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How a collaborative integrated taxonomic effort has trained new spongiologists and improved knowledge of Martinique Island (French Antilles, eastern Caribbean Sea) marine biodiversity

Although sponges are important components of benthic ecosystems of the Caribbean Sea, their diversity remained poorly investigated in the Lesser Antilles. By organizing a training course in Martinique, we wanted both to promote taxonomy and to provide a first inventory of the sponge diversity on thi...

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Autores principales: Pérez, Thierry, Díaz, Maria-Cristina, Ruiz, César, Cóndor-Luján, Baslavi, Klautau, Michelle, Hajdu, Eduardo, Lobo-Hajdu, Gisele, Zea, Sven, Pomponi, Shirley A., Thacker, Robert W., Carteron, Sophie, Tollu, Guillaume, Pouget-Cuvelier, Adeline, Thélamon, Philippe, Marechal, Jean-Philippe, Thomas, Olivier P., Ereskovsky, Alexander V., Vacelet, Jean, Boury-Esnault, Nicole
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5362083/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28329020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173859
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author Pérez, Thierry
Díaz, Maria-Cristina
Ruiz, César
Cóndor-Luján, Baslavi
Klautau, Michelle
Hajdu, Eduardo
Lobo-Hajdu, Gisele
Zea, Sven
Pomponi, Shirley A.
Thacker, Robert W.
Carteron, Sophie
Tollu, Guillaume
Pouget-Cuvelier, Adeline
Thélamon, Philippe
Marechal, Jean-Philippe
Thomas, Olivier P.
Ereskovsky, Alexander V.
Vacelet, Jean
Boury-Esnault, Nicole
author_facet Pérez, Thierry
Díaz, Maria-Cristina
Ruiz, César
Cóndor-Luján, Baslavi
Klautau, Michelle
Hajdu, Eduardo
Lobo-Hajdu, Gisele
Zea, Sven
Pomponi, Shirley A.
Thacker, Robert W.
Carteron, Sophie
Tollu, Guillaume
Pouget-Cuvelier, Adeline
Thélamon, Philippe
Marechal, Jean-Philippe
Thomas, Olivier P.
Ereskovsky, Alexander V.
Vacelet, Jean
Boury-Esnault, Nicole
author_sort Pérez, Thierry
collection PubMed
description Although sponges are important components of benthic ecosystems of the Caribbean Sea, their diversity remained poorly investigated in the Lesser Antilles. By organizing a training course in Martinique, we wanted both to promote taxonomy and to provide a first inventory of the sponge diversity on this island. The course was like a naturalist expedition, with a field laboratory and a classroom nearby. Early-career scientists and environmental managers were trained in sponge taxonomy. We gathered unpublished data and conducted an inventory at 13 coastal sites. We explored only shallow water habitats (0–30 m), such as mangroves, reefs or rocky bottoms and underwater caves. According to this study, the sponge fauna of Martinique is currently represented by a minimum of 191 species, 134 of which we could assign species names. One third of the remaining non-identified sponge species we consider to be new to science. Martinique appears very remarkable because of its littoral marine fauna harboring sponge aggregations with high biomass and species diversity dominating over coral species. In mangroves, sponges cover about 10% of the surface of subtidal roots. Several submarine caves are true reservoirs of hidden and insufficiently described sponge diversity. Thanks to this new collaborative effort, the Eastern Caribbean has gained a significant increase of knowledge, with sponge diversity of this area potentially representing 40% of the total in the Caribbean Sea. We thus demonstrated the importance of developing exploratory and educational research in areas historically devoid of biodiversity inventories and systematics studies. Finally, we believe in the necessity to consider not only the number of species but their distribution in space to evaluate their putative contribution to ecosystem services and our willingness to preserve them.
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spelling pubmed-53620832017-04-06 How a collaborative integrated taxonomic effort has trained new spongiologists and improved knowledge of Martinique Island (French Antilles, eastern Caribbean Sea) marine biodiversity Pérez, Thierry Díaz, Maria-Cristina Ruiz, César Cóndor-Luján, Baslavi Klautau, Michelle Hajdu, Eduardo Lobo-Hajdu, Gisele Zea, Sven Pomponi, Shirley A. Thacker, Robert W. Carteron, Sophie Tollu, Guillaume Pouget-Cuvelier, Adeline Thélamon, Philippe Marechal, Jean-Philippe Thomas, Olivier P. Ereskovsky, Alexander V. Vacelet, Jean Boury-Esnault, Nicole PLoS One Research Article Although sponges are important components of benthic ecosystems of the Caribbean Sea, their diversity remained poorly investigated in the Lesser Antilles. By organizing a training course in Martinique, we wanted both to promote taxonomy and to provide a first inventory of the sponge diversity on this island. The course was like a naturalist expedition, with a field laboratory and a classroom nearby. Early-career scientists and environmental managers were trained in sponge taxonomy. We gathered unpublished data and conducted an inventory at 13 coastal sites. We explored only shallow water habitats (0–30 m), such as mangroves, reefs or rocky bottoms and underwater caves. According to this study, the sponge fauna of Martinique is currently represented by a minimum of 191 species, 134 of which we could assign species names. One third of the remaining non-identified sponge species we consider to be new to science. Martinique appears very remarkable because of its littoral marine fauna harboring sponge aggregations with high biomass and species diversity dominating over coral species. In mangroves, sponges cover about 10% of the surface of subtidal roots. Several submarine caves are true reservoirs of hidden and insufficiently described sponge diversity. Thanks to this new collaborative effort, the Eastern Caribbean has gained a significant increase of knowledge, with sponge diversity of this area potentially representing 40% of the total in the Caribbean Sea. We thus demonstrated the importance of developing exploratory and educational research in areas historically devoid of biodiversity inventories and systematics studies. Finally, we believe in the necessity to consider not only the number of species but their distribution in space to evaluate their putative contribution to ecosystem services and our willingness to preserve them. Public Library of Science 2017-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5362083/ /pubmed/28329020 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173859 Text en © 2017 Pérez et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pérez, Thierry
Díaz, Maria-Cristina
Ruiz, César
Cóndor-Luján, Baslavi
Klautau, Michelle
Hajdu, Eduardo
Lobo-Hajdu, Gisele
Zea, Sven
Pomponi, Shirley A.
Thacker, Robert W.
Carteron, Sophie
Tollu, Guillaume
Pouget-Cuvelier, Adeline
Thélamon, Philippe
Marechal, Jean-Philippe
Thomas, Olivier P.
Ereskovsky, Alexander V.
Vacelet, Jean
Boury-Esnault, Nicole
How a collaborative integrated taxonomic effort has trained new spongiologists and improved knowledge of Martinique Island (French Antilles, eastern Caribbean Sea) marine biodiversity
title How a collaborative integrated taxonomic effort has trained new spongiologists and improved knowledge of Martinique Island (French Antilles, eastern Caribbean Sea) marine biodiversity
title_full How a collaborative integrated taxonomic effort has trained new spongiologists and improved knowledge of Martinique Island (French Antilles, eastern Caribbean Sea) marine biodiversity
title_fullStr How a collaborative integrated taxonomic effort has trained new spongiologists and improved knowledge of Martinique Island (French Antilles, eastern Caribbean Sea) marine biodiversity
title_full_unstemmed How a collaborative integrated taxonomic effort has trained new spongiologists and improved knowledge of Martinique Island (French Antilles, eastern Caribbean Sea) marine biodiversity
title_short How a collaborative integrated taxonomic effort has trained new spongiologists and improved knowledge of Martinique Island (French Antilles, eastern Caribbean Sea) marine biodiversity
title_sort how a collaborative integrated taxonomic effort has trained new spongiologists and improved knowledge of martinique island (french antilles, eastern caribbean sea) marine biodiversity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5362083/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28329020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0173859
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