Banner
Intro | About | Wiki | Search traits | Data explorer | Literature | Definitions | Sources | Webservices | Statistics | Feedback | Editors | Log in

Traits source details

Clarke, Andrew; Johnston, Nadine M. (2003). Antarctic marine benthic diversity. Oceanography and Marine Biology: an Annual Review. 41: 47-114.
4179
Clarke, Andrew; Johnston, Nadine M
2003
Antarctic marine benthic diversity
Oceanography and Marine Biology: an Annual Review
41: 47-114
Publication
An unpublished species checklist compiled for background to this paper by the two authors was later used as basis for the Register of Antarctic Marine Species. The review article itself contains no species lists. The journal series is available at https://www.routledge.com but there is no link to the article. The original spreadsheet checklist might be obtainable from the author, accl@bas.ac.uk
Ant'Phipoda Literature database.
Available for editors  PDF available
Species lists have been compiled for all the major groups of Southern Ocean benthic marine invertebrates, eliminating synonymies where possible and providing a subjective estimate of completeness and reliability for each group. Antarctic marine diversity (pelagic and benthic) is relatively high at the phylum and class level, with the gaps mostly comprising minor, meiofaunal or parasitic groups. Most benthic diversity data come from the continental shelves, with relatively few samples from deeper water. Even for the continental shelves, however, sampling is highly patchy with some areas hardly investigated at all. Over 4100 benthic species have been reported from the Southern Ocean, with the most speciose groups being polychaetes, gastropods and amphipods. Comparison with tropical and temperate regions suggest that decapods, bivalves and teleost fishes are poorly represented in the Southern Ocean benthic marine fauna, whereas pycnogonids, echinoderms and many suspension feeding groups are rich and diverse. Some groups that are currently low in diversity were previously well represented in the Antarctic shallow water marine fauna, notably decapods and many fishes. Other groups have undergone marked radiations in the Southern Ocean, including pycnogonids, amphipods, isopods and teleost fishes; in all cases, however, it is only some lineages that have diversified. This indicates that evolutionary questions concerning the origin, diversification or extinction of the Southern Ocean marine fauna will have no single answer; the evolutionary history of each group appears to reflect a different response to the tectonic, climatic and oceanographic changes to which they have been subject through history. The disposition of southern hemisphere continents makes it difficult to assess whether there is a latitudinal cline in shallow-water marine diversity to mirror that known from the northern hemisphere. Within Antarctica, many species appear to have circumpolar distributions, and the long established biogeographical division into continental Antarctic, Antarctic Peninsula and sub-Antarctic regions have not been challenged by recent sampling. For most groups the frequency distribution of species per genus ratios is typical, though none is well described by the predictions from current evolutionary or null models. Where data are available, size spectra indicate that many Southern Ocean taxa are small, a few spectacular examples of gigantism notwithstanding, and species abundance plots are normal. Knowledge of the Southern Ocean benthic marine fauna has reached a stage where we can now ask powerful evolutionary questions, and the development of new molecular techniques provides the mechanism for answering them
Antarctic
Fauna and Flora, Faunistic inventories, Checklists, Catalogues
RIS (EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)
BibTex (BibDesk, LaTeX)
Date
action
by
2013-01-12 18:30:12Z
created
db_admin
2014-02-09 21:01:17Z
changed
2014-02-10 00:57:53Z
changed
2019-05-29 14:31:21Z
changed
2024-01-17 21:45:47Z
changed

Abatus agassizii Mortensen, 1910 (additional source)
Abatus cavernosus (Philippi, 1845) (additional source)
Abatus curvidens Mortensen, 1936 (additional source)
Abatus elongatus (Koehler, 1908) accepted as Abatus koehleri (Thiéry, 1909) (additional source)
Abatus ingens Koehler, 1926 (additional source)
Abatus shackletoni Koehler, 1911 (additional source)
Abyssoclymene Hartman, 1967 (basis of record)
Abyssoclymene annularis Hartman, 1967 (basis of record)
Acantharcturus acutipleon Schultz, 1981 (basis of record)
Acanthomunna spinipes (Vanhöffen, 1914) (basis of record)
Acanthophragma Hayward, 1993 (basis of record)
Acanthophragma polaris Hayward, 1993 (basis of record)
Acanthopriapulus van der Land, 1970 (basis of record)
Acanthopriapulus horridus (Théel, 1911) (basis of record)
Acanthorhabdus fragilis Burton, 1929 (additional source)
Acanthoserolis Brandt, 1988 (basis of record)
Acanthoserolis polaris (Richardson, 1911) (basis of record)
Acanthoserolis schythei (Lütken, 1858) (basis of record)
Accalathura gigantissima Kussakin, 1967 (basis of record)
Achelia communis (Bouvier, 1906) (basis of record)
Achelia hoekii (Pfeffer, 1889) (basis of record)
Achelia parvula (Loman, 1923) (basis of record)
Achelia serratipalpis (Bouvier, 1911) (basis of record)
Achelia spicata (Hodgson, 1914) (basis of record)
Achelia sufflata Gordon, 1944 (basis of record)
Acodontaster Verrill, 1899 (basis of record)
Acodontaster capitatus (Koehler, 1912) (basis of record)
Acodontaster conspicuus (Koehler, 1920) (basis of record)
Acodontaster elongatus (Sladen, 1889) (basis of record)
Acodontaster hodgsoni (Bell, 1908) (basis of record)
Acodontaster hodgsoni f. hodgsoni (Bell, 1889) (basis of record)
Acodontaster hodgsoni f. stellatus (Koehler, 1920) (basis of record)
Acodontaster marginatus (Koehler, 1912) (basis of record)
Actinernus elongatus (Hertwig, 1882) (basis of record)
Actinoscyphia plebeia (McMurrich, 1893) (basis of record)
Actinostola crassicornis (Hertwig, 1882) (basis of record)
Acutiserolis Brandt, 1988 (basis of record)
Acutiserolis gerlachei (Monod, 1925) (basis of record)
Acutiserolis johnstoni (Hale, 1952) (basis of record)
Acutiserolis spinosa (Kussakin, 1967) (basis of record)
Adagnesia weddelli Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1994 (basis of record)
Adelascopora Hayward & Thorpe, 1988 (basis of record)
Adelascopora secunda Hayward & Thorpe, 1988 (basis of record)
Aegiochus antarctica (Hodgson, 1910) (basis of record)
Aegiochus glacialis (Tattersall, 1921) (basis of record)
Aglaophamus digitatus Hartman, 1967 (basis of record)
Aglaophamus foliosus Hartman, 1967 (basis of record)
Aglaophamus groenlandiae Hartman, 1967 (basis of record)
Aglaophamus paramalmgreni Hartmann-Schröder & Rosenfeldt, 1992 (additional source)
Aglaophamus posterobranchus Hartman, 1967 (basis of record)
Aglaophamus trissophyllus (Grube, 1877) (additional source)
Aglaophamus virginis (Kinberg, 1866) (basis of record)
Aglaoprimnoa Bayer, 1996 (basis of record)
Aglaoprimnoa stefanii Bayer, 1996 (basis of record)
Agnezia arnaudi (Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1974) (basis of record)
Agnezia biscoei (Monniot C. & Monniot F., 1983) (basis of record)
Aimulosia Jullien, 1888 (basis of record)
Aimulosia antarctica (Powell, 1967) (basis of record)
Aimulosia australis Jullien, 1888 (basis of record)
Alcyonidium Lamouroux, 1813 (additional source)
Alcyonidium antarcticum Waters, 1904 (basis of record)
Alcyonidium eightsi Winston & Hayward, 1994 (basis of record)
Alcyonidium flabelliforme Kirkpatrick, 1902 (basis of record)
Alcyonidium mytili Dalyell, 1848 accepted as Alcyonidioides mytili (Dalyell, 1848) (additional source)
Alloeocarpa incrustans (Herdman, 1886) (basis of record)
Amage sculpta Ehlers, 1908 (basis of record)
Amastigia Busk, 1852 (additional source)
Amastigia antarctica (Kluge, 1914) (basis of record)
Amastigia cabereoides (Kluge, 1914) (basis of record)
Amastigia gaussi (Kluge, 1914) (basis of record)
Amastigia solida (Kluge, 1914) (basis of record)
Amblyosyllis granosa Ehlers, 1897 (additional source)
Ammothea allopodes Fry & Hedgpeth, 1969 (basis of record)
Ammothea bicorniculata Stiboy-Risch, 1992 (basis of record)
Ammothea calmani Gordon, 1932 (basis of record)
Ammothea carolinensis Leach, 1814 (basis of record)
Ammothea clausi Pfeffer, 1889 (basis of record)
Ammothea gigantea Gordon, 1932 (basis of record)
Ammothea glacialis (Hodgson, 1907) (basis of record)
Ammothea gordonae Child, 1994 (basis of record)
Ammothea hesperidensis Munilla, 2000 (basis of record)
Ammothea longispina Gordon, 1932 (basis of record)
Ammothea meridionalis Hodgson, 1914 (basis of record)
Ammothea minor (Hodgson, 1907) (basis of record)
Ammothea sextarticulata Munilla, 1991 (basis of record)
Ammothea spinosa (Hodgson, 1907) (basis of record)
Ammothea striata (Möbius, 1902) (basis of record)
Ammothea stylirostris Gordon, 1932 (basis of record)
Ammothea tetrapora Gordon, 1932 (basis of record)
Ammotrypane gymnopyge Ehlers, 1908 accepted as Ophelina gymnopyge (Ehlers, 1908) (additional source)
Amperima velacula Agatep, 1967 (basis of record)
Ampharana Hartman, 1967 (basis of record)
Ampharana antarctica Hartman, 1967 (basis of record)
Ampharete kerguelensis McIntosh, 1885 (basis of record)
Amphiblestrum Gray, 1848 (additional source)
Amphiblestrum familiaris Hayward & Thorpe, 1989 (basis of record)
Amphiblestrum georgensis Hayward & Thorpe, 1989 (basis of record)
Amphiblestrum inermis (Kluge, 1914) (basis of record)
Amphiblestrum rossi Hayward & Thorpe, 1989 (basis of record)
Amphimedon paradisus Desqueyroux-Faúndez, 1989 (additional source)