla, was assessed. The best represented taxa were Arthropoda and Mollusca, contributing approximately with the 50% of the mentioned species in the literature. Cumulative species curves were analyzed in order to estimate the percentage of marine invertebrate biodiversity that is currently known. However, no model fit to our data, showing that the recorded species represent less than 50% of the expected marine invertebrate biodiversity for the Argentine Sea. The great surface of the Argentine Marine Platform (6,581,500 km2) and the relative low effort in collecting and studying new species due to economical restrictions could explain the low fraction of described species. The training of new taxonomists, as well as, the support of projects that contribute to the knowledge of marine invertebrate biodiversity from South Western Atlantic is recommended. https://zookeys.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=22587
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gregorio Bigatti
Javier Signorelli
spellingShingle Gregorio Bigatti
Javier Signorelli
Marine invertebrate biodiversity from the Argentine Sea, South Western Atlantic
ZooKeys
author_facet Gregorio Bigatti
Javier Signorelli
author_sort Gregorio Bigatti
title Marine invertebrate biodiversity from the Argentine Sea, South Western Atlantic
title_short Marine invertebrate biodiversity from the Argentine Sea, South Western Atlantic
title_full Marine invertebrate biodiversity from the Argentine Sea, South Western Atlantic
title_fullStr Marine invertebrate biodiversity from the Argentine Sea, South Western Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Marine invertebrate biodiversity from the Argentine Sea, South Western Atlantic
title_sort marine invertebrate biodiversity from the argentine sea, south western atlantic
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series ZooKeys
issn 1313-2989
1313-2970
publishDate 2018-10-01
description The list of marine invertebrate biodiversity living in the southern tip of South America is compiled. In particular, the living invertebrate organisms, reported in the literature for the Argentine Sea, were checked and summarized covering more than 8,000 km of coastline and marine platform. After an exhaustive literature review, the available information of two centuries of scientific contributions is summarized. Thus, almost 3,100 valid species are currently recognized as living in the Argentine Sea. Part of this dataset was uploaded to the OBIS database, as a product of the Census of Marine Life-NaGISA project. A list of 3,064 valid species, grouped into 1,662 genera distributed in 808 families and 23 phyla, was assessed. The best represented taxa were Arthropoda and Mollusca, contributing approximately with the 50% of the mentioned species in the literature. Cumulative species curves were analyzed in order to estimate the percentage of marine invertebrate biodiversity that is currently known. However, no model fit to our data, showing that the recorded species represent less than 50% of the expected marine invertebrate biodiversity for the Argentine Sea. The great surface of the Argentine Marine Platform (6,581,500 km2) and the relative low effort in collecting and studying new species due to economical restrictions could explain the low fraction of described species. The training of new taxonomists, as well as, the support of projects that contribute to the knowledge of marine invertebrate biodiversity from South Western Atlantic is recommended.
url https://zookeys.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=22587
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