Document details

Lobophora (Dictyotales, Phaeophyceae) from the western Indian Ocean: diversity and biogeography

Author(s): Vieira, Christophe ; Rasoamanendrika, Faravavy A. ; Zubia, Mayalen ; Bolton, John J. ; Anderson, Robert J. ; Engelen, Aschwin ; D'hondt, Sofie ; Leliaert, Frederik ; Payri, Claude ; Kawai, Hiroshi ; De Clerck, Olivier

Date: 2021

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/17410

Origin: Sapientia - Universidade do Algarve

Subject(s): Madagascar; Mozambique molecular phylogenetics; Red Sea; Seaweeds; South Africa; Taxonomy


Description

The brown algal genus Lobophora (Dictyotales, Phaeophyceae) is an important ecological component of tropical marine systems. Although still scantily sampled, 35 species of Lobophora were discovered previously from the western Indian Ocean. This study updates previous diversity estimates by incorporating recent collections from Madagascar, Mozambique, and the Red Sea, considerably improving our knowledge of Lobophora diversity and biogeography in this region. Eight additional species are identified from the western Indian Ocean, raising the total number of Lobophora species to 43. Fifteen species are new to science and described herein. With ca. 40% of the global diversity, the western Indian Ocean is second only to the Central IndoPacific. Of the species identified to date, 29 appear to be restricted to the western Indian Ocean, three are shared with the Atlantic (four including L. lessepsiana introduced to the western Mediterranean Sea) and 12 have a wider distribution in the Indo-Pacific. The western Indian Ocean supports a high diversity with ca. 67% of its Lobophora restricted to this region, which is comparable to the Central Indo-Pacific (62%) and the Caribbean (61%). The presence of several putative endemic species in the western Indian Ocean islands and the Red Sea illustrates that these provinces played an important role in Lobophora species diversification within the western Indian Ocean by producing locally new species. The small number of species shared between the western Indo-Pacific and Atlantic indicates that this oceanic boundary - associated with the temperate Agulhas marine province, and the Benguela current and upwelling - acts as an effective dispersal barrier.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
Contributor(s) Sapientia
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