Document of bibliographic reference 324968

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Meiofauna life on loggerhead sea turtles-diversely structured abundance and biodiversity hotspots that challenge the meiofauna paradox
Abstract
Sea turtles migrate thousands of miles annually between foraging and breeding areas, carrying dozens of epibiont species with them on their journeys. Most sea turtle epibiont studies have focused on large-sized organisms, those visible to the naked eye. Here, we report previously undocumented levels of epibiont abundance and biodiversity for loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta), by focusing on the microscopic meiofauna. During the peak of the 2018 loggerhead nesting season at St. George Island, Florida, USA, we sampled all epibionts from 24 carapaces. From the subsamples, we identified 38,874 meiofauna individuals belonging to 20 higher taxa. This means 810,753 individuals were recovered in our survey, with an average of 33,781 individuals per carapace. Of 6992 identified nematodes, 111 different genera were observed. To our knowledge, such levels of sea turtle epibiont abundance and diversity have never been recorded. Loggerhead carapaces are without doubt hotspots of meiofaunal and nematode diversity, especially compared to other non-sedimentary substrates. The posterior carapace sections harbored higher diversity and evenness compared to the anterior and middle sections, suggesting increased colonization and potentially facilitation favoring posterior carapace epibiosis, or increased disturbance on the anterior and middle carapace sections. Our findings also shed new light on the meiofauna paradox: “How do small, benthic meiofauna organisms become cosmopolitan over large geographic ranges?” Considering high loggerhead epibiont colonization, the large distances loggerheads migrate for reproduction and feeding, and the evolutionary age and sheer numbers of sea turtles worldwide, potentially large-scale exchange and dispersal for meiofauna through phoresis is implied. We distinguished different groups of loggerhead carapaces based on divergent epibiont communities, suggesting distinct epibiont colonization processes. These epibiont observations hold potential for investigating loggerhead movements and, hence, their conservation.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000541083200006
Bibliographic citation
Ingels, J.; Valdes, Y.; Pontes, L.P.; Silva, A.C.; Neres, P.F.; Corrêa, G.V.V.; Silver-Gorges, I.; Fuentes, M.M.P.B.; Gillis, A.; Hooper, L.; Ware, M.; O’Reilly, C.; Bergman, Q.; Danyuk, J.; Sanchez Zarate, S.; Acevedo Natale, L.I.; dos Santos, G.A.P. (2020). Meiofauna life on loggerhead sea turtles-diversely structured abundance and biodiversity hotspots that challenge the meiofauna paradox. Diversity 12(5): 203. https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d12050203
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Jeroen Ingels
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8342-2222
author
Name
Yirina Valdes
author
Name
Leticia Pontes
author
Name
Alexsandra Silva
author
Name
PatrÍcia Neres
author
Name
Gustavo Corrêa
author
Name
Ian Silver-Gorges
author
Name
Mariana Fuentes
author
Name
Anthony Gillis
author
Name
Lindsay Hooper
author
Name
Matthew Ware
author
Name
Carrie O’Reilly
author
Name
Quintin Bergman
author
Name
Julia Danyuk
author
Name
Sofia Sanchez Zarate
author
Name
Laura Acevedo Natale
author
Name
Giovanni dos Santos

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d12050203

taxonomic terms

taxonomic terms associated with this publication
Nematoda [Nematodes]

Document metadata

date created
2020-06-09
date modified
2020-06-09