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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-01-14
    Print ISSN: 0095-3628
    Electronic ISSN: 1432-184X
    Topics: Biology
    Published by Springer
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The phylogenetic relationships of the Fungiidae, a family of predominantly free-living, zooxanthellate, reef corals, were studied by sequencing a part of the mitochondrial Cytochrome Oxidase I (COI) and the complete ribosomal Internal Transcribed Spacers (ITS) I & II of specimens from various locations in the Indo- West Pacific. Some sequences were retrieved by using fungiidspecific primers on DNA-extracts from parasitic gastropods living with these corals. The analyses were performed both including and excluding intraspecific variation to investigate the potential effect of saturation. Even though the present molecular phylogeny reconstructions largely reflect those based on morphological characters, there are some distinct differences. Three major clades are distinguished, one of which consists of species with relatively long tentacles. The two other major clades cannot yet be clearly separated from each other morphologically. Several polyphyletic taxa were detected and some genera and species that previously were considered closely related to each other, appear not to be so. Proposed nomenclatorial changes include amongst others the upgrading of subgenera in Fungia to genus level. A few species moved from one genus to another. Among all Fungiidae, the loss of the ability to become free-living appears to have evolved independently as reversals in four separate clades, including two that were previously assumed to be sister groups. The evolution of corals with additional (secondary) mouths leading to polystomatous growth forms from corals with only a single primary mouth (monostomatous growth form) appears to have occurred independently ten times: seven times by extrastomatal budding and three times by intrastomatal budding. In two clades, Herpolitha and Polyphyllia, both mechanisms co-evolved. In general there is no clear relationship between the loss of a freeliving phase and the evolution of multiple mouths.
    Keywords: COI ; evolutionary history ; ITS 1 & 2 ; maximum coral size ; polystomatism ; reproduction strategy
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Ovulid gastropods and their octocoral hosts were collected along the leeward coast of Cura\xc3\xa7ao, Netherlands Antilles. New\nmolecular data of Caribbean and a single Atlantic species were combined with comparable data of Indo-Pacific Ovulidae and a\nsingle East-Pacific species from GenBank. Based on two DNA markers, viz. CO-I and 16S, the phylogenetic relationships\namong all ovulid species of which these data are available are reconstructed. The provisional results suggest a dichotomy between\nthe Atlantic and the Indo-Pacific taxa. Fully grown Simnialena uniplicata closely resembles juvenile Cyphoma gibbosum\nconchologically. Cymbovula acicularis and C. bahamaensis might be synonyms. The assignments of Caribbean host species\nfor Cyphoma gibbosum, C. signatum, Cymbovula acicularis and Simnialena uniplicata are revised.
    Keywords: Anthozoa ; Alcyonacea ; Caribbean ; Cura\xc3\xa7ao ; molecular phylogeny ; symbiosis
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The scleractinian species Psammocora explanulata and Coscinaraea wellsi were originally classified in the family Siderastreidae, but in a recent morpho-molecular study it appeared that they are more closely related to each other and to the Fungiidae than to any siderastreid taxon. A subsequent morpho-molecular study of the Fungiidae provided new insights regarding the phylogenetic relationships within that family. In the present study existing molecular data sets of both families were analyzed jointly with those of new specimens and sequences of P. explanulata and C. wellsi. The results indicate that both species actually belong to the Cycloseris clade within the family Fungiidae. A reappraisal of their morphologic characters based on museum specimens and recently collected material substantiate the molecular results. Consequently, they are renamed Cycloseris explanulata and C. wellsi. They are polystomatous and encrusting like C. mokai, another species recently added to the genus, whereas all Cycloseris species were initially thought to be monostomatous and free-living. In the light of the new findings, the taxonomy and distribution data of C. explanulata and C. wellsi have been updated and revised. Finally, the ecological implications of the evolutionary history of the three encrusting polystomatous Cycloseris species and their free-living monostomatous congeners are discussed.
    Keywords: COI ; Coscinaraea wellsi ; Psammocora explanulata ; rDNA
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Botanical and zoological collections may serve as archives for historical ecological research on the effects of global change and human impact on coral reef biota. Museum collections may harbour old specimens of reef-dwelling species that have become locally extinct. Such collections also help to determine whether early records of invasive species can be obtained from times when they were not yet recognized as such. A case study (2006) involving Saba Bank, Caribbean Netherlands (former Netherlands Antilles), suggests that the coral reef fauna here may have become impoverished when compared with data obtained during an earlier expedition in 1972. However, the 1972 sampling may have been incomplete, as it was performed by professional divers who were not trained taxonomists, whereas the collecting in 2006 was done by experienced marine biologists who knew the taxa they were sampling. As Saba Bank has been under stress due to the anchoring of large vessels, and invasive species have been a potential threat as well, future studies are needed to obtain more insights into the changing reef biota of Saba Bank. Using this Saba Bank example, we want to address the importance of natural history collections as reservoirs of valuable data relevant to coral reef biodiversity studies in a time of global change. As such, these collections are still underexplored and underexploited.
    Keywords: Biodiversity ; global change biology ; historical ecology ; invasive species ; local extinctions ; natural history museums
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: An overview of the octocoral and hydrozoan host species of pygmy seahorses is provided based on literature records and recently collected field data for Hippocampus bargibanti, H. denise and H. pontohi. Seven new associations are recognized and an overview of the so far documented host species is given. A detailed re-examination of octocoral type material and a review of the taxonomic history of the alcyonacean genera Annella (Subergorgiidae) and Muricella (Acanthogorgiidae) are included as baseline for future revisions. The host specificity and colour morphs of pygmy seahorses are discussed, as well as the reliability of (previous) identifications and conservation issues.
    Keywords: Acanthogorgiidae ; Alcyonacea ; Annella ; Anthozoa ; Hippocampus ; host specificity ; Hydrozoa ; Indo-Pacific ; Muricella ; new associations ; Octocorallia ; Subergorgiidae
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-04-18
    Description: Octocorallia (primarily soft corals and gorgonians) occur in cold-water environments as well as in tropical seas and can form a major component of reef communities. Because of their abundance and three-dimensional structure octocorals are an important habitat for symbiotic species such as crustaceans, worms, fishes and molluscs. Among the latter group are snails of the family Ovulidae, obligate associates of octocorals. Ovulid snails have adapted their morphological appearance to avoid predation. They can either be perfectly camouflaged or ambiguously coloured to advertise their toxic properties. It was therefore expected that these morphological adaptations would have an evolutionary background, which would corresponds with that of their octocoral hosts. In this thesis the evolutionary history of the Ovulidae and Octocorallia are examined within and between both taxa by using a multifaceted approach, consisting of (calibrated) phylogenetic and co-evolutionary analyses, taxonomic revisions and coral bioactivity research. The results show that snails and octocorals did not coevolve, but that the evolutionary history between both groups is best described as sequential evolution in which the host affects the symbiont but not vice versa.
    Keywords: Octocorallia ; Cospeciaton ; Ovulidae ; Co-evolution ; Sequential evolution ; Phylogeny ; Taxonomy ; Systematics
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 8
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    In:  Marine Biodiversity vol. 42 no. 2, pp. 1-3
    Publication Date: 2024-04-16
    Description: On two separate occasions during fieldwork in Semporna (eastern Sabah, Malaysia), sea anemones of the family Edwardsiidae were observed attempting to feed on the nudibranch species Nembrotha lineolata and Phyllidia ocellata. These are the first in situ observations of nudibranch predation by sea anemones. This new record is compared with known information on sea slug predators.
    Keywords: Actiniaria ; Coral reef ; Nudibranchia ; Polyceridae ; Phylidiidae
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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