New reports of echinoderms on the Caribbean continental slope of central America

The Caribbean is considered a unique biogeographic region that represents an important hotspot of marine diversity in the Atlantic Ocean. The Caribbean Continental Slope of Central America (CCCA) is a largely unexplored area that exhibits a variety of habitats. Among this unstudied biodiversity, spe...

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Published in:Zoosymposia
Main Authors: CAMBRONERO-SOLANO, SERGIO, BENAVIDES, R., SOLÍS-MARÍN, F. A., ALVARADO, J. J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Zoosymposia 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mapress.com/j/zs/article/view/zoosymposia.15.1.3
https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.15.1.3
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spelling ftmagnoliapress:oai:ojs.mapress.com:article/36373 2023-05-15T17:08:19+02:00 New reports of echinoderms on the Caribbean continental slope of central America CAMBRONERO-SOLANO, SERGIO BENAVIDES, R. SOLÍS-MARÍN, F. A. ALVARADO, J. J. 2019-10-21 application/pdf https://www.mapress.com/j/zs/article/view/zoosymposia.15.1.3 https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.15.1.3 eng eng Zoosymposia https://www.mapress.com/j/zs/article/view/zoosymposia.15.1.3/36901 Copyright (c) 2019 Zoosymposia Zoosymposia; Vol 15: 21 Oct. 2019; 5–12 1178-9913 1178-9905 10.11646/zoosymposia.15.1 Echinodermata echinoderms info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2019 ftmagnoliapress https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.15.1.3 2019-10-22T15:04:11Z The Caribbean is considered a unique biogeographic region that represents an important hotspot of marine diversity in the Atlantic Ocean. The Caribbean Continental Slope of Central America (CCCA) is a largely unexplored area that exhibits a variety of habitats. Among this unstudied biodiversity, special importance has been given to the benthic communities associated with deep bottoms, a diverse group that plays a major role in the ocean carbon cycling and nutrient flux. Echinoderms are one of the main benthic deep sea taxa, in which Holothuroidea is the globally dominant class. We present the results from the first exploratory fishing survey campaign on the CCCA, done under the regional coordination of OSPESCA (Central America Fisheries and Aquaculture Organization) on board of the R/V Miguel Oliver in January 2011. Data was collected from a total of 96 trawls arranged in 25 transects that started in Panama and finished in Belize. A Lofoten bottom trawling net was dragged for 30 min between 0 to 1500m depth. The major component of the total invertebrate catch was Holothuroidea with a biomass of 593 kg (16.49% of the total) and represented by seven species. The following are new reports for the Caribbean: Bathyplotes natans in Honduras and Guatemala, Bentothuria funebris in Panama, Benthodytes sanguinolenta in Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Belize; Hansenothuria sp. in Panama, Costa Rica and Honduras. Paroriza pallens extends its distribution to Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Honduras, Zygothuria lactea its reported in Panama. We also present the first records of the crinoid Neocomatella pulchella in Honduras, theasteroid Cheiraster (Cheiraster) planusin Panama, and, for Costa Rica (Asteroidea: Doraster constellatus and Echinoidea: Clypeaster euclastus).Holothurians are the predominant invertebrate fauna in terms of biomass in the entire region of the CCCA. These findings suggest that CCCA presents a high echinoderm biodiversity and also supports the ecoregional variation theory. We report higher echinoderm biomass (75%) in the Southwestern Caribbean compared to Western Caribbean ecoregion. The information presented in this paper establishes the baseline information of echinoderms depth fauna in the Caribbean of Central America, and opens new opportunities for future research. Article in Journal/Newspaper Lofoten Magnolia press Lofoten Zoosymposia 15 1 5 12
institution Open Polar
collection Magnolia press
op_collection_id ftmagnoliapress
language English
topic Echinodermata
echinoderms
spellingShingle Echinodermata
echinoderms
CAMBRONERO-SOLANO, SERGIO
BENAVIDES, R.
SOLÍS-MARÍN, F. A.
ALVARADO, J. J.
New reports of echinoderms on the Caribbean continental slope of central America
topic_facet Echinodermata
echinoderms
description The Caribbean is considered a unique biogeographic region that represents an important hotspot of marine diversity in the Atlantic Ocean. The Caribbean Continental Slope of Central America (CCCA) is a largely unexplored area that exhibits a variety of habitats. Among this unstudied biodiversity, special importance has been given to the benthic communities associated with deep bottoms, a diverse group that plays a major role in the ocean carbon cycling and nutrient flux. Echinoderms are one of the main benthic deep sea taxa, in which Holothuroidea is the globally dominant class. We present the results from the first exploratory fishing survey campaign on the CCCA, done under the regional coordination of OSPESCA (Central America Fisheries and Aquaculture Organization) on board of the R/V Miguel Oliver in January 2011. Data was collected from a total of 96 trawls arranged in 25 transects that started in Panama and finished in Belize. A Lofoten bottom trawling net was dragged for 30 min between 0 to 1500m depth. The major component of the total invertebrate catch was Holothuroidea with a biomass of 593 kg (16.49% of the total) and represented by seven species. The following are new reports for the Caribbean: Bathyplotes natans in Honduras and Guatemala, Bentothuria funebris in Panama, Benthodytes sanguinolenta in Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Belize; Hansenothuria sp. in Panama, Costa Rica and Honduras. Paroriza pallens extends its distribution to Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Honduras, Zygothuria lactea its reported in Panama. We also present the first records of the crinoid Neocomatella pulchella in Honduras, theasteroid Cheiraster (Cheiraster) planusin Panama, and, for Costa Rica (Asteroidea: Doraster constellatus and Echinoidea: Clypeaster euclastus).Holothurians are the predominant invertebrate fauna in terms of biomass in the entire region of the CCCA. These findings suggest that CCCA presents a high echinoderm biodiversity and also supports the ecoregional variation theory. We report higher echinoderm biomass (75%) in the Southwestern Caribbean compared to Western Caribbean ecoregion. The information presented in this paper establishes the baseline information of echinoderms depth fauna in the Caribbean of Central America, and opens new opportunities for future research.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author CAMBRONERO-SOLANO, SERGIO
BENAVIDES, R.
SOLÍS-MARÍN, F. A.
ALVARADO, J. J.
author_facet CAMBRONERO-SOLANO, SERGIO
BENAVIDES, R.
SOLÍS-MARÍN, F. A.
ALVARADO, J. J.
author_sort CAMBRONERO-SOLANO, SERGIO
title New reports of echinoderms on the Caribbean continental slope of central America
title_short New reports of echinoderms on the Caribbean continental slope of central America
title_full New reports of echinoderms on the Caribbean continental slope of central America
title_fullStr New reports of echinoderms on the Caribbean continental slope of central America
title_full_unstemmed New reports of echinoderms on the Caribbean continental slope of central America
title_sort new reports of echinoderms on the caribbean continental slope of central america
publisher Zoosymposia
publishDate 2019
url https://www.mapress.com/j/zs/article/view/zoosymposia.15.1.3
https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.15.1.3
geographic Lofoten
geographic_facet Lofoten
genre Lofoten
genre_facet Lofoten
op_source Zoosymposia; Vol 15: 21 Oct. 2019; 5–12
1178-9913
1178-9905
10.11646/zoosymposia.15.1
op_relation https://www.mapress.com/j/zs/article/view/zoosymposia.15.1.3/36901
op_rights Copyright (c) 2019 Zoosymposia
op_doi https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.15.1.3
container_title Zoosymposia
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