A review on the diversity and distribution of athecate dinoflagellates in South Atlantic and in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean: Research insights and gaps.

This review summarizes the state of knowledge on athecate dinoflagellates occurring within the South Atlantic Ocean and Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. We compiled data from 105 articles and selected 33 addressing any aspect of athecate dinoflagellate studies. Our aim is to discuss the patter...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências
Main Authors: Werlang, Chariane Camila, Souza, Márcio S DE, Mendes, Carlos Rafael B
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: Scientific Electronic Library Online 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1590/0001-3765202420230746
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39016363
Description
Summary:This review summarizes the state of knowledge on athecate dinoflagellates occurring within the South Atlantic Ocean and Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. We compiled data from 105 articles and selected 33 addressing any aspect of athecate dinoflagellate studies. Our aim is to discuss the patterns in athecate dinoflagellate distribution by building a thorough species list and an occurrence map based on species recorded in coastal and oceanic waters. We found 69 species totaling 141 occurrences in the entire South Atlantic Ocean basin. Contradicting global trends, most species distributed throughout this region are subtropical. We linked this trend to a higher local effort in dinoflagellate research instead of higher biodiversity, especially when compared to usual hotspots in biodiversity attributed to tropical oceans. The Subantarctic and Antarctic regions had a low number of occurrences, with 12 and 5, respectively. Except for the occurrence of Gyrodinium lachryma in the Antarctic Zone, all records are unique, poorly described and never recorded again for species such as Gymnodinium baccatum and Gymnodinium antarcticum. This demonstrates that the state of knowledge regarding athecate dinoflagellates in the South Atlantic and especially in the Antarctic region is still limited due to a lack of directed investigation.