Trends in the diversity, distribution and life history strategy of Arctic Hydrozoa (Cnidaria). 2015

Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
Marine Ecology Department, Institute of Oceanology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Sopot, Poland.

This is the first attempt to compile a comprehensive and updated species list for Hydrozoa in the Arctic, encompassing both hydroid and medusa stages and including Siphonophorae. We address the hypothesis that the presence of a pelagic stage (holo- or meroplanktonic) was not necessary to successfully recolonize the Arctic by Hydrozoa after the Last Glacial Maximum. Presence-absence data of Hydrozoa in the Arctic were prepared on the basis of historical and present-day literature. The Arctic was divided into ecoregions. Species were grouped into distributional categories according to their worldwide occurrences. Each species was classified according to life history strategy. The similarity of species composition among regions was calculated with the Bray-Curtis index. Average and variation in taxonomic distinctness were used to measure diversity at the taxonomic level. A total of 268 species were recorded. Arctic-boreal species were the most common and dominated each studied region. Nineteen percent of species were restricted to the Arctic. There was a predominance of benthic species over holo- and meroplanktonic species. Arctic, Arctic-Boreal and Boreal species were mostly benthic, while widely distributed species more frequently possessed a pelagic stage. Our results support hypothesis that the presence of a pelagic stage (holo- or meroplanktonic) was not necessary to successfully recolonize the Arctic. The predominance of benthic Hydrozoa suggests that the Arctic could have been colonised after the Last Glacial Maximum by hydroids rafting on floating substrata or recolonising from glacial refugia.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D003063 Cnidaria A phylum of radially symmetrical invertebrates characterized by possession of stinging cells called nematocysts. It includes the classes ANTHOZOA; CUBOZOA; HYDROZOA, and SCYPHOZOA. Members carry CNIDARIAN VENOMS. Cnidarians,Cnidarian,Cnidarias
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D001110 Arctic Regions The Arctic Ocean and the lands in it and adjacent to it. It includes Point Barrow, Alaska, most of the Franklin District in Canada, two thirds of Greenland, Svalbard, Franz Josef Land, Lapland, Novaya Zemlya, and Northern Siberia. (Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1988, p66)
D044822 Biodiversity The variety of all native living organisms and their various forms and interrelationships. Biological Diversity,Diversity, Biological
D058974 Phylogeography A field of study concerned with the principles and processes governing the geographic distributions of genealogical lineages, especially those within and among closely related species. (Avise, J.C., Phylogeography: The History and Formation of Species. Harvard University Press, 2000) Phylogenetic Biogeography,Biogeography, Phylogenetic
D063147 Animal Distribution A process by which animals in various forms and stages of development are physically distributed through time and space. Animal Dispersal,Animal Dispersals,Animal Distributions,Dispersal, Animal,Dispersals, Animal,Distribution, Animal,Distributions, Animal

Related Publications

Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
January 2011, PloS one,
Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
January 2014, PloS one,
Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
October 2015, Molecular phylogenetics and evolution,
Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
January 2015, PloS one,
Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
February 2021, Proceedings. Biological sciences,
Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
September 2010, Integrative and comparative biology,
Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
July 2020, Zootaxa,
Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
December 2012, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution,
Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
January 1986, Comparative biochemistry and physiology. C, Comparative pharmacology and toxicology,
Marta Ronowicz, and Piotr Kukliński, and Gillian M Mapstone
January 2015, PloS one,
Copied contents to your clipboard!