Document of bibliographic reference 288488

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Holothurian (Echinodermata) diversity in the Glorieuses Archipelago (Eparses Islands, France, Mozambique Channel)
Abstract
Due to their isolation, Eparses Islands provide a valuable opportunity to investigate biodiversity in the absence of anthropogenic influence. The Glorieuses Archipelago forms part of the Eparses Islands, or the French scattered islands in the Mozambique Channel (Western Indian Ocean). Inventories of several taxa, including the holothurians (Echinodermata), were carried out in December 2012 as part of the BIORECIE (Biodiversity, Resources and Conservation of Eparses Islands) programme. Specimens were collected and photographed on the reef slopes of the island at ten sites down to 20 m and the reef flats at twelve sites. Given the worldwide overexploitation of holothurians, it is important to know their present diversity and distribution in such remote areas. The Holothuria comprised 20 species: 10 species were collected on the slopes and 15 on the reef flats. Despite the limited number of sites surveyed, the occurrence of the different species allowed their categorisation as common, uncommon or rare. The commercial species, Holothuria nobilis, Bohadschia atra and B. subrubra, were common. Comparisons at local and regional scales using the same methodology showed that holothurian diversity in Glorieuses is high, but already occurring illegal fisheries are a serious concern.
Bibliographic citation
Conand, C.; Mulochau, T.; Chabanet, P. (2013). Holothurian (Echinodermata) diversity in the Glorieuses Archipelago (Eparses Islands, France, Mozambique Channel). Western Indian Ocean J. Mar. Sci. 12(1): 71-78
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Chantal Conand
author
Name
Thierry Mulochau
author
Name
Pascale Chabanet

Document metadata

date created
2017-08-22
date modified
2017-09-12