Coralline red algae of Antarctica and Subantarctic regions: state of knowledge of a threatened, yet poorly known, group of ecosystem engineers

Due to limitations imposed by the extreme environmental conditions, Antarctica and Subantarctic regions remain among the least phycologically known. Corallines of these regions are poorly known, despite a long history of studies dating back to the early twentieth century. Current knowledge of their...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rindi F., Trentin R., Sciuto K., Moschin E., Nelson W. A., Moro I.
Other Authors: Solène Connan, Emeline Creis, Bertrand Jacquemin, Gabriel Markov and Philippe Potin, Rindi, F., Trentin, R., Sciuto, K., Moschin, E., Nelson, W. A., Moro, I.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: country:FRA 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11566/322631
https://epc8.sciencesconf.org/
id ftupmarcheiris:oai:iris.univpm.it:11566/322631
record_format openpolar
spelling ftupmarcheiris:oai:iris.univpm.it:11566/322631 2024-02-27T08:35:18+00:00 Coralline red algae of Antarctica and Subantarctic regions: state of knowledge of a threatened, yet poorly known, group of ecosystem engineers Rindi F. Trentin R. Sciuto K. Moschin E. Nelson W. A. Moro I. Solène Connan, Emeline Creis, Bertrand Jacquemin, Gabriel Markov and Philippe Potin Rindi, F. Trentin, R. Sciuto, K. Moschin, E. Nelson, W. A. Moro, I. 2023 ELETTRONICO https://hdl.handle.net/11566/322631 https://epc8.sciencesconf.org/ eng eng country:FRA place:Brest ispartofbook:Program and book of abstracts - 8th European Phycological Congress 8th European Phycological Congress firstpage:183 lastpage:184 numberofpages:2 https://hdl.handle.net/11566/322631 https://epc8.sciencesconf.org/ info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2023 ftupmarcheiris 2024-01-31T17:32:57Z Due to limitations imposed by the extreme environmental conditions, Antarctica and Subantarctic regions remain among the least phycologically known. Corallines of these regions are poorly known, despite a long history of studies dating back to the early twentieth century. Current knowledge of their diversity is based mostly on traditional morphoanatomical investigations. For Antarctica proper, reliable records are available for 12 species; most of these are based on collections from intertidal and shallow subtidal habitats, with Leptophytum coulmanicum and L. foecundum being the most frequently reported. However, recent collections made in the deep subtidal of the Ross Sea and studied by a combination of morpho-anatomical and molecular data produced the discovery of the new genera and species Tethysphytum antarcticum and Thalassolithon adeliense; these represented two previously unknown lineages within the order Hapalidiales. Molecular data suggest that Thalassolithon has probably a much wider distribution, extending to the Auckland Islands and New Zealand. While 11 species of corallines are recognized based on molecular data from the Balleny Islands and the New Zealand subantarctic islands, only 5 of these can currently be assigned to genera. Four of them are confined to the Ross Sea/Balleny Islands or subantarctic islands, while the remainder have much wider distributions to Rakiura/Stewart Island and the New Zealand mainland. These discoveries confirm that the knowledge of coralline diversity in the Southern Ocean is largely incomplete. Further collections from presently unexplored regions and use of DNA sequence data, including sequences obtained from relevant type specimens, are key requirements for future progress. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctica Auckland Islands Balleny Islands Ross Sea Southern Ocean Università Politecnica delle Marche: IRIS Southern Ocean Ross Sea Balleny Islands New Zealand
institution Open Polar
collection Università Politecnica delle Marche: IRIS
op_collection_id ftupmarcheiris
language English
description Due to limitations imposed by the extreme environmental conditions, Antarctica and Subantarctic regions remain among the least phycologically known. Corallines of these regions are poorly known, despite a long history of studies dating back to the early twentieth century. Current knowledge of their diversity is based mostly on traditional morphoanatomical investigations. For Antarctica proper, reliable records are available for 12 species; most of these are based on collections from intertidal and shallow subtidal habitats, with Leptophytum coulmanicum and L. foecundum being the most frequently reported. However, recent collections made in the deep subtidal of the Ross Sea and studied by a combination of morpho-anatomical and molecular data produced the discovery of the new genera and species Tethysphytum antarcticum and Thalassolithon adeliense; these represented two previously unknown lineages within the order Hapalidiales. Molecular data suggest that Thalassolithon has probably a much wider distribution, extending to the Auckland Islands and New Zealand. While 11 species of corallines are recognized based on molecular data from the Balleny Islands and the New Zealand subantarctic islands, only 5 of these can currently be assigned to genera. Four of them are confined to the Ross Sea/Balleny Islands or subantarctic islands, while the remainder have much wider distributions to Rakiura/Stewart Island and the New Zealand mainland. These discoveries confirm that the knowledge of coralline diversity in the Southern Ocean is largely incomplete. Further collections from presently unexplored regions and use of DNA sequence data, including sequences obtained from relevant type specimens, are key requirements for future progress.
author2 Solène Connan, Emeline Creis, Bertrand Jacquemin, Gabriel Markov and Philippe Potin
Rindi, F.
Trentin, R.
Sciuto, K.
Moschin, E.
Nelson, W. A.
Moro, I.
format Conference Object
author Rindi F.
Trentin R.
Sciuto K.
Moschin E.
Nelson W. A.
Moro I.
spellingShingle Rindi F.
Trentin R.
Sciuto K.
Moschin E.
Nelson W. A.
Moro I.
Coralline red algae of Antarctica and Subantarctic regions: state of knowledge of a threatened, yet poorly known, group of ecosystem engineers
author_facet Rindi F.
Trentin R.
Sciuto K.
Moschin E.
Nelson W. A.
Moro I.
author_sort Rindi F.
title Coralline red algae of Antarctica and Subantarctic regions: state of knowledge of a threatened, yet poorly known, group of ecosystem engineers
title_short Coralline red algae of Antarctica and Subantarctic regions: state of knowledge of a threatened, yet poorly known, group of ecosystem engineers
title_full Coralline red algae of Antarctica and Subantarctic regions: state of knowledge of a threatened, yet poorly known, group of ecosystem engineers
title_fullStr Coralline red algae of Antarctica and Subantarctic regions: state of knowledge of a threatened, yet poorly known, group of ecosystem engineers
title_full_unstemmed Coralline red algae of Antarctica and Subantarctic regions: state of knowledge of a threatened, yet poorly known, group of ecosystem engineers
title_sort coralline red algae of antarctica and subantarctic regions: state of knowledge of a threatened, yet poorly known, group of ecosystem engineers
publisher country:FRA
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/11566/322631
https://epc8.sciencesconf.org/
geographic Southern Ocean
Ross Sea
Balleny Islands
New Zealand
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
Ross Sea
Balleny Islands
New Zealand
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Auckland Islands
Balleny Islands
Ross Sea
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Auckland Islands
Balleny Islands
Ross Sea
Southern Ocean
op_relation ispartofbook:Program and book of abstracts - 8th European Phycological Congress
8th European Phycological Congress
firstpage:183
lastpage:184
numberofpages:2
https://hdl.handle.net/11566/322631
https://epc8.sciencesconf.org/
_version_ 1792041791933906944