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1.
Mar Environ Res ; 192: 106230, 2023 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37922703

RESUMEN

We explicitly tested for spatial changes in Pocillopora damicornis-associated invertebrates across several spatial scales in the southern Mexican Pacific. Sorting of invertebrates from 40 coral heads along 882 km of the coast yielded 325 taxa, 283% more than any other Pocillopora spp. coral host study to date, but estimators signals that richness might be 17-39% larger than the current number. Permutation, ordination, and regression analysis indicate that the composition and abundance of invertebrates vary in response to the spatial distance among coral heads: high similarity and variation occur among coral heads within localities (<500 m), probably related to faunal homogenization, but progressively modest reduction in similarity and variation as spatial distance increases suggesting a weak role for environmental sorting across southern Mexican Pacific coral reefs. Future studies should explicitly explore spatial, environmental, and historical biogeography processes that regulate and maintain community structure and biodiversity on eastern Pacific reefs.


Asunto(s)
Antozoos , Animales , Arrecifes de Coral , Biodiversidad , México
2.
PeerJ ; 10: e12774, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35228905

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Holothuriophilus trapeziformis Nauck, 1880 is a holothurian-dweller pinnotherid crab representing one of the two species of the genus distributed along the Pacific coast of Mexico and Chile, respectively. While the parasitic ecological interaction with its host is well established, the morphology of the male remains unknown, and DNA information for the species is not available. Furthermore, the only morphological trait separating both species of the genus is subjective and corresponds to the presence or absence of a gap between the fingers of the chelae. Our goal is to complete and clarify the taxonomic status of H. trapeziformis and describe the male morphology with the use of the integrative taxonomy, providing additional characters to differentiate this species. METHODS: We collected new biological material in the Pacific coast of Mexico including the topotypes. We also reviewed material from national collections to integrate morphology (based on a complete and detailed description and illustration of the species using light microscopy), ecological data (based on the identification of the host and the place where it was located within the host), and the mtCOI gene information (commonly known as DNA barcode) to differentiate Holothuriophilus trapeziformis from other related crabs. RESULTS: This species presents marked sexual dimorphism only in the primary sexual characters. For the first time we describe morphological variability of traditionally stable characters. In addition to the gap between the fingers of the chelae, Holothuriophilus trapeziformis differs from H. pacificus (Poeppig, 1836) by their ornamentation, the shape of the male abdomen, and the gonopod. Cytocrome Oxidase 1 gene (COI) distance divergence was >3% between both Holothuriophilus species forming a clear clade. DNA barcoding indicates only one taxon, with a maximum divergence of 2.2%. All the specimens have the same Barcode Index Number (BIN; BOLD: ADE9974). All the hosts for H. trapeziformis were identified as Holothuria (Halodeima) inornata Semper, 1868; the presence of the crab in the host's coelomic cavity was confirmed, and for the first time we found it within the intestine. The geographical distribution is the Pacific coast of Mexico. Based on the data presented here, the taxonomic status of Holothuriophilus trapeziformis is now complete.


Asunto(s)
Cipriniformes , Decápodos , Holothuria , Animales , Masculino , México , Chile , Alimentos Marinos
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