Fauna and distribution of Testacea (Protozoa) from Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet

Testacea (or testate amoebae, thecamoebians) are free-living amoeboid protozoa inhabiting a shell or test and they play an important role in material cycle and energy flow in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. The fauna of Testacea was analyzed from three polar regions of the Earth (Arctic, Antarct...

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Main Authors: Yang, J., Wilkinson, D.M., Smith H.G.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Chinese
Published: Science Press 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://curve.coventry.ac.uk/open/items/16693304-6f93-e83b-0c52-7dc6dddf0570/1
id ftcoventryuniv:tle:16693304-6f93-e83b-0c52-7dc6dddf0570:2fa872f8-6189-4232-b228-bd31f47934f5:1
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcoventryuniv:tle:16693304-6f93-e83b-0c52-7dc6dddf0570:2fa872f8-6189-4232-b228-bd31f47934f5:1 2023-05-15T13:57:48+02:00 Fauna and distribution of Testacea (Protozoa) from Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet Yang, J. Wilkinson, D.M. Smith H.G. 2010 http://curve.coventry.ac.uk/open/items/16693304-6f93-e83b-0c52-7dc6dddf0570/1 Chinese chi Science Press http://curve.coventry.ac.uk/open/items/16693304-6f93-e83b-0c52-7dc6dddf0570/1 Please see https://curve.coventry.ac.uk/cu/file/c14694d9-3d19-84a8-f43f-7f4723bacf7e/1/CURVE%20Purpose%20and%20PoliciesMay08v2.pdf for our metadata and full-text reuse policies. testate amoebae Arctic Antarctic Tibet faunal analysis geographic distribution Article 2010 ftcoventryuniv 2021-04-27T17:44:12Z Testacea (or testate amoebae, thecamoebians) are free-living amoeboid protozoa inhabiting a shell or test and they play an important role in material cycle and energy flow in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. The fauna of Testacea was analyzed from three polar regions of the Earth (Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet). In total, 315 species from 62 genera were recorded in the polar regions, i.e. 232 species (51 genera) in the Arctic, 131 species (30 genera) in the Antarctic, and 173 species (42 genera) in Tibet. In each polar region, the most diverse genera were Arcella, Centropyxis, Difflugia, Euglypha, Nebela; they accounted for 51.3%, 63.4% and 60.1% of the total species number in the Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet, respectively. Seventy-three species (23.2% of all species) and twenty-four genera (38.7% of all genera) were common to the three polar regions. One hundred and sixty-seven species (53.0% of species) were found only in one of the polar regions. Both Assulina muscorum and Centropyxis aerophila were widely distributed with the highest frequency (90%) in 40 subregions from the Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet. Cluster analysis revealed that the highest species-levelsimilarity of Testacea was between the Arctic and Tibet (56.3%). Further, species similarity was the highest between the Arctic and Tibet based on Arcellinida species data, but the lowest based on filose Testacea species. Distinct differences in Testacea fauna indicate that some species are not ubiquitously distributed in spite of better passive long-distance dispersal than macro-organisms. Geographic distributional patterns of Testacea diversity are closely related to body size, habitat type and historical events, and our perception of these patterns are strongly influenced by taxonomic resolution (morphological criteria), sampling effort and spatial scales. We propose that study of genetic diversity among and within common Testacea morphospecies in relation to ecological and historical factors will elucidate geographic distributional patterns within this interesting group. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Arctic Coventry University: Curve/open Antarctic Arctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Coventry University: Curve/open
op_collection_id ftcoventryuniv
language Chinese
topic testate amoebae
Arctic
Antarctic
Tibet
faunal analysis
geographic distribution
spellingShingle testate amoebae
Arctic
Antarctic
Tibet
faunal analysis
geographic distribution
Yang, J.
Wilkinson, D.M.
Smith H.G.
Fauna and distribution of Testacea (Protozoa) from Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet
topic_facet testate amoebae
Arctic
Antarctic
Tibet
faunal analysis
geographic distribution
description Testacea (or testate amoebae, thecamoebians) are free-living amoeboid protozoa inhabiting a shell or test and they play an important role in material cycle and energy flow in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. The fauna of Testacea was analyzed from three polar regions of the Earth (Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet). In total, 315 species from 62 genera were recorded in the polar regions, i.e. 232 species (51 genera) in the Arctic, 131 species (30 genera) in the Antarctic, and 173 species (42 genera) in Tibet. In each polar region, the most diverse genera were Arcella, Centropyxis, Difflugia, Euglypha, Nebela; they accounted for 51.3%, 63.4% and 60.1% of the total species number in the Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet, respectively. Seventy-three species (23.2% of all species) and twenty-four genera (38.7% of all genera) were common to the three polar regions. One hundred and sixty-seven species (53.0% of species) were found only in one of the polar regions. Both Assulina muscorum and Centropyxis aerophila were widely distributed with the highest frequency (90%) in 40 subregions from the Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet. Cluster analysis revealed that the highest species-levelsimilarity of Testacea was between the Arctic and Tibet (56.3%). Further, species similarity was the highest between the Arctic and Tibet based on Arcellinida species data, but the lowest based on filose Testacea species. Distinct differences in Testacea fauna indicate that some species are not ubiquitously distributed in spite of better passive long-distance dispersal than macro-organisms. Geographic distributional patterns of Testacea diversity are closely related to body size, habitat type and historical events, and our perception of these patterns are strongly influenced by taxonomic resolution (morphological criteria), sampling effort and spatial scales. We propose that study of genetic diversity among and within common Testacea morphospecies in relation to ecological and historical factors will elucidate geographic distributional patterns within this interesting group.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Yang, J.
Wilkinson, D.M.
Smith H.G.
author_facet Yang, J.
Wilkinson, D.M.
Smith H.G.
author_sort Yang, J.
title Fauna and distribution of Testacea (Protozoa) from Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet
title_short Fauna and distribution of Testacea (Protozoa) from Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet
title_full Fauna and distribution of Testacea (Protozoa) from Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet
title_fullStr Fauna and distribution of Testacea (Protozoa) from Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet
title_full_unstemmed Fauna and distribution of Testacea (Protozoa) from Arctic, Antarctic and Tibet
title_sort fauna and distribution of testacea (protozoa) from arctic, antarctic and tibet
publisher Science Press
publishDate 2010
url http://curve.coventry.ac.uk/open/items/16693304-6f93-e83b-0c52-7dc6dddf0570/1
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
op_relation http://curve.coventry.ac.uk/open/items/16693304-6f93-e83b-0c52-7dc6dddf0570/1
op_rights Please see https://curve.coventry.ac.uk/cu/file/c14694d9-3d19-84a8-f43f-7f4723bacf7e/1/CURVE%20Purpose%20and%20PoliciesMay08v2.pdf for our metadata and full-text reuse policies.
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