Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts)

The crustacean order Isopoda (excluding Asellota, crustacean symbionts and freshwater taxa) comprise 3154 described marine species in 379 genera in 37 families according to the WoRMS catalogue. The history of taxonomic discovery over the last two centuries is reviewed. Although a well defined order...

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Published in:PLoS ONE
Main Authors: Poore, Gary C.B., Bruce, Niel L.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Public Library of Science 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/24973/1/24973_Poore_and_Bruce_2012.pdf
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spelling ftjamescook:oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:24973 2024-02-11T09:56:58+01:00 Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts) Poore, Gary C.B. Bruce, Niel L. 2012 application/pdf https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/24973/1/24973_Poore_and_Bruce_2012.pdf unknown Public Library of Science http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043529 https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/24973/ https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/24973/1/24973_Poore_and_Bruce_2012.pdf Poore, Gary C.B., and Bruce, Niel L. (2012) Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts). PLoS ONE, 7 (8). e43529. pp. 1-15. open Article PeerReviewed 2012 ftjamescook https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043529 2024-01-22T23:29:57Z The crustacean order Isopoda (excluding Asellota, crustacean symbionts and freshwater taxa) comprise 3154 described marine species in 379 genera in 37 families according to the WoRMS catalogue. The history of taxonomic discovery over the last two centuries is reviewed. Although a well defined order with the Peracarida, their relationship to other orders is not yet resolved but systematics of the major subordinal taxa is relatively well understood. Isopods range in size from less than 1 mm to Bathynomus giganteus at 365 mm long. They inhabit all marine habitats down to 7280 m depth but with few doubtful exceptions species have restricted biogeographic and bathymetric ranges. Four feeding categories are recognised as much on the basis of anecdotal evidence as hard data: detritus feeders and browsers, carnivores, parasites, and filter feeders. Notable among these are the Cymothooidea that range from predators and scavengers to external blood-sucking micropredators and parasites. Isopods brood 10–1600 eggs depending on individual species. Strong sexual dimorphism is characteristic of several families, notably in Gnathiidae where sessile males live with a harem of females while juvenile praniza stages are ectoparasites of fish. Protandry is known in Cymothoidae and protogyny in Anthuroidea. Some Paranthuridae are neotenous. About half of all coastal, shelf and upper bathyal species have been recorded in the MEOW temperate realms, 40% in tropical regions and the remainder in polar seas. The greatest concentration of temperate species is in Australasia; more have been recorded from temperate North Pacific than the North Atlantic. Of tropical regions, the Central Indo-Pacific is home to more species any other region. Isopods are decidedly asymmetrical latitudinally with 1.35 times as many species in temperate Southern Hemisphere than the temperate North Atlantic and northern Pacific, and almost four times as many Antarctic as Arctic species. More species are known from the bathyal and abyssal Antarctic than Arctic GOODS ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Arctic North Atlantic James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU Arctic Antarctic Pacific Giganteus ENVELOPE(62.500,62.500,-67.567,-67.567) PLoS ONE 7 8 e43529
institution Open Polar
collection James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
op_collection_id ftjamescook
language unknown
description The crustacean order Isopoda (excluding Asellota, crustacean symbionts and freshwater taxa) comprise 3154 described marine species in 379 genera in 37 families according to the WoRMS catalogue. The history of taxonomic discovery over the last two centuries is reviewed. Although a well defined order with the Peracarida, their relationship to other orders is not yet resolved but systematics of the major subordinal taxa is relatively well understood. Isopods range in size from less than 1 mm to Bathynomus giganteus at 365 mm long. They inhabit all marine habitats down to 7280 m depth but with few doubtful exceptions species have restricted biogeographic and bathymetric ranges. Four feeding categories are recognised as much on the basis of anecdotal evidence as hard data: detritus feeders and browsers, carnivores, parasites, and filter feeders. Notable among these are the Cymothooidea that range from predators and scavengers to external blood-sucking micropredators and parasites. Isopods brood 10–1600 eggs depending on individual species. Strong sexual dimorphism is characteristic of several families, notably in Gnathiidae where sessile males live with a harem of females while juvenile praniza stages are ectoparasites of fish. Protandry is known in Cymothoidae and protogyny in Anthuroidea. Some Paranthuridae are neotenous. About half of all coastal, shelf and upper bathyal species have been recorded in the MEOW temperate realms, 40% in tropical regions and the remainder in polar seas. The greatest concentration of temperate species is in Australasia; more have been recorded from temperate North Pacific than the North Atlantic. Of tropical regions, the Central Indo-Pacific is home to more species any other region. Isopods are decidedly asymmetrical latitudinally with 1.35 times as many species in temperate Southern Hemisphere than the temperate North Atlantic and northern Pacific, and almost four times as many Antarctic as Arctic species. More species are known from the bathyal and abyssal Antarctic than Arctic GOODS ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Poore, Gary C.B.
Bruce, Niel L.
spellingShingle Poore, Gary C.B.
Bruce, Niel L.
Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts)
author_facet Poore, Gary C.B.
Bruce, Niel L.
author_sort Poore, Gary C.B.
title Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts)
title_short Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts)
title_full Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts)
title_fullStr Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts)
title_full_unstemmed Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts)
title_sort global diversity of marine isopods (except asellota and crustacean symbionts)
publisher Public Library of Science
publishDate 2012
url https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/24973/1/24973_Poore_and_Bruce_2012.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(62.500,62.500,-67.567,-67.567)
geographic Arctic
Antarctic
Pacific
Giganteus
geographic_facet Arctic
Antarctic
Pacific
Giganteus
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
North Atlantic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
North Atlantic
op_relation http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043529
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/24973/
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/24973/1/24973_Poore_and_Bruce_2012.pdf
Poore, Gary C.B., and Bruce, Niel L. (2012) Global diversity of marine isopods (except Asellota and crustacean symbionts). PLoS ONE, 7 (8). e43529. pp. 1-15.
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