WoRMS source details

Polgar, Gianluca; Nishi, Eijiroh; Idris, Izwandy; Glasby, Christopher J. (2015). Tropical polychaete community and reef dynamics: insights from a Malayan Sabellaria (Annelida: Sabellariidae) reef. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 63: 401-417.
230290
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9648B3CD-ADE3-4F0B-8190-4F3A1CFB822A [view]
Polgar, Gianluca; Nishi, Eijiroh; Idris, Izwandy; Glasby, Christopher J.
2015
Tropical polychaete community and reef dynamics: insights from a Malayan <i>Sabellaria</i> (Annelida: Sabellariidae) reef
The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology
63: 401-417
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb)
Available for editors  PDF available [request]
The ecology of tropical sabellariid reefs is scarcely known, and only few records of such systems were reported from Southeast Asia. The present investigation describes the only documented polychaete reef of western Peninsular Malaysia, which has been previously reported on in two other studies. More recent surveys documented dramatic temporal changes of the reef’s extension and polychaete community composition. This reef appears to experience different phases of growth and destruction, associated with sediment dynamics, possibly determined by monsoons. In the present study, the extent, temporal dynamics and polychaete species composition of the reef are documented from December 2010 to April 2013. Semi-quantitative sampling of the polychaete community in selected portions of the reef along the intertidal zone revealed drastic changes in the composition and geomorphic structure of the reef. The reef reached its largest extension in December 2010, when Sabellaria sp. 1 was the primary builder. The tubiculous Polydora cavitensis and Loimia verrucosa dominated the reef at different stages of reef development. A total of 26 polychaete species from 12 families were recorded, including errant and associated species. Eight un-described species were found, plus five new records for an area including the South China Sea, the Malacca Straits and the Andaman Sea, and five new records for the Malay Peninsula only. Hypotheses of the reef cycle, the synecological dynamics, and the abiotic factors triggering the ecological succession are also discussed.
Asia
Indo-Malay
South China Sea
Community, Assemblages, Competition
Ecology
RIS (EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)
BibTex (BibDesk, LaTeX)
Date
action
by
2016-04-21 17:41:57Z
created
2020-09-30 17:46:58Z
changed

Perinereis maindroni Fauvel, 1943 (additional source)
Nontype NTM W025330, geounit Selangor, identified as Perinereis maindroni Fauvel, 1943
Nontype NTM W025339, geounit Selangor, identified as Perinereis maindroni Fauvel, 1943
Nontype NTM W025341, geounit Selangor, identified as Perinereis maindroni Fauvel, 1943
Nontype NTM W025375, geounit Selangor, identified as Perinereis maindroni Fauvel, 1943
 Depth range

Intertidal, according to Polgar et al. (2015). Not stated in original description, but probably also found at ... [details]

 Distribution

Indian Ocean: Puducherry, Southeast India (Bay of Bengal); Jeram Beach, Selangor, Malaysia (Strait of Malacca).  [details]

 Habitat

The new species was based on specimens collected by the French entomologist Maurice Maindron in 1901, during his ... [details]