Global Habitat Suitability and Ecological Niche Separation in the Phylum Placozoa.

The enigmatic placozoans, which hold a key position in the metazoan Tree of Life, have attracted substantial attention in many areas of biological and biomedical research. While placozoans have become an emerging model system, their ecology and particularly biogeography remain widely unknown. In thi...

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Main Authors: Omid Paknia, Bernd Schierwater
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4651326?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-212097f65caa42c9ba03c94c871110042020-11-24T21:56:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011011e014016210.1371/journal.pone.0140162Global Habitat Suitability and Ecological Niche Separation in the Phylum Placozoa.Omid PakniaBernd SchierwaterThe enigmatic placozoans, which hold a key position in the metazoan Tree of Life, have attracted substantial attention in many areas of biological and biomedical research. While placozoans have become an emerging model system, their ecology and particularly biogeography remain widely unknown. In this study, we use modelling approaches to explore habitat preferences, and distribution pattern of the placozoans phylum. We provide hypotheses for discrete ecological niche separation between genetic placozoan lineages, which may also help to understand biogeography patterns in other small marine invertebrates. We, here, used maximum entropy modelling to predict placozoan distribution using 20 environmental grids of 9.2 km2 resolution. In addition, we used recently developed metrics of niche overlap to compare habitat suitability models of three genetic clades. The predicted distributions range from 55°N to 44°S and are restricted to regions of intermediate to warm sea surface temperatures. High concentrations of salinity and low nutrient concentrations appear as secondary factors. Tests of niche equivalency reveal the largest differences between placozoan clades I and III. Interestingly, the genetically well-separated clades I and V appear to be ecologically very similar. Our habitat suitability models predict a wider latitudinal distribution for placozoans, than currently described, especially in the northern hemisphere. With respect to biogeography modelling, placozoans show patterns somewhere between higher metazoan taxa and marine microorganisms, with the first group usually showing complex biogeographies and the second usually showing "no biogeography."http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4651326?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Omid Paknia
Bernd Schierwater
spellingShingle Omid Paknia
Bernd Schierwater
Global Habitat Suitability and Ecological Niche Separation in the Phylum Placozoa.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Omid Paknia
Bernd Schierwater
author_sort Omid Paknia
title Global Habitat Suitability and Ecological Niche Separation in the Phylum Placozoa.
title_short Global Habitat Suitability and Ecological Niche Separation in the Phylum Placozoa.
title_full Global Habitat Suitability and Ecological Niche Separation in the Phylum Placozoa.
title_fullStr Global Habitat Suitability and Ecological Niche Separation in the Phylum Placozoa.
title_full_unstemmed Global Habitat Suitability and Ecological Niche Separation in the Phylum Placozoa.
title_sort global habitat suitability and ecological niche separation in the phylum placozoa.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The enigmatic placozoans, which hold a key position in the metazoan Tree of Life, have attracted substantial attention in many areas of biological and biomedical research. While placozoans have become an emerging model system, their ecology and particularly biogeography remain widely unknown. In this study, we use modelling approaches to explore habitat preferences, and distribution pattern of the placozoans phylum. We provide hypotheses for discrete ecological niche separation between genetic placozoan lineages, which may also help to understand biogeography patterns in other small marine invertebrates. We, here, used maximum entropy modelling to predict placozoan distribution using 20 environmental grids of 9.2 km2 resolution. In addition, we used recently developed metrics of niche overlap to compare habitat suitability models of three genetic clades. The predicted distributions range from 55°N to 44°S and are restricted to regions of intermediate to warm sea surface temperatures. High concentrations of salinity and low nutrient concentrations appear as secondary factors. Tests of niche equivalency reveal the largest differences between placozoan clades I and III. Interestingly, the genetically well-separated clades I and V appear to be ecologically very similar. Our habitat suitability models predict a wider latitudinal distribution for placozoans, than currently described, especially in the northern hemisphere. With respect to biogeography modelling, placozoans show patterns somewhere between higher metazoan taxa and marine microorganisms, with the first group usually showing complex biogeographies and the second usually showing "no biogeography."
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4651326?pdf=render
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